BigDeal - #132 You Need To Be Bored. Here's Why. | Dr. Arthur Brooks
Episode Date: March 26, 2026You did everything right. The degree, the job, the money. So why does it still feel empty? Dr. Arthur Brooks is a Harvard professor, bestselling author, and the happiness scientist billionaires cal...l when their success stops working. In this episode, he breaks down the science of why high achievers feel trapped in a simulation of love, progress, and purpose — while feeling nothing real. You'll learn: - Why boredom is critical for meaning, and why eliminating it makes life emptier - The 3 meaning questions AI can never answer for you - Why resisting pain creates more suffering than the pain itself - Why algorithms have hijacked your brain, and how to take it back - The difference between resume virtues and eulogy virtues — and why most people optimize for the wrong one - 6 rebellious ways to break out of the simulation for good If you have everything but feel nothing, this episode will show you exactly why — and how to fix it. Watch if you're a high achiever, entrepreneur, or anyone who's ever wondered why success feels hollow. Turn your audience into an owned asset. Start your newsletter for free. Visit https://beehiiv.link/l2it20 and use CODIE30 to get 30% off your first 3 months. (00:00:00) Introduction (00:01:12) The Matrix You're Living In: Why Your Brain Has Been Captured (00:01:52) The Depression Epidemic: What Happens When You Never Find Meaning (00:03:44) Left Brain vs Right Brain: Where Meaning Actually Lives (00:05:44) The Three Unanswerable Questions That Unlock Your Life's Meaning (00:07:30) From Uncertainty to Adventure: The Risk Framework High Performers Need (00:12:12) The Death Meditation: How Facing Failure Sets You Free (00:16:39) Why Americans Meditate Wrong: The Dalai Lama's Critique (00:22:07) The Biggest Lie: Suffering Is Bad (00:28:23) Marriage as Startup: Deep Friendship and the Two Keys to the Divine (00:33:37) Where to Find Love: The Dating Strategy Nobody Talks About (00:36:39) The Doom Loop: How You've Been Productized and Monetized (00:47:04) The Boredom Paradox: Why Your Grandpa Was Happier Than You (00:54:14) Resume Virtues vs Eulogy Virtues: The Ultimate vs Intermediate Goals (01:01:37) Who This Book Is For: You Have Everything and Feel Nothing MORE FROM BIGDEAL 🎥 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@podcastbigdeal 📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bigdeal.podcast 📽️ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@big.deal.pod MORE FROM CODIE SANCHEZ 🎥 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@codiesanchezct 📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/codiesanchez 📽️ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@realcodiesanchez OTHER THINGS WE DO 🌐 Our community: https://contrarianthinking.typeform.com/to/WBztXXID 📰 Free newsletter: https://contrarianthinking.biz/3XWLlZp 📚 Biz buying course: https://contrarianthinking.biz/3NhjGgN 🏠 Resibrands: https://resibrands.com/ 💰 CT Capital: https://contrarianthinking.biz/4eRyGOk 🏦 Main St Hold Co: https://contrarianthinking.biz/3YfGa8u Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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You're living in the Matrix.
You're simulating love, sex, progress.
But the one thing you can't simulate is the meaning of your life.
You can be an independent person.
You cannot be a sheep.
And that's the first step in actually taking back your autonomy
in a world that doesn't want you to be independent.
Dr. Arthur Brooks is the happiness scientist billionaires' call
when their success stops working.
He's a Harvard professor, a best-selling author.
If you want to break your phone addiction,
learn how to turn risk into adventure,
and how high performers can rebuild meaning
instead of chasing emptiness.
Today's episode is for you.
Your brain isn't working right.
You're frittering away your time and not feeling good about it because your brain has been captured by algorithms.
That's a weird thing when you think about it, is the more we try to eliminate our boredom, the more boring our life gets.
Can you tell us what is a resume or a eulogy achievement?
Your resume virtues are your instrumental goals.
I don't like this, but I'm getting to make a lot of money.
That's why people actually stay in jobs that they actually hate.
Your eulogy virtues, which is what you'd want people to say at your funeral.
Those are the ultimate goals, not the intermediate goals.
What is the biggest lie we tell ourselves that stops us from achieving the life that we want?
Yeah. There is a big lie. And that is the...
I want to start with a quote from your book, which thank you for the advanced copy. It's amazing.
And I actually read the entire thing. So to David. I know a lot of times people, people bring people on and that don't actually follow the people that they are talking to on podcasts.
Feed into chat, GPT. Exactly. But there's a quote that I love.
And it's to find the meaning of your life requires thinking and living differently from how you've been trained by school, work, media, entertainment, culture.
And to find the meaning of your life, you have to pay attention to the aspects of your life you've been trained to ignore, the dark side of your consciousness.
I thought that was so interesting.
So what happens if you never discover the meaning in your life?
At the most obvious level, you'll become depressed and anxious.
Depression has increased by about a factor of three for people under 30.
anxiety by about a factor of two, the explanation for this is that we're using our brains wrong.
And so that's the most obvious effect of this, is that we become depressed, anxious, and lonely,
and self-harming, and we fall for every kind of moral panic and every kind of cultural fad that
comes along because we think it's actually going to give us meaning. And it won't because we're in
the wrong side of our brain. So anytime that you're getting your questions answered and your
cultural references from TikTok, you're not on the right side. You're not on the right side. You're
on to the right side of your brain, and this is not going to give you what you need, and you're
going to follow these false lures again and again and again. That's the biggest problem. The underlying
problem from all of that is because you're not getting what your heart desires, what you were built
to understand, which is the meaning of your life. You're not going to develop the relationships that
you need with your friends, with your family. You're less and less likely to develop a lifelong
pair bond, which is what homo sapiens are built for. We're built for pair bond mating. We're built for
pair bond mating, all of the nonsense about, I don't know, polyamory that are coming right,
that's all nonsense.
It's all over Austin.
And again, I mean, look, no judgment, different strokes, but look, I'm a behavioral scientist.
And the truth of the matter is that we are built for pair bond mating.
And the way that you understand the deep chemistry with another person is the fusion of the right
hemispheres of your brain.
And if you and your pair bond or have those right hemispheres turned off, who knows what
going to happen. So all of these things, you're very much less likely to develop a relationship
with the divine. You won't actually pursue a spiritual life, and that's exactly what we're seeing.
You have three big questions that you think we have to ask ourselves to find the meaning of life.
What are those? Well, the first question you have to ask is, you know, where do you find it? And the
answer is not like the beach or even the church or even Italy. It's the right side of your brain.
So you need to understand the science is the most important thing.
Then the second thing to do is to really open up the right side of your brain.
And that really comes from these questions.
And people ask me all the time about, you know, AI and happiness.
So the most popular question that I get these days is AI and happiness.
And the answer to that question is AI can make you happier, but it probably won't.
The reason is because when you use AI as an adjunct to the left side of your brain to answer
what and how to mechanical and technical questions, you can free up more time.
to spend in your relationships in real life.
But if you use it as an adjunct to the right side of your brain for love and happiness,
you will become more miserable because it doesn't work.
