Cautionary Tales with Tim Harford - Cautionary Tales Presents The Dream
Episode Date: November 6, 2023On The Dream, host Jane Marie gets to know the life coaches and gurus who claim they know the secret to living our best lives. Is it all in our mindset? Or our privilege? Or are we all under a spell? ...Tim Harford is joined by Jane Marie to talk about who coaching works least well for. Turns out it’s the exact people who could benefit most from it, according to the industry. Dr. Sherman James and Dr. Arline Geronimus discuss the downsides of positive thinking, bootstrapping, and mindset culture. For some people, striving has negative impacts on health and happiness.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Pushing in.
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And I think it was, it was the fear is not out of sadness, not out of being mad.
It's terrifying.
From the team that brought you South Lake,
this is a six-part podcast series about faith, power, and what it means to protect children in an American suburb.
This was a kind of sleeping giant.
From NBC News Studios, this is Great Vine.
Listen now, wherever you get your podcasts.
Hello, today I'd like to bring you a cautionary tale
from one of the other podcasts in the pushkin industry's
family. It's called The Dream.
And it's a co-production with Little Everywhere.
The host of the dream, Jane Marie, is with me now. Welcome to Corsany Tales, Jane.
Hi, Tim. Thanks for having me.
Oh, it's my pleasure. I've really been enjoying listening to some of the back catalog of The Dream.
We're into the third season. Your previous seasons looked at the world of wellness
and pyramid schemes, very interesting
from a point of view, of portion of the details. So before we talk about the current season,
what were you trying to do with those earlier episodes?
Some of my favorite stories in radio and podcasting are about things that are right in front of
your face that you just don't actually know what's happening.
Multilobal marketing has been part of my life
since I was a baby.
My grandmother's sold Mary Kaye and Tupperware
and Avaan and now we know their pyramid schemes,
but when I was a kid, it was just ladies getting together
and having fun.
When you say multi-level marketing,
you're not just selling whatever makeup.
You're selling the idea of being a makeup selling agent.
You're selling the American dream,
you're selling financial freedom,
you're selling a small business.
You're selling the dream, the hence the name of the podcast,
the dream, yeah.
And the book, I wrote a book,
it's coming out in March called,
selling the dream about all this stuff
You heard it here first guys
I
Like looking into worlds where we think we know it's going on and and we really don't so you're you're exploring in these three seasons
You're exploring three different manifestations of the American dream. That's right. Yeah, and so it is it partly that the system isn't delivering and so people reach for ever more implausible workarounds?
Absolutely.
And what all of them have in common is kind of a quick fix, right?
So with multi-level marketing, it's all you need is a hundred bucks
and you don't even need a high school diploma
and you can run an empire if you want to with wellness.
You don't need to do chemo, just take this pill, right?
This is, it's, or rub this essential oil on your body.
And with life coaching, you don't really need a therapist,
you don't need antidepressants, we don't need infrastructure
for our healthcare or mental healthcare.
You just need a life coach, you need someone
who's calling themselves a life coach.
And then you could also be a life coach if you want.
The multi level marketing comes back in, it's you can't quite keep that idea down.
So you just need a life coach.
That brings us to season three, the current season of the dream.
Why did that strike you as a good topic?
Because I think it's perhaps less well known than the wellness industry, you know,
a goop, but it's less well known than pyramid schemes.
So why life coaching?
It is so embedded in both of those worlds that it felt like the most natural next thing to explore.
With multiple marketing, a lot of the companies offer coaching services as another
enticement for staying in the scheme. After you spend a few years and realize you're not going
to make any money, you just need to pay for a coach. Exactly. And usually that person works for
the multiple marketing company. And we actually speak to someone who started out in multi-level marketing. And it was a wellness brand.
And she then got sucked into a coaching cult.
Because I think what coaching does is it really drills down
on the idea that all success and failure
is upon the individual.
The multi-level marketing company really
doesn't matter what their products are like
as long as you're working as hard as you possibly can to sell them.
