Cleared Hot - Powered By BRCC - We're Living in the Gaslit Era | Jennifer Fraser | Ep.456
Episode Date: June 29, 2026My guest has a PhD from the University of Toronto. She taught at the university level, then at two prep schools for years. In 2017 she walked away from education after the system covered up the abuse ...of one of her students. She turned whistleblower, went public, and started digging into the brain science of what had happened. That work became two books, The Bullied Brain and The Gaslit Brain, and a long-running column for Psychology Today. Jennifer Fraser studies abuse cultures for a living. We get into gaslighting and what it actually does to your brain. She lays out the dark tetrad — narcissism, Machiavellianism, psychopathy, sadism — and the mask these people wear so well it fools the experts. How they read you, isolate you, and make you doubt your own memory. We cover the lie that abuse is the price of greatness. Coaches who don't want to win — they want to hurt the kids. Why refusing a bad order is the real test of leadership. And the part that matters most: the brain is wired to repair. The Gaslit Brain: https://a.co/d/018Vlq2z Join the Cleared Hot Newsletter: https://www.clearedhotpodcast.com Today's Sponsors: Montana Knife Company: https://www.montanaknifecompany.com Firecracker Farm https://www.firecracker.farm
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Okay, got the red smoke.
I'm looking at danger close now.
Why is my book on the table?
This is about your book slash books.
I have some questions for you.
Fire away.
Well, first of all, let's catch up about when did you come back on?
I know it was at least two years ago.
Yeah, I feel like it was 2003, maybe.
It says three years ago.
Three years.
See, out of the darkness comes the truth.
So, yeah, it does seem.
like a long time ago. Man, 2003, let's see, were we officially through the pandemic at that point,
or was that the tail end of it? It must have been the tail end because I was able to come down here.
So it had to have been. They only shut down travel for a little bit, but then it was masks,
the distancing. We didn't have masks on when I came. We were just, it was in the tail end then.
Yeah. It was near the end. Yeah. We are you still in a time warp since COVID? I still haven't
gotten my time normal. It feels like it was closer, but.
yet farther away than it actually was, if that makes sense.
It was a really bizarre 18 to 24 month time period.
Yeah.
I wonder 20 years from now what tales will be told of that time, how it will be described.
Yeah.
Stickers on the ground, social distancing, stand here.
Well, you know, I met sort of more doom and gloom than you.
And I figure in the next 20 years, we're going to have more.
If we continue treating.
Oh, yeah.
The way we're treating the planet, the kind of...
What you're talking about?
I heard we're doing pretty good.
With the planet?
Yeah.
I heard it's healing itself.
From who?
This could be our first example of gas lighting.
I'm looking forward to this.
I'm just being contrarian more than anything.
I don't really have any data to support my position.
The comedian Nate Bargettze has this whole thing about...
He's the best.
Yeah.
You look at other planets.
He's the best.
Look at Mars.
It's doing way worse than us.
You know, I think we're kind of first right now.
Yeah.
I think we're going to figure out the point.
planet stuff. What I worry is that realistic issues get thrown into activism. And in doing so,
they lose the vast majority of people. I mean, for clarity, I think everybody, since we all live on
Earth, we have a vested interest. But when it starts getting super doomsdayish, super
activist-e, and there's nothing wrong with activism, but not everything can be an activist
approach. Otherwise, nobody's going to pay attention to anything. I think we're going to
to figure it out though. I mean, or we're just all going to die. So it will sort itself.
Exactly. Either way. Either way. The prime minister, Mark Carney of Canada right now,
he's a really great example of what you're talking about, where he's very much economy and
industry and very much an environmentalist. But his whole thought process is, why don't we make them
work together? Why don't we, why don't we not say that it has to be one or the other? Like, he's good
at not that binary thinking. Yeah. Yeah. That is the, the, the,
modern social optic is you're either for capitalism or you're for the sustainment in thriving
of planet earth. And I don't think it's that black and white.
Your previous prime minister is apparently just traveling around the world dating a pop star.
What's going on there?
That I cannot comment on.