If you use AI as your therapist or your lover or your friend,
it will leave you feeling empty, depressed, and anxious.
That's the bottom line.
So the way that you need to, here's how to think about it,
get back to your question, is about asking deep questions.
Questions of meaning can't be asked to AI.
this is the test. If you can ask a question and put it into a Google search bar and get an answer that's
meaningful to you or that has significance to you, it's not a true meaning question of life. That's a left
side question, only left side questions. If you take a real, like, imagine this Cody. Why am I alive?
For what would I give my life? Ask Chad GPT that. You'll get hilarious stuff. You get stuff that's
like chat GPT is spitballing about why you would give your life. Well, many people say it's not meaningful
to you. And you know, it can pass the two ring test and kind of fool you a little bit, but not really.
So think about all the questions in your life that you just can't Google. Those are the meaning
questions. And the really big ones come in kind of three categories. This is the way to start looking
into the right, the deep right, to find the really deep meaning that we have in life. Number one is
why do things happen the way they do in my life? And there are lots of ways. Science, faith,
conspiracy theories. I mean, then why am I doing these things that I'm doing every day? Why am I doing
these things? That's your purpose. And this is really important for your philosophy, because one of the
great parts of how you talk about happiness is progress. We're built for progress. We're not built for
arrival. We're built for progress toward goals, right? But that requires understanding goals.
understanding direction, et cetera. And that's why am I doing what I'm doing? And the last one is,
why does my life matter into whom? Those are deep meaning questions. And so I encourage my students
and everybody at me to think deeply to get a mastermind around these types of questions,
because then the aperture starts opening. And then you start getting interested in these
right hemisphere behaviors, the things in your life that you do that don't have answers
that you can articulate, they don't have problems that you can actually solve.
Say, like your marriage, you can't solve that.
You can only live it.
And that's why you love your marriage.
Yeah, it's a great point.
You know, I've been thinking a lot about risk lately.
It comes up again and again on the podcast.
Because what I found in the people that we tried to help when it comes to building or
buying businesses is they really cannot progress without risk.
And there's a lot of people today that want to de-risk everything.
And I'm not so sure that a de-risk life is a good one.
And so I'm wondering, you know, what does the research tell us about the kind of risk you have to take to build a meaningful life?
Yeah.
The first way to actually improve your life is to turn uncertainty into risk.
Risk is where you can describe the possibilities.
You can assign probabilities and so you can manage contingencies.
That's the reason that everybody gets happier after they buy insurance.
because insurance does exactly that.
Insurance is a happiness business.
It feels like Brussels sprouts.
It's actually ice cream.
Nobody buys life insurance policy
that doesn't get happier when they do it.
And the reason is because they said, like,
I might die.
These actuaries, they have numbers on when I might die.
And if I do, my family's not left in poverty.
And so that turns it into risk.
And risk is way, way, way better.
And then the important, the next step
into actually making it into a really good part of your life,
a meaningful part of your life,
is actually to start reframing risk as adventure.
That's the important thing to do.
It's like, this is so, this is so exciting.
And, you know, thinking about, you know, what might happen and what the, you know,
what you do if these particular things happened and sometimes it's good and sometimes
it's bad.
Because a lot of things, for example, people start businesses with you.
I mean, this is what you're enabling entrepreneurship for people who wouldn't have
these opportunities, which is why it's so important what you're doing.
But what the risk really is is there's, there's a,
an upside and there's a downside. I mean, you might go broke and you might get rich and you might just
make a living and you might be doing something else in five years. And that adventure is sort of the
adventure of life because that's a model of really, really good living on how that works. And you need to
apply that same entrepreneurial mindset that goes from uncertainty to risk to adventure in every
part of your life. That's not just your business. It's not just opening laundromats or, you know,
running vending machines, the kinds of businesses that people actually wind up loving and that you
help people do, which is super important. It's also who you marry and where you live and whether you
get an education and how you raise your kids. All of those things go from uncertainty to risk to
adventure. And if you're living the adventurous lifestyle, then you're treating your life as a startup.
You're not treating your business as a startup. You're treating your life as a startup. And that's the right way to
That's so good. I had this, one of my favorite economists of all time, his name is Brian Westbury,
and he's had a company called First Trust I used to work at. And like, we took him down to Latin
America when I used to run a business down there. And he went down to Patagonia and went
rafting down a river and fishing. He's a big fisherman, kind of an older guy. And all of a sudden,
you know, Patagonia is pretty crazy weather. And so the weather kind of gets crazy. The storm clouds
roll in. And it's not looking so good. And so Brian's trying to communicate with the, you know,
driver at the boat and he's yelling at him in Spanish. Brian doesn't speak Spanish. And, and, you know,
Brian's like, are we going to drown? You know, it's freezing. This is glacial runoff. What are we doing?
And the boat captain looks back at Brian and kind of perfect English says, do you want to know the
difference between an adventure and a disaster? And Brian's like, what? And he says, attitude.
And Brian must have told this story 400 times. And every time he told it, I chuckled and I thought about
how sometimes, like, the fishermen, the coal miners, the farmers, they have the best one-liners
because it is so true.
Right.
Like, if you go broken business, will you die?
Well, probably not.
No.
You know?
And so what is really the difference?
Right.
Right.
But I like that categorization a lot.
It's really important.
And, you know, it's, I work a lot with my students on this because they're super afraid of
failure.
They're, they're, and it's funny because everybody has a death fear, by the way.
And your death fear is probably not your physical death.
Only 20% of people really have a significant fear of their physical death.
That's called thanatophobia.
It's that actual diagnosable malady.
But 80% of us don't have that.
But you still have a death fear, which is the threat to who you are in your own mind.
And if you're a striver, if you're an achiever, if you're a winner, you're going to be afraid of failure.
You just are.
And if you've never gotten to be in school, right?
And if you're super success addicted, and if you actually go through life, not as a human being,
but as a human doing, then fear of failure is going to haunt you. It's going to hunt you, as a matter of
fact. And those are the people that I've actually, that show up in my classes, because I teach MBA students
at Harvard. I mean, they're, they've never, like, there's no bees in their background, right? And so
the result of it is I have to make them, actually take them through an exercise on how to deal with
this on how to, such that they can actually live the adventure that is risk, because the adventure
that is risk requires that you take a serious chance on failure. Because otherwise, there's
no stakes. Otherwise, at six I win and have a dozen you lose. It's not real. And there's no real
upside of anything. So I have to take them through that. And it's actually a Buddhist death
meditation that I take them through. There's a there's a Theravada Buddhist monks, Thailand,
in Vietnam and Sri Lanka, they have something called the Maranasi meditation,
in which they'll contemplate pictures of corpses in various states of decay.
And it's a nine-step meditation.
So a body that has just died, a body that has just started to decay, a body where the skin
is bloated and blue, a body where the skin is peeling back.
At the end, it's just a bunch of bones or dust where the bones were.
And the monks stand in front of the pictures and say, that is me.
And they contemplate and say, that is me.
And only when they become familiar with the inevitability of their death,
can they fully be alive?