There's no fault within the company for your failure.
It's all about your attitude and your work ethic.
With wellness products, it's not really about whether the product has any scientific efficacy
or will actually cure your ailments, but it's about what you believe, whether you are fully invested and have the
right attitude.
So a lot of what we looked at this season was this mindset junk.
I think it's junk.
About success comes to those with the right way of looking at things in the right mindset.
The hardest workers should reap the biggest rewards, all that stuff.
That was just very curious to me. It's very interesting because I guess what makes it so seductive is in part that
it's adjacent to something perfectly reasonable. That's right. Yeah. So let's talk
about the episode that you've picked is about hard work. So why did you want to
share that with C cautionary tale listeners?
In reporting this season about life coaches, a lot of them are well-intentioned and the
results you can get from them are great, but I just kept having this feeling as we were
reporting that there's got to be someone that this doesn't work for, and in fact, I felt
like the kind of toxic positivity within the coaching world.
I don't know, there was something icky about it,
like encouraging this bootstrap mentality that we're talking about
and rugged individualism and just think and grow rich.
Think your way out of your station in life.
That can't work for everybody,
because there are systemic issues that keep certain populations
in a struggle and no amount of individual effort will
change those systems. I was right, sadly. There happens to be many populations, mostly people of
color, mostly people who are poor, for whom this sort of striving is not only unhelpful, you know, doesn't work, but it can be very detrimental
to one's health and longevity. So we found this professor, Dr. Sherman James and another
professor, Arlene Geronimus, who are in North Carolina and Michigan, respectively, and
they do research into populations where striving, as Arlene calls it weathering,
you know, really just working your butt off and trying to improve your life,
can lead to all kinds of health complications if you're in a population where
the entire system is already built to like not let you succeed no matter how hard you're working.
Yes, I love the fact that I don't that I have too many spoilers for the episode, but I love the fact that
the episode features its own cautionary tale, which is the story of John Henry, the steel
worker, but one of the researchers that you talked to has developed a John Henry scale
of whether people have tendencies to just be absolutely determined and to work
and to work and to work. And we're told that that kind of determination, that persistence,
that grit, that book wasn't that grit, that's the secret to success. And well, it doesn't
necessarily work out like that as we find out.
Yeah, it's not necessarily good for you to try to beat the machine. But why
do people strive so hard when both the evidence and kind of common sense says, you can push
it too far, you can hurt yourself? Well, in America, we're trained up from birth
to believe that that's how it works. It's a delusion, it's a mass delusion. But that we live somewhere where the hardest workers,
the people with the most grit, as you say,
the people who only get six hours of sleep at night.
The most industrious individual will somehow not only
reap unimaginable riches in this life,
but probably also get into heaven.
And that's, I mean, I'm talking from kindergarten, you're told that story, right?
Never mind the fact that all the people that they bring up as examples of folks who that's
worked for are mostly dead white guys, but it's a way for these big systems and giant
corporations to shirk the responsibility of taking care of each other by saying, you
know, if you just had the right attitude and worked a little bit harder, you wouldn't
have anything to complain about.
Yeah.
Is there a way to break out of that vicious cycle?
Yeah, revolution man.
No, I don't know.
That's a thing.
I think about all the time.
Like, what am I really saying here?
We're just humble podcasters.
Yeah.
I don't know.
I've gotten some pushback from people saying,
well, you know, it's nice to criticize the system,
but that doesn't help me right now.
And that's what I wish changed is like,
I don't really care about right now.
Like, I'm 45.
I'm running out of time.
Like, nothing really that amazing is going to happen
in my life.
But I would hope that we change the system for my grandkids.
You know, I hope that by the time 100 years from now, they have different opportunities.
I get really sad every once in a while thinking about sexism.
I was told as a little girl in the 70s, 80s, that's going to get fixed.
And then I'm now at my age and I go, ah, the pay gap is still real, man,
you know, like this is all still a problem.
And I get really sad thinking about my daughter because we didn't fix it in time for her.
She's 10 years old now.