You absolutely can. You're the authority on Canada in the room.
I said to my husband, I said, have you seen this?
Justin Trudeau is like hanging out with Katie Perry.
And worse than that, they're posting all this stuff about themselves on Instagram.
My husband just goes, what a fucking idiot.
I like your husband.
Yeah.
Yeah, I tried to make no sense of either of those two or their lives.
But an odd pairing, for sure.
I didn't see that one coming.
Not that I saw or spend any time thinking about who Katie Perry made date next.
I was surprised at that one.
I know, but she left the, what was his name?
Orlando Bloom.
Yeah, exactly.
I was going to say the elven star of Lord of the Rings, you know.
He is a handsome man.
He's very handsome.
And, you know, Justin Trudeau has made everyone in Canada, or many people in Canada, frustrated.
Because he came in sort of with all of this potential.
And then he just was kind of a coasting for about 10 years.
Nothing happened in the country.
We didn't achieve things.
I mean, some things, yes, of course, you can't say that.
But he just could have done a lot better.
How did he get reelected so many times then?
Well, it's always around the person.
You have to have a really good contender to make a change.
It's hard to make change.
We like to, you know, the person that is a known quantity is always going to lead.
But there just wasn't a strong enough contender until Mark Carney came in.
And then it was like, hmm, this guy has everything.
Is he moving the needle for you guys?
Absolutely.
He's doing a great job.
Are the U.S. and Canada friends again?
Well.
First off, on this side of the table, they were never.
not friends. I know. So I, the Albertans, for people not familiar with the geography, I live in
Calisville, Montana, which is about 60 miles south of the Canadian border, many Albertans have approached
me to become the 51st state. So they seem like they've always been on board. The farther east you
go, that theory seems to shift a little bit. You get near Toronto and they're, it's a kind of, they'll
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I feel like nothing changed except for.
for the rhetoric at the political level.
I love Canadians.
Canadians are awesome.
And Canadians love Americans.
It's exactly as you say.
I must, when I looked out my window from the hotel,
there was the Canadian flag, the Montana flag, and the American flag.
And I was like, all is right with the world, which we don't feel that much anymore.
That's pretty common up here.
Yeah.
It's, uh, I'll be honest, I didn't realize the Canadian affinity for Target.
Oh.
It's not a good store.
No, I've never shopped there.
The number of Alberton plates that will be seen at Target is shocking.
Is Target American?
Yes.
It's an American star.
I'm pretty sure.
What I do know is they don't have them in Canada.
So therefore, they think there's something really awesome about Target.
And I feel like be better than Target.
We can do better.
You guys make the journey.
The all-white Albertan plates are often seen in the Target parking lot.
And I don't know why.
I don't know. With Alberta, it's, it's, I think it's frustrating to be in an enormous country, same as what you have in the States with incredibly diverse people. And that model of trying to all work together just is grading on everyone's nerves and nobody knows how to do it differently. And Alberta, that's, that's been a real shame for Canada. We've had it previously, of course, with Quebec, where they wanted to separate and it was very- Oh, they are talking about that right now.
Well, and it was very close at one point.
Big referendum.
It's what Alberta wants to do now.
And I don't know.
I think it would be pretty tragic for this country if we lost any of our provinces or territories.
If they were successful, would they become their own country?
Well, I don't understand what would happen.
They don't seem very clear on that, actually.
And the other thing that's being talked about a lot is there's been a great deal of foreign encouragement.
They sort of think it's all Albertans talking about Alberta.
So there are a little bit.
there's a conversation around misinformation, disinformation, manipulation.
You know, the same things we've seen on social media when it comes to wars, when it comes to
elections.
Alberta seems to be getting a lot of that messaging right now.
So it's in other people's, it's to the advantage of foreign operators, obviously, to
destabilize our country.
And it's a shame that people, it's so hard to discern these days what's true and what's
false.
I mean.
It's getting harder too.
Yeah.
And it's going to get worse, I think.
What do you think the solution to that is, other than I feel like we will have to deploy AI tools against AI, or people will have to voluntarily detach from these electronic devices in platforms, which I don't know if that's possible or a good idea to isolate yourself like that.