Death gives them life.
Failure gives you success.
And so familiarity with your own failure only gives you the possibility of success.
That's really what we're talking about.
So I take my students through a nine-part meditation on their own professional failure,
starting with, I just failed a class at Harvard.
I'm falling behind my classmates.
I'm not getting interviews.
I don't think I'm going to get the job that I want.
I don't think I'm going to get any job after I graduate.
I'm moving back in with mom.
And there's this one step where I always cry.
Step seven, where I think my parents feel sorry for me.
Brutable.
Oh, that's awful.
Because that's the worst for a success addict,
especially the very special, junior, very special boy, very special girl who really never got attention and affection
except when she got first cheer in the orchestra or she got it all straight a is in the report card.
And she learned that all love is earned.
Love isn't earned, love is a grace freely given.
But if your parents doing their best, they reward you for being special, then you'll go through life like that.
you will develop these pathologies and you will never be free. Wow. So in practice, have you done
the death meditation? Oh yeah. You've done it. Oh yeah, for sure. Did you cry on one of the steps?
No, I mean the death meditation on respect to success and failure. Well, both of them.
Yeah, never on the physical death's meditation because that one is like, that's not my problem in its way.
I'm sort of afraid of different things. I am horribly afraid of failure. I'm horribly naturally
afraid of failure. I'm afraid of not being loved. I'm afraid of losing my mind because my stock and
trade is the stuff that's going on inside my head. And I have a lot of early onset dimension in my family.
So these are the fears that I have. And so those are the things that I have to look straight into
where I have to design the Marinas Sati meditation. And everybody watching us, look, these are
slackers don't watch you. That's very true. This is the striber cast. People are amazing. Yeah, totally.
but that means that they have fears of their own sense of self, which probably will revolve around
their own performance. And that's the exercise that's work doing. It's hard for me still, but I still do
it. So do you ask yourself multiple questions then? You ask yourself nine questions kind of like
all the way down to almost you feel yourself crying about the thing that you might be most
scared about. Is that the process? It's not questions. It's putting myself in the position of these
things actually happening. Yeah. So you're kind of like visualizing it. Yeah.
You're visualizing the worst possible thing.
It's funny because the visualization exercises based on manifestation, all those goofy self-improvement techniques.
It's manifest something really beautiful.
No, no, no, no, no.
That's for amateurs.
Fine.
Do it if you want because that will change your behavior in a positive way.
It's not going to change the universe.
It's going to change you, which is how manifestation actually works, but also manifest the worst possible thing because you need to master that.
You need to master your fears.
You must.
And the only way that you can do that is through exposure.
If you're afraid of flying, you need to go see airplanes and then go get on an airplane.
So do you think most people actually meditate wrong?
Yeah.
I think, well, it's funny because I've talked about this.
I've worked for the last 12 years with the Dalai Lama.
And you and I've talked about this before.
And we have a close relationship.
He's been good to me and I love him for lots of reasons.
He's really helped my life in a lot of ways.
And one time he said something that was kind of negative about Americans who,
who meditate.
And I said,
Your Holiness, why did you say that?
Because he's not a negative person.
On the contrary, he's completely full of compassion and love.
He's a bodhisattva.
He has a Buddha nature.
It's extraordinary.
I've never met anybody like this.
And he said, no, the problem is that Westerners meditate
because they want the benefits of meditation.
And you only will get the benefits of meditation
when you stop trying to get the benefits of meditation.
And I said, tell me more.
He said, Americans, when they meditate,
is because they want to feel better.
and the goal of meditation is the rest of the world feeling better.
You meditate so the rest of the world can feel better.
You're meditating for them.
And that's a very metaphysical thing.
It's a very transcendent thing is the way that that works.
And that's a lot of how we do things wrong in general.
This is, you know, how people who start small businesses.
They do best when they're trying to lift up everybody and everything.
When something is motivated by love of others, it becomes transcendent.
and it becomes more successful.
It's the same point.
It's such a good point, actually.
It's literally, I was just thinking about this today.
Like, if you actually want to change your life,
stop trying so hard to change your life.
If you actually want to make a ton of money,
stop trying to make so much money.
Instead, like, try to go make somebody else money.
Yeah.
Like, that's the way you make money in business.
You're in my business.
Look, we're in the business of spreading ideas.
Yeah.
And we know tons of people.
You and I both know tons of,
you know more than people than I do
because you're so successful at influencing culture.
And you've been a pioneer.
in a lot of this, which is fantastic.
But you know a lot of people who really would like the level of popular, millions and millions
of followers on social media, and they want that.
The reason they can't get that to a certain, because we have a million ways to discern when
somebody is not doing it for love of others.
The motivation has to be other focused.
That's a sense of transcendence about what you're doing, which is a key element of success.
Yeah, it's so fascinating.
It's very timely.
I'm thinking about that right now with team, even.
Like David knows for this podcast, like, you know, when I'm thinking about who is, you know, it's crazy.
Somebody, one of our podcasts the other day was a million listens across platforms.
Another one was six million listens across platform platforms.
Yeah.
And that's including short form content and stuff, not like straight up listening to the whole podcast.
That'd be great.
We're not there yet.
Anyway.
There aren't that many that are getting those numbers.
But at that point, I basically thought, oh my God, that is, you know, if that's six million people listening or if it's,
six million hours. That is so many hours of somebody's life. This thing better be fucking fantastic.
Otherwise, what a travesty and we should shut it down. And so like every time somebody asks to be on the pod or like once or we've had to kill some episodes because they weren't good enough, I'm like, I know that sucks, but six million people are going to waste the most precious thing they have if this thing is bad.
And they trust you. They trust you to be a steward of their time and energy and attention and affection. That's what they're trusting you to do. And that's a big responsibility.
It's not like, hey, let the market decide.
I mean, you're a gatekeeper into their attention and energy.
And that's a covenant, actually.
That's actually one of the reasons why I started a newsletter is because I didn't want
just social posts that were there a second and then gone forever.
And it made me think about Beehive and why I think the best newsletter writers, I know,
have already switched to it because there is this difference between publishing and building.
You know, most platforms let you do the form.
Beehive is engineered for the latter for things that last and leave something behind.
You know, the analytics show you exactly what's resonating, engagement tiers, revenue attribution
by post, what's converting casual readers into paying subscribers.
You can stop guessing.
The ad network actually brings sponsors directly to you and just released on-demand ads,
which gives you access to countless ad opportunities.
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because in order to keep writing things that matter, you need to earn money.
That's why they have paid subscription boosts, referral programs, all native, all inside one dashboard,
all working while you write.
So if you're publishing a newsletter on a platform with thin analytics, limited monetization
and growth tools that are just an afterthought, you're not going to build something that lasts.
You're going to maintain something that decays at best.
Beehive newsletters actually grow 2.75x faster than the industry average.
And that infrastructure is what helps people write things that stand the test of time.
So if you want to switch to be hive today, like I do, because I use it, use code Cody 30 for 30% off your first three months at B-E-E-H-I-I-V.com slash Cody.