I'll give you personal absolution for not fixing capitalism in a single podcast.
I think it's okay to point to the problem and to tell these vivid stories about this problem. Tim, I'm going to keep trying.
It's fun to be mad about it.
And it's an amazing, amazing story, amazing listen.
So thank you so much for joining us, Jim, Marie.
Thanks, Tim.
And before we listen to the latest episode of The Dream,
I should point out that people can hear the dream wherever they get their podcasts.
It is a production of pushkin Industries and little everywhere.
Thanks again for joining us and loyal listeners. You've been waiting. Here it is.
Striving is bad for your health.
Pushkin.
Have you ever heard the legend of John Henry?
Before I did the interview you're about to hear, the best recollection I had of the
story came from a Disney short I saw like 20 years ago.
In that cartoon version for Kids, it's a story about the ultimate can-do man, a man
with supernatural grit and determination.
His story was first shared as a folktale among African Americans in the late 1800s, and
then it became a song performed by black folks, and then white folk singers about the magnificence
of the steel-driving man, that's the human precursor to a jackhammer or pneumatic drill.
For over a century, it's been upheld as a story emblematic of the American dream.
Work hard enough and you shall overcome. Have the right mindset and the rest will fall into place.
Except that's not what happens in the end of the legend of John Henry, not
even close. John Henry's life doesn't get better, no. The ending of the legend of John
Henry is totally perplexing. So much so that scholars have argued about its meaning
for almost a hundred years. One of those scholars, a retired Southern
black professor, Dr. Sherman James, used the story to come
up with a hypothesis about why putting your mind to something and trying your very, very
hardest isn't necessarily a good thing for any of us.
Any of us, not just the person driving the steel.
Here's how Dr. Sherman James 1870s, John Henry and uneducated African-American
was working as part of a work gang, probably a group of convict laborers.
And so one day, John Henry, who was a puter to be the you know, the best steel driver that the world had ever known, was challenged by his work
boss to compete against a newly invented machine,
mechanical steam drill, and he rose to the challenge,
arguing that a man was nothing but a man, but a man was certainly
better than a machine, and so this epic battle, man,
and Ginks machine ensued.
And after a long, long confrontation with the machine,
John Henry won, but he dropped dead after his victory from complete mental and physical exhaustion.
And what was that legend meant to teach us at the or when it was created?
Yeah, that's that's a great question.
It's probably debatable as to what the legend actually
signifies.
The earliest work on the meaning of the legend
was by an anthropologist by the name of Guy Johnson,
who actually went to the area where this legendary contest
was supposed to have taken place, Newtowcott, West Virginia.
And so he interviewed a number of black folks.
And he came away with the idea that John Henry may not have
actually been a real person. But that really didn't matter.
He is what he wrote in his book, John Henry,
Tracking Don Negro Legend, first published in 1929. The question of whether the John Henry Legend
rests on a factual basis is, after all, not of much significance. No matter which way it is answered,
there remains the fact that the legend itself is a reality,
a living functioning thing in the folk life of the Negro. So the legend had this large meaning
in the lives of working class African-Americans who felt that it sort of signified the triumph of the spirit of
like people. So it was standing up to power and refusing to back down and
winning even at a very high cost. Now in 2006, historian Scott Nelson wrote this really interesting book, Still Driving Man,
the untold story of John Henry.
And it's a wonderful piece of historical research.
Scott Nelson concluded, after extensive archival research, that John Henry was probably a real
person.
And not necessarily a freed slave.
Maybe he was born in New Jersey
and he worked his way south shortly after the Civil War,
looking for job opportunities.
And he got caught up in the black codes,
but actually he was accused of petty larceny and was tried and convicted and thrown into
jail, a very long prison term, and Wanda working as part of a working on the Chesapeake
Ohio railroad, and then was exposed to all of the toxic dust that men who carved out tunnels and mountains that were exposed to,
and he probably died of what we might call coal miners' disease. So, in a sense then,
he was a legendary engineer, was a victim of sort of the first wave of mass incarceration of black people. So Scott Nelson concluded that the meaning
of the story for everyday black folks,
it was like a cautionary tale.