There's a couple of researchers.
One's a lawyer and one's a neuroscientist, so Talley Cheroe and Cass Sunstein.
and they do really interesting research on how when people are given an alert and it says this is true or this is not true
or this cannot be verified this there's no evidence behind whatever this claim is on social media it makes a
huge difference but of course you'll notice that the regulators our lawmakers are not doing that kind of thing
and that i think that that will be the game changer and it needs to happen i mean when i look back at my life
as a kid, we were very sheltered by the lawmakers and the regulators.
You weren't allowed to watch TV shows that were inappropriate.
Everything was coordinated around.
There's a certain time of day where kids' shows are allowed, a certain time of day when, obviously, it's only for adults.
There was no way to access highly destructive things for your brain, basically, as a kid.
Who had to decide what was highly destructive, though?
It was, I mean, that's a good question.
There were regulators.
I don't even know a better word for it.
But, you know, there were really strong rules around broadcasting and truth-telling.
And, you know, growing up, if you'd gone into a classroom and a teacher had said in front of the class,
the Holocaust didn't happen, or they're really exaggerating when they're talking $6 million, that's a big lie.
You'd be fired the next day.
Whereas we're in a world where lying has become kind of the norm.
You're almost rewarded for manipulation and lying and sort of, you know, we're in a world.
in the war on truth, which I think actually is gone a step further. I would argue we're in the
gaslit era. We're in an era where people in very high leadership positions manipulate.
And it's public. It's public. That's the thing that gets me. It used to be this kind of like
really shameful thing. Even in the corporate world, as you know, if you're going to do something
that's bad, that's morally, you know, not ethical, not fair, not right, not true, you do it
behind closed doors. What's fascinating to me is the door is wide open. And going back to your
question about regulation and lawmakers, it's like you're allowed to lie in public with impunity.
And it's going to be interesting to see where that goes. Do you think there's a point where it
goes too far and then it becomes irrecoverable? Because if you can't define truth or agree upon truth,
how do you have a foundation for even communication at that point? Well, that's my, that's the
the driving force behind my work these days. I became very worried three years ago. Because if you think
about it, the way we define sanity versus insanity is our relationship to the truth. And...
Okay. Yeah, I would agree with that. Yeah. And so, and I don't hear a lot of people talking about that.
We talk a lot about misinformation, disinformation, gaslighting. I mean, you can't turn around without
being bombarded with the term gaslighting right now. So it's a very dominant force, whether it's used
correctly or incorrectly. It's a dominant force right now, but I don't hear people talking about
the correlation between mental illness, which is massively on the rise in our society and our
relationship to reality and trust, trust. Why do you think mental illness is drastically on the rise?
Well, I really tend to look at youth population, for example. And so you look at from 2000 to 2018,
and this is CDC, so it's American statistics. 2000 to 2000.
2018, youth suicide increased 57%.
I mean, that's...
That's an insane number.
You and I talked about suicide the last time I was here.
And you said, all of a sudden, in my life as a dad,
every time I go to the school to pick the kids up,
every two to three weeks, there's a youth suicide.
It was gnarly.
All of my children across a variety of grades
and at two different schools were having...
And I'm happy to say,
is happy the right word.
I'm glad to say that, or I'm fortunate that I can say,
that it seems as if, at least in the local ecosystem,
I'm not hearing of that.
However, my children are also out of school age.
Their friends are now dying occasionally for different reasons
that highlight parental teaching points about decision making,
which is going to happen.
It sucks.
You know, learning from other people's mistakes is not always,
as easy as it would sound and trying to create a learning lesson around some of these
catastrophes is pretty gnarly. But I would hope that that isn't continuing from that timeline
that you and I first talked. Well, I mean, another statistic that I wish all young people knew
and I would be interesting to do a survey, just a random survey, do you guys know this?
Because I used to do that with my classes all the time. Do you guys know X, Y, and Z? And if they
didn't and it was a life-threatening thing, we would stop what we were doing and I would tell them all
about it. And it's this strange thing as if we don't want to tell kids because it's so upsetting.