One of the things that I wanted to talk to you about that I've been obsessing on lately is like, so, you know, you know if you want to lose weight, you should probably eat less, work out more.
You know, if you want to make more money, you could maybe work a little bit harder, increase your skill stack.
Like, it's not that complicated in many ways. It may be hard, but it's like kind of simple.
What do you think is the biggest reason why? Or like, what is the biggest lie we tell ourselves that stops us from achieving the life that we want?
Yeah, there is a big lie. And that is that suffering is bad. That's the big lie. People are trying to eliminate and avoid suffering is what it comes down to.
And only when you understand that suffering is your teacher and suffering is sacred.
Now, they could be dysregulated.
But the truth of the matter is that it's a very interesting math about this that the Zen
Buddhists like to use in Japan.
Suffering equals your pain multiplied by the resistance to the pain.
Pain multiplied by resistance.
Now think about that, when we think back to our high school math, suffering is going to go
up when pain goes up or when resistance to it goes up.
You can make your suffering go down by trying to get rid of your pain, but it's much better if you get rid of your resistance.
That's a really important concept because, you know, when you're starting to open a business or you're going to college or your relationship is struggling, you know, you can try to avoid the pain somehow by working less and by sleeping in and by avoiding your partner.
That's pain avoidance.
Or you can lower your resistance by trying to understand it, to engage it, to learn from it and grow from it.
what it comes down to. The number one lie that holds people back is an unwillingness to suffer
because of a misunderstanding the nature of suffering. That's a super important thing. And we've
miscategorized all suffering as a malady. And if you go to campus counseling at my university
and you say, I'm sad and anxious, I'm sad and anxious, they're going to say, well, we got to fix
that. If you come to my office hours and say, I'm sad and anxious, I'm saying, well, you know what?
You're a student at Harvard. If you weren't sad and anxious, you need therapy. Because you're
doing a hard thing. Congratulations.
Now, it can be dysregulated.
There are many medical issues with this.
There's, you know, the, we know more and more about the neuromodulators involved in clinical depression and anxiety.
We understand that better.
But for the most part, suffering is part of life.
Negative emotions are the system that created in the limbic system of the brain that tell you that there's a threat.
And those threats are translated into negative emotions and they get your attention to you behave appropriately.
Negative experiences help you learn and grow. And that's just evidence that you're alive because, you're going to have, Cody, you're going to have a negative interaction with somebody today. And it might be somebody you work with and it might be somebody on the phone or it might be your husband or maybe all three. And that's how you learn and grow if you allow yourself.
Yeah, it's so good. Now, I want to talk about suffering in a different way. Do you think that high performers suffer more from a lack of meaning of life? And if so, why?
Yeah. And the answer is it really, it very much depends on that, but they often do. So many high
performers are driven in an unhealthy way. Now, it's not necessarily the case. This is, there's not a
necessity to be driven in the wrong kind of way to be a high performer. But it does mean that you have to,
every striver has to be alert, vigilant toward workaholism, success addiction, and kind of the,
the self-objectification that goes into that. So, and I know. I know.
a lot of people. And it really does start with the pathology we talked about a minute ago, where their
childhood is all about achievement. And they learn in their little brains, which are highly synaptically
plastic, that all love is earned. And so they're looking to earn love the rest of their life. And you have
to stop trying to earn love. That's a really, really big error in life. That's one of the big errors of
life, as a matter of fact. If you're trying to earn your partner's love, as a woman, most likely,
you're going to be trying to alter your appearance into your 70s. It's a big mistake. And if you're a
And you're going to be, you know, trying to get the admiration of your wife for worldly accomplishments to the extent that you're marginalizing her and not giving her the attention and energy and affection that she needs.
And this is why couples break up as they're trying to earn each other's love a lot of the time.
This is not the only reason they break up, but it's a big reason that couples break up and why workaholism destroys marriages for these reasons.
It's a really important thing.
And so I talk an awful lot about that.
But that's a really important thing for people to keep in mind because strivers,
success addicted individuals, they're driven by a pathology and they can't quit. You actually have to be a
well-balanced person to be a super-striver and a really happy person. And, you know, the truth of the matter is
that that's possibly a minority of strivers. I've met some who do it really, really well. And in my
research, I'm trying to be that guy. I think we all are. But it's hard. But it's hard because, you know,
It's like, when I'm weak, then I'm really afraid of failure and I'm really driven by worldly rewards as opposed to the rewards that matter.
And I'm trying to be special rather than happy.
That's really what all very successful, unhappy people have in common is they will expend their happiness in search of specialness.
So what do you do practically to stop that?
knowledge is power number one knowledge is power is really really important second is that the the
one barrier against that the one your bulwark against this is your relationships and there's
you know there's family relationships that really has a lot to do with your romantic partnership
it's just why it's so that's why marriage is the most important part of your startup the most
important thing that you do that's your most important acquisition it's true i drew that's really really
important. And then third is I strongly recommend that everybody watching us do spiritual work.
Because you need a relationship with the metaphysical. For me, I'm a Catholic. I mean,
it's like, which, you know, the Catholic church is like Starbucks. It's a franchise system. It's very
uniform. It's a really, really good way to get it done, right? For me, I'm not going to say that
my path is the only path for everybody. And I'm not actually talking about the metaphysical questions
of, you know, what's true. What's not true? I have views about that too. But, but, but,
But, you know, everybody needs to actually experience transcendence.
Every, you know, we need love.
That's what we need.
And if you're not, if you don't, if you feel like your love is earned and you go through
life like that, you're going to have a bitter existence.
And you need to experience the grace of pure love from people who love you for truly
actually love you for who you are.
That's the bulwark against these pathologies.
You know, if we were to take this about marriage a little bit, and we haven't
talking a lot about marriage lately. And I think it's for the same reason. I'm increasingly realizing,
you know, in business and life, none of it matters if you don't have somebody to love.
And marriage is such a beautiful challenge that I feel very privileged to be trying to live through,
not solved for. So what is the secret that you found to a happy relationship or marriage?
Yeah, it's a, there's sort of two levels to that. At the earthly level is deep friendship.
The secret to a happy marriage is deep friendship.
And that's one of the reasons that you find that there's sort of psychologists talk about romantic love in two phases, passionate and companionate.
And companionate love is the goal after three to five years in a relationship, which is like, I told that to one of my kids.
And he's like, dad, that's not hot.
I got a companionate love.
Not hot.
Like grandma and grandpa sitting on the porch in their rocking chairs, you know.
And which, by the way, isn't half bad.
Yeah.
But when you're young, it feels like, it sounds like giving up.
Yeah, it does.
And it turns out the companion love is pretty hot, right?
But the important thing is that the vehicular language of your marriage is deep friendship.
And one of the reasons that couples that are super in love and then a year later hate each other is because they never got to friendship.
They never culminated.
They never consummated their relationship in terms of the real consummation, which is the friendship.
And so that's the goal is how that works.
And there's a whole neurochemical process of bonding to each other in love.
And the last phase of which is a deep level of oxytocin release, which is the neuropeptide in the brain of bonding.
And that's the basis of your deep friendship.