Don't let this happen to you.
Run away as fast as you can.
Don't get caught up in this system.
So we have these, I'm gonna say competing versions
of what the legend means.
For me, I sort of lean more toward the former
because I think it really taps more deeply,
more authentically into the spirit of black Americans to confront adversity,
to not give up on their dreams, to succeed, you know, against the odds.
So it's more of a fight, if you will, kind of response, then a flight, kind of response.
And then, of course, I think that there are both rewards
and costs associated with engaging in that kind of
fight response.
So with the story in the back of his mind,
Dr. James headed off to college
and became a professor of epidemiology at UNC Chapel Hill.
He studied diseases and their causes, and he decided to look at the problem of high blood
pressure in black men in eastern North Carolina.
He said he chose this population because they were unlikely to regularly go to the doctor
and very likely to die of heart attack and stroke, the end result of a life with high blood pressure or hypertension.
And so a physician colleague of mine gave me the names of six of his black male patients who I could interview.
So I drove about 55 miles north of Chapel Hill to a farm in Alamance County
to speak to a man by the name of Mr. John Martin. And he was retired.
He was 71 years of age. At the time, he was waiting for me in his backyard. It was mid-July,
very hot. So I'm welcoming me warmly inviting me to sit next to him and chair in the big tree.
And we just started talking. And he began to tell me his life story. It was a phenomenal
story, born into a sharecropper family in 1907. His father was, of course, uneducated and could never
get out of debt because the sharecropper system was designed to keep particularly black shirt croppers perpetually in debt.
And so when John Martin, Mr. John Martin was probably an early adolescent.
He saw, you know, how his father just fredded and hardy worked.
And he could just never get ahead.
He vowed that that would not be his fate on the new circumstances.
Would he, he be caught up in that kind of exploitative
System so some years later when he became a young man got married
And he was a sharecropper himself because he had the job out of school and the second grade noted help out on the farm
his wife's
brother was a
Was a landowner and independent land owner.
And his wife also came from a family that owned their own land.
And so both of them, his wife and his brother-in-law,
prevailed upon him to take the risk and go to the bank
and get alone and buy his own property.
So with some considerable reluctance, he did. And he got a mortgage, a 40-year mortgage,
to purchase 75 acres of fertile North Carolina farmland. And he always had this sort of deep sense of
vulnerability to powerful forces, because he saw what had happened to his father.
And by working literally night and day for six days a week, he, he, with a lot of help from his wife,
managed to pay it off in five years. A huge accomplishment. And so then he turned to me and he said,
I think that's the reason why my legs
all out of whack.
I pushed myself too hard in the fields.
Now I knew that he had high blood pressure
and he had two kings that were leaning against the chair
in which he was sitting.
So he was suffering
from a very severe case of osteoarthritis. And in the course of telling me his life story,
he also told me that in his mid-50s or so, he had to go to the hospital and have 40% of
his stomach removed because he had a very serious case of peptic ulcers.
Oh my gosh.
Yeah. So he had these three major diseases that had a huge stress component.
Stress component meaning these diseases that can be caused or triggered by stress.
Yeah. The stress plays a role.
So he'd been talking for maybe a couple of hours and his wife came to the
him to the door and she said, John Henry, it's time for lunch and bring your guests with you.
So I looked at him and I said, your name is John Henry and he said, yeah, John Henry Martin.
And I thought just like the legendary John Hinnon went up against the machine,
and in the case of John Hinnon Martin, the machine was the sharecropper system, which he beat.
He won his struggle against the machine, the economic machine that was the sharecropper system,
but he paid a price.
machine that was the Shackwap system, but he paid a price. I began to think, well, maybe there's something here, you know, maybe there's something here,
because his story reminded me, Johnny and Martin's story reminded me a lot of the story of my parents, the story of my grandparents, my grandfather, some
both my mother's side and my father's side were sharecroppers.