But the bottom line is they need to know. So when Facebook was released to all college kids,
so first it was restricted. You could only get it. Stanford.edu. Was it Stanford or Harvard?
Harvard. Yeah. It was Harvard. And then nobody else was allowed to see it.
Correct.
When they released it to everyone, serious depression in youth spiked by 83%.
And it reminds me of something that you've said, which is this tendency, especially of young people, all of us,
but especially young people to compare themselves.
That didn't used to be the norm until you were bombarded with.
Look at all these other people doing what they're doing and looking the way they look.
I must therefore have failed in some capacity because I sure don't look like that and I haven't accomplished those things.
I'm worthless.
I feel like there's,
I feel like that the natural inclination to compare yourself is always there.
But if I look back to my own school age years,
I could only do that with my physical eyes and the proximity that I was in.
And then at the end of the day,
I left the people that I was largely comparing myself to,
unless, of course,
you're hanging out with them in your social circle.
Now it's an escapeable.
It's in your pocket.
Yeah.
The comparison is never ending.
And, I mean, makeup's been.
a thing forever. And I guess that would be the real world version of a digital filter,
but a little bit easier to spot, I think, than a lot of the things that can fool just
about everybody at this point. Yeah. And I mean, with AI, to your point, it's only going to get
worse. I mean, we are not quite done. I don't think, with the real deep dive into the virtual
world taking over from the actual world and how it affects us. Oh, I don't even think we're started.
I think we've just opened the door.
I don't even know if we have a foot in through the threshold yet.
Shack in Montana, I'm telling you, it's the way to go.
Yeah, I agree.
So what have you been up to for the last three years?
I've been writing.
Okay.
Writing and researching, my usual nerd self in the library at my desk, reading all these books,
trying to figure out the neuroscience, which I'm not a neuroscientist,
so it's very slow work and hard work.
It's not as if my brain has been trained to understand.
understand these things. So, but I am doing a deep dive because I don't think the science is getting
out of the lab fast enough for all of us that need it. Fair. What's been going on with the family?
Bring me up to speed. We talked a bit about your son, the first episode. So the first book that you came
on with was the bullied brain. And then we'll get to the gaslit brain. I love the topic,
by the way, and the title. What's new with your son? So I have two sons, as the gaslit brain
is all about the older son. The young... Has he been gaslighting people?
Is that the issue?
No.
No, he's not a gas lighter, but he's really good at detecting it better than I am.
So, yeah, it's one of those classic things where your kids teach you and you learn from them.
I've had that so many times as a parent.
But my younger son, it's been a very, I mean, it's interesting when you think about it in the gaslighting world.
Because he's the classic example of gaslighting by accident, which isn't really gaslighting.
When I define it, it has to be intentional and it has to be to mislead.
How do you define the term gaslighting?
Okay, that's a good place to start.
So it's defined as right now for the 21st century, and it has changed over time.
So it's important for us to distinguish.
But in the 21st century, it is defined since 2022 as the actor practice of grossly misleading someone for one's especially, for one's own advantage.
So it's intentional.
And you hear a lot, like I get interviewed all the time about medical gaslighting.
And I try to say, well, unless the doctor is sitting across from you lying to your face on purpose with intent to mislead you, if that's happening, yeah, you're being gaslit.
If it's happening because your doctor didn't have the training, has biases he or she don't really aren't aware of, has been taught through a system to learn, you know, male health and is applying it to a female sitting in front of them.
these are, has been taught that they have to be godlike because they can't be in front of a
patient saying, I have no idea what's wrong with you. They'd rather say, I think you need antibiotics
because it's X and just have that be a mistake. Misdiagnosis, absolutely, does it have terrible
consequences? Yes, I'm not trying to minimize it, but that's not gaslighting. That's misdiagnosis.
So my younger son has had fabulous doctors, not every single one, but in general fabulous.
What has not been understood is by him as teachers and community, friends, so-called friends.
His peers couldn't understand.