I mean, it's the deep friendship that you have at the level, even with your children, with your parents, and certainly with your partner and with your closest friends.
And that's what you need at the deepest level with the person who knows you the best.
That's what it comes down to.
Then at the more metaphysical level with relationships that you find that the relationships that do the best and last the longest with the greatest amount of happiness is they feel divine.
And that's one of the reasons that the happiest marriage is, one of the characteristics is that the partners get more religious across the decades together.
They get more religious together, right?
And maybe they're Buddhists and maybe they're Catholics and maybe they're Jews, maybe there's something.
But they're getting more religious.
They're more interested in this because they have this sense, this divine.
fusion. You know, they say marriage is one flesh and people sort of think of that in sexual
context. That's the least of it. That's sort of the least intimate. The most intimate thing that you
could do with your partners pray together. Most partners, even religious partners, don't pray in front of each
other. It's too embarrassing. And the reason is because that opens up the right hemisphere of
their brains together. The fusion, one flesh is the fusion of the right hemispheres of their brain.
And that's when their relationship becomes like those old, you know, the nuclear subs where you couldn't launch the missiles until two guys had two keys that they put it in.
Yeah, I've seen those movies.
Yeah.
And that's what the divine nature of marriage feels like to the most successful couples is two keys, two keys to the divine.
You turn yours, I turn mine.
And our marriage has become an intent of God.
Wow.
That's so beautiful.
I mean, I think it was, who was it?
Was it, maybe it was Nietzsche, who said like marriage is one long conversation?
Yeah, that was Nietzsche, yeah.
Right?
And Nietzsche, by the way, he proposed to the same woman over and over and over again and
again and again and got shot down again and again.
Did he ever win?
No.
And she said no forever.
So really?
She was just using him.
Wow.
So it was one long singular conversation.
Yeah, it was just one long begging session for Nietzsche because he was whole,
hopelessly in love with this woman that he was in his social circle and hung out with. And she was
like a sophisticate and also a philosopher and really smart. And he kept, will you marry me?
No. Well, now will you marry me? No. And by the, you know, in his 40s, he was in an insane asylum.
Wow. Yeah. I mean, there were probably good reasons to not marry Nietzsche. Yeah, definitely,
having read most of his stuff. But there are these moments of brilliance. Maybe that's why we all
think that like tortured poets and philosophers and artists, they have like Bukowski, a crazy man.
Yeah. Depending on what I had you listen to him, you'd be like,
like, wow, that's one of your favorites?
I know.
But then you read some lines and they...
It's sublime.
It's sublime.
It's sublime.
The problem is that it's hard to live with those people a lot of the time.
Imagine living with Schopenhauer.
My theory of rational pessimism is like, oh, man, I'm just trying to buy Christmas presents here.
It's very, very true.
Yeah, I don't think nihilists or existentialists would probably be good companions either.
Not fun, yeah.
I was wondering, if somebody's listening right now, and maybe they're not in the relationship.
already. You know, they don't, they're like, okay, sounds great. Sign me up. I love all of that. But look at the
world out here. It seems impossible and I feel a little lost and, you know, all the things you hear.
Women these days are X. Men these days are Y. We kind of have this compete competition of the
sexes. Like what would you tell somebody? What could they practically do if they feel a bit
hopeless, but they want to find love? Live like the person you want to become and look for the
person that you want to be with for the rest of your life. That's what you do. I mean, the whole
problem is that we compromise with respect to who we are and we compromise with respect to the people
that we date and potentially mate with. That's the problem is what it comes down to, have standards,
and then go to the place where people have the same standards as you. That's one of the reasons
that dating apps, the dating apps are getting better as a matter of fact because some of them don't
have time in app as the goal. Some dating apps are getting better for its time in person is the
goal. And that's really good. That's what it comes down to. But the truth of the matter is that
that meeting in person is critically important around shared ideas and values.
So, you know, one of the things when people come to me in office hours and they say,
so how do I meet, you know, professor, you know, I want to audition for the role of husband,
you know, but where do I, where's the audition?
And I say, were you raised in a religion?
A lot of times it'll be like, yeah, but I don't practice it.
I don't care.
Go back.
I don't believe it.
I don't care.
That's not the point.
The point is not what you believe right now.
People get religion all wrong, by the way.
you have to, especially in the current generation, you have to feel something, and then you'll
believe something, and then you'll practice something. That's exactly backwards when it comes to
religion. First practice, then believe, and occasionally feel. That's how religion is supposed to work.
And so if you're looking for a goal of meeting somebody who's got conceivably values and aspirations
that are similar to yours, somebody with whom you want to have your joint startup with,
which, by the way, the best marriages are startups. They're not murder.
They're certainly not acquisitions or hostile takeovers.
The best marriages are startups.
And you want to go someplace where somebody has the same startup mentality as you, even if you're a little unsure about these underlying values.
That's perfectly fine.
That's a really important way to do it.
You know, it's fascinating because my husband and I have gotten more religious together over the years.
Good sign.
And when we go to church here in Austin, we go to two.
We go to Austin Ridge and Red Rocks.
And you can just tell on these people's faces.
They're like young, they're happy, they're curious.
I'm sure there's moments of depression and anxiety and whatever.
But I think faith does a really incredible job of pulling you out of one of the things you talk about a lot,
which is like interrupting the doom loop.
And so I have it here.
I liked one of the quotes in your book where you talk about,
if you find yourself stuck in the distractions of modern life while feeling bereft of deep meaning,
before doing anything else, you need to get unstuck to interrupt.
to interrupt the doom loop. That requires declaring your independence by rebelling against the
herd thinking that is creating the quiet desperation of millions, refusing to be just another statistic
in the scourge of depression and anxiety and defying the economic forces that productized
and monetize every moment of your attention. I'm kind of a libertarian.
What is, well, yeah, like to like, it's probably why I like you. What is the meaning of this
do in the loop. So we have absolutely been productized, you know, and in so many ways. I mean,
in so many ways that people don't quite realize, when you hate somebody for political reasons,
you're the product. You're somebody's product. Somebody's making money. Somebody's getting clicks.
Somebody's getting attention or just getting their jollies. When you hate your neighbor or your
sister-in-law because she votes differently than you, that's an example of productization
of actually what's happening to us. When you spent, when you fritter away three hours looking at YouTube
shorts, I got nothing.
against YouTube shorts. I have tons of YouTube shorts. But when you're frittering away your time
and not feeling good about it, the reason is because your brain has been captured by algorithms
is what it comes down to. Productization is a major problem because we're getting better and
better and better at it. Before you had to go to a casino and get stuck behind a slot machine.
It's like, I shouldn't have done 23 hours on the slot machine or something. But now it's as close
as the screen in your pocket when the dopaminergic pathways have been really captured by the way
that these technologies work when we're getting better and better at eliminating boredom because people
hate boredom, but boredom is incredibly important for finding the meaning of your life. And we're doing
it because that's actually putting money in people's pockets and popularity for people who just want
your, they crave your attention, they feed off your attention. The first step in that is not just
going to a detox program. The first step is what every addict does, which is they say, enough,
I'm tired of being subjugated to this.