So I could identify with what Johnnie de Morton was telling me.
And I thought, his story is not just his story.
This is really the story of black people, black people in America.
Having to go up against these very powerful, political and economic forces these systems, these institutions,
that are in place to keep black people subjugated and forcing them to have to work extremely hard in order to make ends meet
in order to try to move ahead.
So that really led then to the John D. Ngerson hypothesis that maybe that's the explanation
for why we see so much eye blood pressure and strokes and heart attacks that affect African Americans, particularly
working for African Americans, fairly early in adult life.
And then of course, the out of being mad.
Stareified. From the team that brought you South Lake, this is a six-part podcast
series about faith, power, and what it means to protect children in an American
suburb. This was a kind of sleeping giant. From NBC News studios, this is great
fine. Listen now wherever you get your podcasts.
And so I came up with 12 questions that constitute the John Hinterson
Scale for Active Coping or high effort coping and I can give you if you wish a couple of sample questions. Yes.
So here's the first question. When things don't go the way I want them to, that just makes me work
even harder. Now the response options are strongly agree, somewhat agree, don't know,
somewhat disagree, strongly disagree. So here's the second question.
Once I make up my mind to do something,
I stay with it until the job is completely done.
So the remaining questions continue
to work this theme of tenacity, persistence, not giving up.
So that's the John Dindeson scale.
And guess what? His hunch was right. He found a very strong correlation between scoring
high on the John Henryism scale and having hypertension, and all of its attendant problems like
stroke and heart attack. The more these men strived for excellence, the sicker they became,
and the shorter they lived. And contrary to what Dr. James and his colleagues for excellence, the sicker they became, and the shorter they lived.
And contrary to what Dr. James and his colleagues
speculated, the link was there even for those
who had already moved up the socioeconomic ladder,
who had achieved success and stability,
and were aiming to achieve even more as we all do.
This was very surprising to us.
I can't emphasize that enough.
So this is the late 1980s, when at the time,
they had been very little epidemiological research
on the health of middle class black people.
And we sort of expected to see that,
oh, they will be doing so much better
than they're working class counterparts, right?
We're talking about the, you know,
post-civil rights movement,
you know, you know, folks whocivil rights movement, you know,
you know, folks who came of age in the 1960s who benefited from the 1964
civil rights act 1965, you know, civil rights legislation. And now they're moving
into these white spaces from which, you know, Black folks had, for the most part been excluded. There may be a lot of physiological
wear and tear that attends, you know, going up a gang, taking on these intrinsic shape shifting
institutional constraints against upward social mobility. That's wild.
I mean, I understand it.
I understand it, but yeah.
I mean, obviously very disturbing, right?
A very disturbing finding.
So what the data are telling us, what these data are telling us.
And again, I want to emphasize that this is not just one study,
but there are
multiple studies that have shown this effect. What this is telling us is that successful
upward mobility in America for people of color, not just black Americans, but for people of color,
comes with a price just like we saw in the story of John Henry Martin,
he achieved there was upward social mobility.
He became a landowner.
He became an independent farmer.
He had some wealth, but he paid a price.
I kept wondering how Dr. James' findings extended to women.
At the end of one popular version of the John Henry song, the story goes on to talk about
his widow, Polly Ann, who just picked up John Henry's hammer and went right on driving
steel in his place.
So I spoke to a professor at the University of Michigan's School of Public Health, Dr.
Arlene Geronimus.
My area study is health and equity.
Okay, tell me more about that.
I think that's something we all want to know a lot about right now.
Which is interesting to me because 30 years ago, people weren't that interested.
Dr. Geronimus began her research into health and equity back in the 70s in a school for pregnant teen moms.
She had a hunch about teen pregnancy and the way we thought about it, that it wasn't
the very worst thing to ever happen to someone, and it wasn't nearly as negatively impactful
on people's lives as other larger forces in society.
It wasn't the root of all evil.