We didn't understand a lot of the time.
And it's only been in the last three years.
He's gotten a diagnosis.
It went to genetics and genetics sent it off to Finland because in Canada we don't apparently have the massive $100,000 a person system to do it.
So went off to Finland.
He has a repeat chromosome 16.
And it's very, very rare, like beyond rare.
Probably no one listening to this has ever heard of it.
I certainly never had.
And what it means, though, is it results in kidney disease.
Yeah, he's got that.
Ear, nose, throat, all kinds of problems.
He's had multiple surgeries.
Yep, he's got that.
Cleft palate, pharyngeoplasty surgery.
Yeah, he has that.
Celiac disease and gastrointestinal issues.
Yeah, he has that.
And the real kicker is debilitating pain.
all of his muscles are contract he has contracture in his muscles that means they're all twisted
and so you know how when you get a migraine headache it's because all your neck muscles
constrict stops the blood going this is one form of migraine well he has 24 7 migraine
because all his muscles are constricted so he's you know he's six three he walks well
he's you know looks great you wouldn't know unless you're a physician can tell within or a nurse
10 seconds of looking at him that he's in debilitating pain.
But the rest of us can't.
And so he's had to deal all his life with this kind of doubting,
oh, are you faking it?
Like one kid called him, you're a faking faggot, he said,
because it was like you're just trying to get attention
or you're this or you're that when he's unable to do things.
He had a teacher, a P.E. teacher telling me he was pathetic
because he can't do anything without exacerbating the pain.
So what you want to do in that much pain,
is not move. You want to stay still. And, you know, he goes and lifts weights twice a week. He goes
to a physio. It's called neuromotion. So they're very specialized in these kind of neural, like it's all
spinal. He's got a spinal fusion. It affects his brain. It's like, you know, he's smart as they come,
but it's been a hellish. His life has been hell. And is there a pathway or treatment for him
out of that? No. Now, as part of our conversation of like, what will the future hold? I'm reading
where they're actually going in and doing genetic stuff with the DNA.
So maybe in a matter, and I tell them all the time, you know, pain comes from the brain.
It's not, it's, yes, it's the brain's communication with the body, but the bottom line is, it's in the brain.
And when it's chronic pain, it's especially in the brain.
It's a misreading of what's going on in the body.
So I think it's hopeful.
But he just recently met with a neurologist who's got him on new migraine medication.
It's a game changer.
He's got a pain specialist, a new guy who he gets lytocaine shots in his abdomen.
And it's like a 24-hour IV.
It takes the pain from an 8-9 down to a 6 and a 5.
And this is huge when you live in that pain world.
So, you know, he spends his days in a darkened room.
Like the let, he can't have any sensory, no sunlight and these things because it's so aggravating.
Wow.
Noise cancelling headphones.
That's how he spends his days.
Yeah.
And what does he watch?
He watches Cleard Hot.
How did he find it?
He loves reading.
He wanted me to tell you that he's just finishing, oh boy, Carr.
James Carr?
Jack Carr's new book.
He wanted you to know that because you guys are friends.
And he reads 24-7.
He listens to music 24-7 and he watches podcasts of interesting people.
My maternal theory is, you know, psychologist in the closet,
that he loves to watch people fulfill their lives with activity and adventure because he can't.
And so he deeply admires it.
And he's also like you in the sense that he's had to have ridiculous mental toughness to survive what has been given to him.
You know, he would like probably to disappear most days.
And he fights that internal battle to be here with us.
What you've described that your son has gone through and is going through, just for clarity,
he far surpasses any level of mental toughness that I've ever had.
I do not consider myself to be an individual that would be defined by their mental toughness.
Not everything, especially my old job, not everything associated with that required that by any stretch.
There were, I would say, short, segmented timelines, perhaps, or defined times where
I'm not trying to say it was easy by any stretch,
but the people who do that job are not actually abnormal.
I think you could probably work most people to a place where they could accomplish those things.
It's just the matter of whether or not they're willing to put in the work to get to that place.
I really, I love that statement, and I liked how you had it in the book,
because one of the things I battle is, I think it's one of the biggest,
lies that fuels our society today.