You know, you and I know a lot of people who are in recovery.
And one of the things that, what was the day when you said, I'm not going to, I'm mad as hell and I'm not going to take it anymore.
I'm not going to put up with this anymore.
I'm being subjugated to this addiction.
I'm being used by this dealer.
And I'm part of a culture that doesn't love me.
And I'm not going to do it anymore.
So the first point is rebellion, is the spirit of the revolution.
is what it comes down to. It's so interesting because I've worked with college students forever
and I say, get rid of your social media account and see how that feels. And it's like, I feel
alive, not just because I'm not stuck on the social media, but because I'm a walking middle finger
toward the, I'm standing up to the man is how they feel. That's a very beautiful thing. So I'm a
whole section in this book about how to be a rebel. And it really gets back to my, I have a
favorite philosopher, which is Ralph Waldo Emerson. And there's one essay that he wrote that everybody
watching us needs to read is called self-reliance. And you can find it in 100 places on the internet,
probably a million places on the internet. And self-reliance is this declaration of independence
on how you can be an independent person, how you cannot be a sheep. And that's the first step
at actually taking back your autonomy in a world that doesn't want you to be independent.
You know, I was thinking about it today. One of the, the woman who is now the youngest billionaire
in the world. Who's that? Who's that? Who, one of the first.
founders of a company called Kalshi. K-A-L-S-H-I. I'm not sure how to pronounce it.
And I pretty much have a point of never talking badly about entrepreneurs because I think it's an
incredibly hard game. And anybody building is better than somebody burning it down. And so,
like, I don't mean this in a disrespectful way, but it is a, it is a predictions market,
which is a fancy way of saying what? Gambling. And,
I've heard of this. I've heard about this. I've just.
So you can bet on anything.
You can bet on anything. It's offshore, right?
I'm not even sure if it has. I don't know the legal ramifications.
But I know that it was invested in by all the big players.
And we have a venture capital fund.
And I just think that we have to be more of a society that doesn't hate each other.
Yeah.
Like if you're that talented where you can build a billion dollar business, should we be building it on gambling?
You know, should you be going and building the next dating app that's really?
vying for screen time, the next social media app that's vying for more attention? Or should we actually,
you know, be pushing back against this idea of us becoming the, you know, milk cow sort of
proverbially plugged in to the milk machine? And so I thought this doom loop was so important
because the epidemic of our attention seems to be awful. And the research that you have
even shocked me. Like just how bad do you think this epidemic of phone addiction is? And
It's worse.
The average person checks their phone 205 times a day.
Fuck me.
The average kid in America under 12 spends between four and seven minutes a day in nature, between four and seven hours a day on screens.
Wow.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, it's insane.
And here's basically what it comes down to.
If this is anybody watching us, you're living in the Matrix.
You're living in a simulation.
a simulation of a real life
where you're simulating love,
maybe you're simulating sex,
you're simulating progress with respect to games,
you're simulating friendship on social media,
you're simulating interaction at work on your Zoom screen
if this is how you're doing your job.
And there's a lot you can simulate,
but the one thing you can't simulate is the meaning of your life.
You can't simulate it.
You can pass the touring test,
so it feels like it.
You have the feeling of knowing,
but your brain, your brain won't.
Your brain says no, and you'll wonder.
You know, I have so many friends and I need more friends and you'll binge on the simulation
and get more depressed and more anxious all along the way.
So the whole point is kind of like in that famous movie The Matrix, where Keanu Reeves is Neo.
And he says, I'm going to, with a small band of rebels, they break out of the matrix and try to
destroy the machine, not because it's not pleasant, on the contrary.
It's the year 2199, everybody thinks it's 1999 because they're living in these pods and having
their energy sapped by an artificial intelligence. It came true. The matrix came true, and a lot of
people watching us are in it. And you've got to break out of the matrix if you're going to live
a real life, because only a real life is a life that has real meaning. It's funny because, you know,
people say, so, you know, how is it so different in the past? Here's the difference. Your grandparents,
the Sanchez. Where did they live? Your grandparents live?
Well, they moved here and lived in...
Texas. Oh, no, that's wrong. I'm in Texas now. In Arizona. So they moved to Miami, a little
mining town. They were miners from Spain. Okay. Minors from Spain. And Sanchez means that they were
from somewhere from the Castilian heartland. That's right. Yeah. And that's a great
Castilian. That's a venerable Castilian surname. Well, thanks. And there's one thing that
Grandpa Sanchez never said.
Honey, I had a panic attack behind the mule today.
Because it wasn't a thing.
Because the hypothelamic pituitary axis, adrenal axis, the HPA axis, was not going to be suddenly lit up by the vicissitudes of his life.
He was just like working the mind.
Life was pretty boring and it had a lot of things that weren't great about it.
but his brain was working the way it was supposed to work.
The left side was doing how and what and the right side was doing why.
And that's why he didn't have the problem.
That's why there was no Matrix.
Okay.
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reverse it. Fascinating. Yeah, I mean, we just went back there not too long ago, too. It's called Miami or Globe,
Arizona. And, you know, it was fascinating watching what that town looked like. One is they were
actually miners, they're copper miners. And so he would go and show me kind of what I think is called
a slag pile, which is sort of all the runoff from the copper mine. And at the end of the slag pile,
was a little river that ran through it and a bunch of trees where they would collect
walnuts that they ate from Arizona, which is not really a great idea to collect and
eat walnuts and river water at the end of a slag pile from a copper mine, which is like...
A little heavy metal in that?
Yeah. And so a lot of him and his family got cancer because, you know, it was spread everywhere.
And at the end, each day at the end of the day, they had a light show. But the light show was actually
just that the runoff was actually, you know, it had some like whatever component in it that
would make it light up. And so they wanted you to go inside. They'd do a siren. Well, they thought
that was sort of the announcement of the light show, but really you were supposed to go inside
and sort of not be there for this portion of it. Not be exposed to the radiation. Exactly.
And so anyway, but when I went back and saw with him where he grew up, which was kind of a little shack
on the side of the hill, and where he used to get the tortillas, which was in another little shack on a
side of the hill. What was fascinating to me is what you said. He never once said life was really hard.
It was really difficult. We were barely scraping by. But when I looked at that place,
I thought, holy hell. You know, somebody inhabited it. Somebody lived there. And yet it was funny. He did
this survey with me before he kind of now he has a dimension, so he's not quite with us.
But before he really fell prey to that, we did a little happiness survey.
And the happiness, it was something silly, like I was looking up, I had done one online on
accident and it had told me you have ADHD and you should get pills. And I thought, this
is hysterical. I seem pretty fine. Like, maybe I'm distracted, but I like, don't think I need
pills for it. Life's pretty good. So we're going to skip that. I think I've done okay.
And so I gave it to him and my grandma and a few other things. And they scored like two to
three levels higher than my cousins. And my cousins, which were his, in happiness.