But, in observing the poorer moms or the moms
of color, she did notice that they often had health problems that usually don't appear
until much later in life. Problems that had nothing to do with being pregnant. What was
going on?
Well, I came to the theory I now pursued for all these decades, which I called weathering, which was the idea
that if you're part of a denigrated group, you're both exposed to more assaults that
were down your health at earlier ages. And so that's weathering as in a rock being, you know, weathered by wind and rain over centuries. But you're also in this,
you know, this is what I had seen initially in the school for pregnant moms. You're also weathering
in the sense that you're having to, and this actually relates a lot to some of the concepts in Sherman James's work. Having to expend so much effort and coping
with all the things you're exposed to because you're still trying to withstand the storm,
you're trying to survive it, you're trying to even overcome it or help overcome it
for the next generation. If we're talking about racism and poverty, that keeps you chronically stressed,
even while you're sleeping.
It's not something you can just say,
let me meditate or let me try to reframe the situation.
Let me smile and put on my high heels
and pretty dress, feel positive.
These are things that are happening day in and day out
and they're happening to you and they're happening to you,
and they're happening, as I said,
work very positively and assertively and proactively
to survive and withstand them.
And I've come to believe,
some of that is just objective things in your environment.
Meditating isn't gonna help you deal
with environmental toxicity. Right. Meditating isn't gonna help you deal with environmental
toxicity.
Meditating isn't gonna help you deal with the fact
in order to feed your children,
given that the value of real wages,
which was never very high in the lower runs,
has gotten even less, means you have to do two or three jobs,
you take night shift jobs that impent on your sleep
or that you don't have a car.
So you're relying on really bad public transportation
to try and get to your various jobs.
You're also juggling how do you get to your kids to school,
how do you have them taking care of when they're home.
At the same time, you don't have any control
over the hours you work.
So there's just this endless coping
that is kind of psycho, I might call it psychosocial.
And what I've come to understand
and what I think goes beyond a lot of how people think
about stress besides it, it's not just
this individual thing you can manage or control,
Besides that it's not just this individual thing you can manage or control, is that a very big part of what sets off all those stress reactions in your body, the cortisol and all
of that, is that we all, as human beings, need to have a sense of how safe we are in any
particular situation.
And safe can mean literally life or death safe,
or it can mean are we somewhere where we can be authentic
where we will be treated fairly.
So it can mean things short of that life or death
or it could mean the intersection of them
such as if you're a black person, stopped by a police officer,
that's both something that you worry is unsafe and it could be life threatening.
Also, so we set off these stress reactions that people kind of vernacularly know as fight
or flight.
But if you think about what happens when you set them off, you start to see how your
health wears down early, long to very things that cause the health inequities by race and
class in the United States.
I think when you were talking about the like, you know, having so many jobs and not sleeping and taking public transportation and all of that. I feel like for a large part of our society in America, anyway, those are
the, actually, the answers. Those are the solves, right? Like get another work harder.
If you don't have a car, take the bus. It's like, just change your attitude. Be more positive, be optimistic and have a better mindset.
What I've seen is in the very same populations who weather,
I've never seen more resilient people
who keep going on in the face of adversity
and who can be very optimistic
and who have all these sayings and support from, you know, the people there
in networks with or their loved ones about, you know, take one foot forward or, you know,
keep on keeping on. But given that I've seen how optimistic and what a good attitude by some measures,
people in these communities have,
and they still get so sick,
it certainly doesn't seem to me
that that's much good evidence
that being optimistic or having grit
or being resilient or making the best of bad situations
is what's gonna make you healthy.
It certainly has worked
in these circumstances. You know, you'd have people would have to, they'd have to accept
how inequatively structured our world is and that they didn't really earn their right to
have vacations and time off for yoga and me time. We're gonna get your me time when you're raising kids and
working night shifts and then working another shift in the day and then trying to figure out
do you pay your electricity bill or not do fight with your landlord that he hasn't fixed the eater
in your building and you have to make these decisions all the time. Yeah.
And then you're also being told you don't work hard, you don't have future orientation.
Right.