And it's that abuse is a necessary evil for greatness.
And it's not...
Who says that?
Everybody.
You know, like a really good example.
Michael, do you say those things?
Michael.
Michael?
First of me, I've been spreading that on my...
For clarity, he's not listening.
He's doodling right now.
I know exactly what he's doing.
Sometimes he doesn't even switch the cameras
because he's drawing hands.
I fill in the rest of this stuff.
He'll leave me a...
He creates the palette.
I finish the masterpiece for him.
Classic dude stuff.
It's not a big deal.
Michael, do you believe that to achieve greatness, you have to be punished?
You have to punish others.
No, I don't think you have to punish others.
I think you going through hardships helps, I think.
But I don't think being purposely punished is.
Yeah, I don't know where that comes from.
So, you know, I used it in bullied brain.
I don't know if you remember, the movie Whiplash.
It's a really good example of that.
That's a musical movie, right?
It's jazz.
Yeah.
So it was by Danian.
Overbearing coach.
What do they call it in music?
Is it a teacher?
He's a jazz teacher.
He was a little bit over the top.
Oh, very over the top.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And it's a drummer specifically he was going after, right?
Yeah.
And so that and Damian Chazel, who is the director and writer, he and he won so many, he's
the youngest director to get an Academy Award for that film.
So this is where I feel like, and I'm, this is making a leap, but I feel like it really
resonated with people.
And I see it all the time in the work that I do because I study abuse cultures.
And it's not hard.
This would be a beautiful example of gaslighting.
It's not hard to convince a group of people or a single individual that the abuse their suffering is to make them great, which was the argument all through whiplash.
I'm going to get the next Charlie Parker by abusing you.
And the musicians, these young people, believed it.
And they, you know, the drummer drums until his hands are bleeding.
You know, people will do that.
You know, that blood sweat and tears or.
One of the other, you know, this, this hurts me more than it hurts you.
And you're like, yeah, I'm not sure.
Never once has it ever actually been the case.
Exactly.
What's tough is there are shades of what those statements mean that are 100% true.
I do believe that if you're going to achieve greatness and anything, it comes through hard work.
Yeah.
But you can also do incredibly hard things that are not beneficial to you, that can destroy you, that can take you farther away from your goal.
And there's also truth in trained smarter, not harder.
Doesn't mean that you can't do the smarter way very strenuously or pushing yourself to the limit.
But that is sticky because like any good lie, there's a percentage of it that's true.
Yeah, it's the deadly half-truth.
The half-truth is the most dangerous lie.
And gaslighters are experts at exploiting that space within us.
all of us have our vulnerabilities.
We have our weaknesses.
We have the things we've done that we're ashamed of.
We have our mistakes.
We have our failures.
We have the limits that just have been given to us by life.
Well, the gas lighter is a master at seeing that.
When they look at you and when they talk to you, in many cases, they are looking for those
gaps and spaces to exploit.
So, you know, you think that you're talking to someone who is really seeing you and
listening to you.
and it's not true. They are, it's almost like they're analyzing you. Do you see a tie between narcissism and
gaslighting? Yes. Yes. There's, so it's really interesting. They have, it's called by the experts. They call it the dark tetrad. Or you hear dark triad, but a woman just convinced me, it's funny. She, she wrote me on my substack and said, look, or was it? Yeah, she wrote on the substack. She said, you know, you talk about the dark triad. I'd like you to look into sadism. And I'd like you do explore that because I really think it's important.
And it's a dark tetrad.
Of course, at the bottom is a picture of Hannibal Lecter.
That's lovely.
Yeah.
Okay.
The dark tetrad is a set of four interrelated malicious personality traits.
Narcissism.
That's another one I didn't understand until pretty recently due to personal exposure.
McAvellianism, psychopathy, and sadism.
I don't actually know what sadism is.
God, this is a classic example.
I say sadism, which is incorrect, apparently,
because I never listen to words out loud.
I only read.
I never do the auditor.
I feel like sadism would just be chronic sadness.