In happiness. My cousins are a little bit younger than me and were, you know, grew up quite well. You know, cars when they hit 16, college degrees, all of the things. And so I thought a bit about that. And, you know, your research is fascinating because they had everything at their fingertips, every game, every, you know, activity. And my grandpa was probably bored a lot. And you talk about this idea that boredom is actually
critical for meaning and maybe happiness. Can you talk about that a little bit? Yeah, so there's
research. There's great research on boredom. And it's absolutely true. Here's the,
here's the thing to keep in mind. Your grandfather, no doubt, was bored a lot. But he would never,
but you've never heard him say, you know the problem with growing up in the shack? It was boring.
He never said that his childhood was boring. But your cousins, they feel bored a lot,
even though they have every device in the world to eliminate their boredom. That's a weird thing when you
think about it is the more we try to eliminate our boredom, the more boring our life gets.
And the reason is because the things that we're actually doing to eliminate the normal
boredom in life, what it gives us is a pathological kind of boredom. That's, you know, when you're
scrolling social media, that's unbelievably boring. Your brain isn't working right. Your brain,
it's painful and stressful for you to be doing that. Whereas when you're actually bored,
like sitting on the train or in the car and looking out the window of the car, then you're
what happens is your brain starts to use a set of structures called the default mode network.
The default mode network is the way your brain is supposed to work. And one of the big things
that you think about is the meaning of your life. You start to consider the meaning of your life.
That's why proper boredom is one of the protocols for finding more meaning in your life.
That's why you need time. That's one of the things that I recommend, for example, is work out
without devices, work out without headphones. Now, people are listening going, what? I can't do that.
But why you're distracting yourself from because you think your workout is boring.
That's the point.
You know, everybody watching us, they have their best ideas in the shower, right?
Why?
Because your phone's not in there.
That's why.
And what happens is you get in the shower and it's kind of warm and you're kind of, and then your default mode network goes, and it kind of turns on a little bit.
And you have these weird thoughts that creative thoughts and linked up with different things that have happened.
And you say, oh, right, do that in the gym.
Or take an hour long shower if you want, right?
If that's your thing, you'll look kind of wrinkly.
But, you know, really clean.
But commute without your, without even the radio, commute, like in silence.
And have these periods of proper boredom, of appropriate bored.
It's funny because it's not comfortable.
We don't like it.
We naturally have an aversion to it.
And my colleague, Dan Gilbert at Harvard, he's at the psychology department.
He's a visionary psychologist.
He's done these boredom experiments where they, have you heard about these experiments?
Only one because of you.
Yeah, yeah.
So they bring these call the students into the lab because they'll do anything for 20 bucks.
And they have to sit in a room alone with nothing on the walls and nothing to do and nothing to look out for 15 minutes.
They can only do one thing.
They have a key fob.
And if they press the button on the key fob, they self-administer a painful electric shock.
That's all they can do.
It's like boredom or a shock.
So a quarter of the women's shock.
themselves and two-thirds of the dudes.
Wow.
Because men and women, right?
Two-thirds of the guys would prefer to shock themselves painfully.
One guy shocked himself 190 times in 15 minutes had to be thrown out of the experiment
for being a sick and twisted freak.
So it's like, that's not what we're looking for, sir.
He's going to win in life.
Or, who knows?
That guy's going to be in jail.
But this is a really important.
So we have an aversion to boredom, but we need the right kind of boredom. And if we actually
use our devices to distract ourselves, we get the wrong kind of boredom and no meaning, no growth,
and we get the pathologies that we're talking about. You know, everybody says things like
boredom is good and don't be so distracted. Right. But I think the fascinating part about your
research is once you start to practice it and do it. So I hope, you know, if you're listening,
you attempt to do one thing, like go to the gym and not use devices, which quite honestly, I thought that sounds awful and I like Arthur a lot, but I'm not going to do that.
Try it one day a week.
Well, I started doing it about six months ago.
And the reason why, this is like a little TMI, but apparently it's for a lot of women and like modern day humans, we have rib flares.
Have you heard about this?
Uh-uh.
So essentially, because we have one, we do this a lot, so we're sitting a lot, and we're short breathers.
We don't take long, deep breaths.
We're like kind of anxious and end up breathing not through our whole diaphragm.
And so because of this, all of this kind of gets like compressed.
And then our ribs kind of like flare out because we're not breathing properly.
Oh, interesting.
And so once you breathe properly, you kind of reframe your ribs and you're stacked,
as opposed to like a lot of women are kind of flared out.
And so anyway, I got a trainer.
And the trainer started helping me think about how to work out.
And basically what she said is that she's,
sees most of the injuries that go wrong and working out are because people have headphones in. They're
not paying attention to what they're doing. And the reason that working out is good in a lot of
different ways, like somatic regulation. And it's that our body actually needs to release some of
these stress hormones. Like animals shake like this, right? And she goes, so when working out,
we're actually not releasing it. We're like doing a movement without any muscle mind connection
actually at all, and we've lost a lot of body awareness.
And she goes, half the reason women come to her today, her specialty is getting them to recognize when a muscle is or is not firing.
Which is fascinating.
If you think about it, we're so out of touch with our bodies that we don't even know if one part of it is functioning or not.
Because we're completely distracted nonstop.
And so now that I start working out, and I do not listen to headphones, I don't listen to anything in the gym now, except if I'm on like a run or the bike or something, I might.
my body's completely changed.
My composition has changed.
I'm not working out harder.
I'm not lifting more.
I'm not doing anything differently except breathing right and paying attention.
Has it affecting your mood management?
Oh, completely different.
It's completely different.
And I don't hate going to the gym.
Actually, it's counterintuitive.
You would think, no, no, no, working out is terrible.
You're going to hate it.
It hurts.
And it'd be better if I could distract myself with the podcast.
That'd be fine.
But actually, what has happened is the complete opposite to me.
No, and that's the paradox of all these things.
You know, the more that you try to wipe out your boredom, the more bored you get.
And see, it's one of the things that, you know, people in podcasts are great.
You have one, I have one, you know, and there's a lot of information.
And it's really provided a learning opportunity for people who wouldn't learn things otherwise.
You know, I have a kid who doesn't like to read, for example.
He knows everything in the world because of the internet.
That's terrific.
But the truth is when you're using it to distract yourself,
will become more bored. And what you'll find, how do you know this? You'll know this because you're like,
I don't know what to listen to in the gym. These podcasts that I have are all so boring. Now, if you actually
listen to the podcast on purpose to learn something, it wouldn't be boring. But when you're using
it to distract yourself, it's unbelievably boring. Isn't that ironic? And that's because our boredom
is all screwed up. It's all upside down. We need to be bored more like your grandpa.
Yeah. I want to end on this.
you speak a lot about resume achievements and eulogy achievements.
And one, I guess I want to start with, you encourage people to quit soul-sucking jobs
and that there's a telltale sign that someone is lying to themselves about why they're staying.
And I think some of it has to do with this resume versus eulogy.
Can you tell us first, what is a resume or a eulogy achievement?
and then why do people stay in soul-sucking jobs?
So resume versus eulogy virtues, this is a term that was originated by David Brooks, my friend,
no relation to me, but an old friend of mine who he writes for the New York Times.