You're not a good person, you had your children too young which just proves you are not a
good person.
If you just really pulled yourself up by your bootstraps, you get all the same things we
got.
Those are stressful things to work against too.
I wish I could say that these findings shocked me, but instead they affirmed a feeling I've been having about the self-improvement woo-woo
coachy world.
There's just something really privileged and toned up
about the idea of picking yourself up
by your bootstraps.
An idea we've heaped upon people of color in this country,
I think, to absolve white people
of having to do any hard work to help their fellow man.
An idea that we've gifted white people.
Convincing us us we've earned everything
we have. An idea designed to keep those in power and power, while blaming people we
oppressed for their powerlessness.
The mindset stuff from Napoleon Hill, the individual responsibility of the unemployed
folks in Texas, Ray Higdon's insistence that you just need to defy your negative feelings
to overcome
adversity.
These are all just distractions from the larger forces that make it harder for so many
people to rise in this country.
Things like racism and sexism, all the isms I'm constantly banging on about.
Despite what these pitchmen might say, you cannot think yourself out of being the only
woman in a business made in believe me I've tried.
There are people, groups of people, for whom this think and grow rich stuff is just plainly
detrimental.
And that it's bad for society on the whole.
When entire enormous communities suffer in an effort to not suffer, we all suffer.
I want to put you in a room with Tony Robbins while he's like screaming about how it, you know,
this like rugged individualism and, you know, your mindset just needs to overcome stuff.
No, it's more complicated. It's more complicated. These motivational speakers have figured something
out, right? You know, how to speak to the aspirations of people and how to connect their stick with
the American dream. And you know, we Americans, you know, how our mind is conditioned, right? To think about our country as a place where hard work pays off.
I mean, we all of us have internalized just some degree
that notion, that aspiration.
They have been so the American dream.
A lot of us have been so the American dream. This is where I want to give them
some grace if let me put it that way. What they don't know is the kind of thing that you and I
have been talking about. They don't, they really don't know the physiological costs associated with
this. It's not the question, for me, the question becomes, what would they say if they knew? How would it change their message? How would it change what they say to people if they knew,
but they don't know? And of course, it's a very powerful dream, isn't it?
I mean, what a wonderful idea the American dream is. I mean, it's a powerful idea. It has attracted people from all over the world.
You know, in search of opportunities to be freer than, you know, they're able to be free in their home countries,
to realize their potential, to be safe from harm, to be successful economically, to gain wealth, to pass something on to the next generation,
to make it easier for the next generation to live their lives and have been the case for them.
There's nothing wrong with the dream, but it's a dream. The problem is, the problem is,
But it's a dream. The problem is, the problem is, and you mentioned this earlier, the wreck of individualism that is such a core attribute of American culture, the notion that
America, that the United States is a meritocracy.
I was just going to say, yeah, the meritocracy thing.
Yeah, that you deserve what you get
and you get what you deserve, right?
And then, yeah, in the end, it's really up to you.
So don't ask me to pay higher taxes
so that the opportunity structure can be expanded and we can have some social safety nets, such as the kind of
of mobility striving, the kind of desire, you know,
for self-realization to realize your potential,
to live a life that is meaningful and satisfying,
does not come with it, in the pursuit of it,
of that kind of life does not come
with a necessary cost to your health.
And that is one of the things that distinguishes our country
from other rich countries in the world.
Right.
One could argue that that is the most distinguishing factor
that distinguishes the United States America
from our peer countries elsewhere in the world.
It's very sobering, but it's important to know that this phenomenon exists, and now that we know it,
and we have to keep, you know, have to keep talking about it. We have to engage in educating the public.
Of course, there'll be the skeptics, you know. But we have to, we have to do our best
certainly to educate policymakers and advocate, you know, for social and economic policies
that may, um, upper mobility striving, and that's costly.
We're going to leave you today with a version of John Henry, sung by the Civil Rights activist,
Harry Belafonte, who died this year. Enjoy. He could hammer, he could whistle, he could sing.