You're probably right.
Sadism.
I say everything.
Mike drives my kids crazy.
There's a good chance that we're both incorrect.
No, I think you're right.
Maybe the inflection is on the eye somehow or something.
I don't know.
No, you're right.
So what is sadism then?
So what was so interesting.
So I was like, okay.
So I went and took a look at the.
research and then I wrote an article about it for psychology today because lo and behold what did I
find out we have a tendency to think whenever we think about a person who's sadistic we think of them
we think sex and like criminology you know criminality and these kinds of types of things well there's
an actual application of this to they call it everyday. Everyday saddest is a person who actually
likes to hurt people just on the day and day out so you can find them in the workplace you can
find them in personal relationships and they just actually take pleasure from seeing somebody else
embarrassed or crying or humiliated. They like it. So it's a psychological, they enjoy the process of
eliciting psychological pain from somebody else. Yep. Or it could be physical. If they can get away
with it. That's going to be a harder thing to do. You see it in sports all the time. I don't know if
you've ever seen footage of coaches with these little girls in gymnastics, for example. And the
child will be sobbing while the adult is holding their leg in a position that's obviously tearing
muscles and they they don't care like they it's so inhuman i can't even look at the pictures but yeah
you see that kind of thing of sports of course yeah that's that there has to be a weird power dynamic
in a non-public setting i find for that to be the case yeah because the physical
elicitation of pain is way easier to spot than the psychological
Or be held accountable for because you can just say, no, I didn't say that.
You can gaslight them.
Oh, exactly.
That is exactly how you do it.
You'd be good at gaslighting.
You could be a star at this.
Maybe I'm a closet gaslighter.
I'm going to start a club.
Gaslighters are us.
Michael, do you want to be in my club?
I think I'm forced to be in your club, actually.
You too nice if I had to be a gas lighter.
Yeah.
You actually do have to be.
So when I look at the dark tetrad, these people are highly disordered.
You know, psychologically.
And what I find so interesting,
is we've known since 1941 that these people, well, really 1938. So the first play, it was a,
it was a British play, highly successful. So again, it shows you it struck a chord. And it was called
Gaslight, 1938 in London. And it was the same thing that became the famous, famous movie
that everybody knows about. Ingrid Bergman won the Academy Award for it in, in the 40s,
big Hollywood movie called Gaslight. And it was taken from the play.
But what people don't know is there was a book written by a psychiatrist in 1941.
His last name was Cleckley, Hervey Cleckley.
And his study was about psychopaths.
And he called it, this is the part I love, he called it the mask of sanity.
And the thing that's so destructive about the dark tetrad is you can't identify them.
And you just said the perfect way to describe it, because there are another personality behind closed doors.
unless, of course, they have recruited others to be mentally disordered like they are.
So you will find abusers work in a little posse or team.
So you'll have the coach whose trainers and assistant coach are in on the abuse,
and they don't care that the football player is like, you know, two weeks from dying by heat exhaustion.
They're just humiliating him in front of his peers.
That can happen in a group.
How, though, I've had these conversations.
I may or may not watch an unhealthy amount of crime documentaries.
They're fascinating to me.
I'm sorry, Bundy is to me, how does this happen?
How is this person behind the eyes of this flesh suit walking around?
And also, how can I find other people like this?
So I don't get wrapped up in that as well.
When they seem to have some, not all, in innate ability.
to find others that would be at least open to, let's say, their sadism.
But it doesn't seem like they ever really have a conversation about it.
They naturally have this gravitational force coming together.
Why is that?
Are they able to sense something in themselves that we aren't able to see because we don't
have that proclivity?
Yes.
So in general, combination of how we're wired or how our brains are wired and how our
society trains us. That's everything, always. We are not trained by our society to identify these people.