And he wrote a book called The Road to Character.
And in The Road to Character, he talks about your resume virtues, which is what you do to be more
impressive to people while you're alive, and your eulogy virtues, which is what you'd want
people to say at your funeral. And he suggests that people actually write their eulogies.
Not the eulogy that you think you're going to get, but the one that you want to get.
And that does not include had five million lifetime miles on Delta. That's not, you know,
you don't want your kids saying that because that means your kid didn't have a relationship
with you is what it comes down to. If somebody's listing your professional achievements at your
funeral, it means they didn't really know you and they weren't close to you. And that's a really
important thing. So the eulogy achievements and virtues are all about love and relationships. That's
really what they're about. And that requires that you actually think beyond the world's rewards.
The world's rewards are money, power, pleasure, and fame. Those are the four. Those are the four
things that you're always trying to get. But those are only, if you're going to be happy,
intermediate goals. They're instrumental goals. What you really want to get to is faith, family,
friendship, and meaning through what you do to earn your daily bread.
Faith, family, friends, and meaningful work.
Those are the ultimate goals, not the intermediate goals.
Now, you can be happy with tons of money.
I think it's great that people go to work and start businesses and make a fortune.
That's phenomenal.
But if that's your primary goal, then you're going to suffer.
You're going to have trouble.
And fame, by the way, is the worst because fame is the only one of the goals that you can only ever be happy in spite of.
And you have to, so most people who get famous, they become less happy because of the fame.
which is, but everybody wants it for evolutionary reasons.
Okay, so that's the whole point to keep in mind.
Your eulogy virtues are the things that your ultimate goals,
your resume virtues are your instrumental goals.
Nothing wrong with them, but those are not your ultimate stopping points.
And that's why people actually stay in jobs that they actually hate,
because they think they're going to be happy with the resume virtues.
They think you're going to be happy.
So it's like, yeah, but I don't like this, but I'm going to make a lot of money.
And when I have a lot of money, I'm going to be happier.
Why?
well, I'll be able to do more stuff.
I'll have more freedom in my life.
I'll have the house that I always wanted.
Deep down, it's I'm going to be more lovable.
I'm going to be a more lovable individual
because I have a lot more dollars in my banking account,
which is complete insanity.
And people don't actually think to the end of it
is the way that that worked.
And I've seen this a million times.
I had a friend, great friend,
you know, because I've been privileged
to work with some of the most successful people in the world
in my career.
You know, I teach at HBS, right?
And, you know, he's talk.
I asked him, because all often, when you just study happiness, people treat you like a psychiatrist.
I bet.
And I said, what was the biggest misapprehension that you had about getting rich?
Because he grew up, Lornell class, and he wound up with billions of dollars.
It's a great American success story.
I said, what is the biggest mistake that you made?
What did you think it was going to be like that it wasn't like?
And he thought about it.
And he said, I thought if I got really rich that my wife would love me.
and I look at his hand and there's no ring.
And I said so.
And he said, she didn't.
That's an example.
The eulogy virtue is of glowing.
It's the description of the relationship of your marriage by your widow.
And the resume virtue is the money that you made along the way.
and it was all about his resume virtues.
And the reason he did what he did,
even though he didn't really...
It's funny because, you know,
Scott Galloway has this really funny line.
He says that you always hear
in your college graduation,
do what you love and you'll never work a day in your life.
And the speech is always being given by a donor
who started an aluminum smelting company.
That is true.
And but that's the problem, right?
And that's why people who are 22 years old,
they'll be like, yeah, if I could have that
be filthy rich, like the aluminum smelter guy, then I would automatically be happy. And here's the
truth that I tell my students. And this makes them panic, by the way. I say, Mother Nature tells you
that if you're successful in worldly terms, happiness will come automatically. Here's the truth.
You need to shoot for happiness and then you will be successful enough. Now they panic because of one
word, enough. Because enough isn't enough. Because there's never enough. Because there's never enough.
And that's the great goal in life.
It's having enough love in your life that there is enough stuff.
That's the goal.
It's so good.
I think where I want to end is this.
This book is, first of all, it's incredible.
I've read every one of your books by now.
Thank you.
We have multiple times.
Well, thank you for writing them.
It's a miserable job writing a book.
I know this one took you five years.
I know.
This one took me five years because it's the meaning of life.
We were joking beforehand about, like, I was like, thank God, you know, you're not 20 anymore.
with, you know, very, very handsome gentlemen, but like, you know, not 20.
Age adjusted.
Well, somebody actually was on the stage the other day with a man by the name of Billy Parks, who's amazing.
And he goes, I looked at my photo the other day and I thought, that's a distinguished older gentleman.
And I thought, that's a great, I like that.
I know.
Well, what happens is every guy, I'm 61.
I'm 31 in my head.
And then I look in the mirror and go, blah.
For women, we stay at 24.
So it's like, it's only worse for us.
But, you know, this book is so beautiful because I think a lot of times when, first of all, when you're younger, you don't fucking understand any of this. And it sounds ridiculous. And you're like, shut up. I'll figure it out after I make the money. And I get the girl and I get the abs and whatever. And so like maybe if any of this breaks through to a younger version of me or you today, what a blessing. And second, you know, I love that it comes from somebody with life experience. I was telling you last time I saw you, like you had already had three life transitions. And that have probably been, you know, I don't know.
maybe eight or nine years since I've followed you and only four or so since I've actually
known you or three. And so you've experienced all of these things, not only having researched
them, but having experienced them. And like, I think it's beautiful because my joke is always
like, I'd love to have the confidence of a 25 year old life coach. And I just don't because I just
don't think that's comical at that point. And so I'm glad you wrote it. And so I guess what I want
to give you is I have all these things we can end with. But if you got to look at,
talk to this person today that you're trying to reach with this book. Who are you trying to
reach? And like, what do you want them to hear from our conversation today and this book of
yours? I'm speaking to the person who has everything and feels nothing. The person who's a
striver, who's done everything right, who's played by the rules, made some mistakes, but has been
playing by the rules that has been promised everything and doesn't feel what they thought they would
feel, that life is busy, but feels empty. And they don't know what's happening. And they're starting
to wonder, is this all there is? Is this it? Am I going to be chasing my tail for the rest of my life?
Is this all going in circles? Is it all nonsense? Or maybe do I just have to grind a little harder?
Maybe I'll feel that thing if I have another million Instagram followers. Maybe I wrote this book to say that
there is an answer to that. There's an answer that's biological, because psychology is biology. It's not
your fault. It's the simulation that you've been thrust into. That's number one. And number two,
the answer is right there. You can break out. I mean, this book has the six ways to break out of
the simulation. The six things that you can actually do that look an awful lot like Grandpa Sanchez's
life, but that are extraordinary today, that are rebellious today. And to every, and to
everybody who's 28 years old starting to despair, you don't have to. There is a solution.
There's an absolute solution, and I'm completely convinced that it can work for every single
person watching us. Your life has meaning, and you can find it. Arthur Brooks. Thank you so much.
Thank you, Cuddy.