Went to the mountain early in the morning
just to hear his hammer, ring Lord, Lord,
just to hear his hammer, ring.
And just to hear his hammer, ring Lord, Lord,
just to hear his hammer, ring.
Where John Henry was a little baby,
sit on his daddy's knee.
Picked up by hammer and a little piece of steel said,
Ham will be the death of me, Lord God,
yes, Ham will be the death of me.
Yes, Ham will be the death of me, Lord,
Lord, yes, Ham will be the death of me.
Well John Henry's family needed money.
Said he didn't have for the dime.
If you wait till the rise of sun goes down,
I'll get it from the men in the mine, Lord, I'll get it from the men in the mine. Said he didn't have for to die. If you wait till the rise of sun goes down,
I'll get it from the men in the mine, Lord,
Lord, I'll get it from the men in the mine.
I'll get it from the men in the mine, Lord, Lord,
I'll get it from the men in the mine.
Well, the captain said to John Henry,
John Henry, what can you do?
I can hoist a jack, I can lead,
track, I can pick and shovel, too, lay a track I can pick and shovel too Lord God I can pick and shovel too.
I can pick and shovel too Lord a laudee I can pick and shovel too.
Well John Henry said to the captain, oh man ain't nothing but a man, but let your steedrill beat me down, Well, I'll die with the hammer in my hand,
Lord God, I'll die with the hammer in my hand.
It's all die with the hammer in my hand, Lord, Lord,
I'll die with the hammer in my hand.
Well, the captain said to John Henry,
I'm going to bring this team drill round.
I'm going to bring this team drill out of the job,
Don't why that's still on, down, Lord, Lord, don't Why that's still on down, Lord, Lord, go
Why that's still on down, I go,
That's still on down, Lord, and Lord,
I go, that's still on down.
Well, John Harris had to shake her,
Shake her, why don't you sing?
Throwing 50 pounds from a hip zone down,
Listen to the cold steel ring, Lord, Lord,
Yes, listen to the cold steel ring, Oh, listen to the cold steel ring, Lord Lord, yes, listen to the cold steel ring. Oh, listen to the cold steel ring, Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord, a Lord made nine. Yes, the steam drill only made nine Lord Lord the steam drill only made nine
Well the captain said to John Henry, are you Martin Sinking in a John Henry said to the captain, oh my nothing but my hammer suckin' wind, Lord, Lord, Nothing but my hammer suckin' wind Ain't nothin' but my hammer suckin' wind, Lord, Lord, Lord, ain't nothin' but my hammer suckin' wind
Well, the Henry said to the captain, Look, he all know what I see
Hold on, choke your drill, done, broke And you can't drive steel like me, Lord, Lord
Can't drive steel like me, Oh, you can't drive steel like me, No, no, you can't drive steel like me, Lord, Lord, can't drive steel like me. Oh, you can't drive steel like me, no, no, you can't drive steel like me.
Well, John Henry drove into the mountain.
The dream is written, hosted, and executive produced by me, Jane Marie.
Our producer is Mike Richter, with help from Nancy Golembisky and Joyce Sanford.
Our editor is Peter Clowney.
The dream is a co-production of Little Everywhere and Pushkin
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lives a steel driving man Lord Lord just there lives a steel driving.
I'm not a child. I'm a child.
I'm a child.
I'm a child.
I'm a child.
I'm a child.
I'm a child.
I'm a child.
I'm a child.
I'm a child.
I'm a child.
I'm a child.
I'm a child.
I'm a child.
I'm a child.
I'm a child.
I'm a child.
I'm a child. I'm a child. I'm want to be. And an English teacher caught in the middle.
I broke down running in the whole egg.
And I think it was, it was the fear.
Tears not out of sadness, not out of being mad.
It's terrifying.
From the team that brought you South Lake,
this is a six-part podcast series about faith, power,
and what it means to protect children in an American suburb.
This was a kind of sleeping giant.
From NBC News Studios, this is Greatvine.
Listen now wherever you get your podcasts.