We, who, I bet you, no one listening to this has ever heard of Cluckley's book. It was the best, most
influential book, not best, but the most influential book ever written on psychopaths and how
they operate. And the key thing to know is they put, they seem like the most wonderful colleague
or leader or teacher or coach or partner, you know, spouse. They're just,
Everybody loves them. They're the life of the party. They're charismatic. They're very, very intelligent. They are able to be sane in front of everyone. And you close the door and you see the other side of them. The classic Dr. Jekyll, Mr. Hyde. And so this is what I really wanted to do a deep dive into because I was exposed to it. And I was like, how did I fall for this? How come I couldn't see it? And so there's a couple of things going on. First of all, you have to be trained to see it. And you can put a psychopath across the table from a psychiatric.
expert. So the leading experts on them today is Paul Babiak and Robert Hare. And they'll tell you,
it takes about 20 minutes before they start doubting themselves, 25 minutes before the professional
starts doubting themselves. The professional in psychopathology starts to go, well, maybe I'm not
seeing this right. Maybe I'm not. Their mask is that good. They are that good. They are so manipulative.
It's like a superpower in them. And you know, we think that people who get gas lit are.
gullible. We think they're not educated. Absolutely not. That's why for my case studies, I chose the most
untouchable people I could find that had indeed been brutally gaslit and almost destroyed by it. Because I wanted to show,
no, it's not that they have a vulnerability. There's not a weakness in them that led them down this path.
Let's stop looking at them and wondering all these questions about the victim. Let's do what you're doing.
Let's look at Bundy. What is it about him? And I think when we change,
change our focus. We start to learn a lot more how to be safe. Where do they learn to put such an
effective mask on that it can fool professionals? Are they just out of the box broken? No, that's
the sad part of it. So what's really sad about these people is there's, and I'm going to give you
a big generalization. As soon as you're ever doing neuroscience anything, it's always complex. So yes,
there's genetic factors. Absolutely. There are these complexities to it. But in general,
the person who is walking around with a mask on who likes to hurt other people, who's modus operandied
to lie and mislead and make other people feel crazy, that person almost always comes from abuse
and neglect.
So the abuse and neglect, what it does, and this is from the research of Simon Baron Cohen,
who's a Cambridge expert in empathy.
So he talks about how, and this gives you an idea of the complexity of the neuroscience again,
our empathic regions in the brain, there's at least 10 parts of the brain that are involved in how it works.
It's never just sort of one component.
And the thing that's complicated about our empathy is there's two different circuits.
So one is cognitive empathy and one is affective empathy.
The people who are in the dark tetrad, they oftentimes have eroded affective empathy.
That means the empathy neural circuit that you just naturally have in your brain, you had a great,
upbringing, not perfect, but you had parents who loved you.
You're not positive.
I might have a great mask.
I might be a psychopath.
You could be, you could be.
That's very true.
But they usually come from a background of love and care and support and it builds their
affective empathy.
That gives you the capacity to feel other people's pain.
So it's really, it's kind of the key and you could feel an animal's pain.
No problem.
It's just natural to you.
It doesn't make you a good person.
It just means that you have been blessed with this kind of healthy part of your brain.
Now, the person who is in the dark tetrad, they haven't grown up with that.
And they've learned all kinds of strategies to survive.
And the strategies to survive have them doing things like manipulating others,
having a hidden personality behind closed doors,
turning on the charm when they need to, letting it, you know,
taking that mask off, which must be a relief,
when they don't have to put it on anymore.
They have strong cognitive empathy.
So they can read you like a book.
This is what I was talking about before.
They're good at identifying your vulnerabilities.
They know what makes you tick.
They're usually very smart and they're very good at created a model of exactly who you are after
a number of visits.
They're good at love bombing.
They put another kind of mask they wear is the one that reflects you.
And so you think that they care about you.
You think that they're interested in you and that they have similar things.
They like.
Exactly.
The things you enjoy doing, they enjoy doing.
You're the closest friend that you've ever had.
Yeah.
No, I get it.
That's exactly what they do.
And it's a traumatic shock when the mask comes off and you see that actually they've objectified you.
So what I try to talk about to get people to understand this is, you know, they can read you like a book, but that's all you are to them.
You're just an object.
You know, you're a pawn on their chestboard.
That's all.
Does anything mean anything to them or just them?
just them just success they love they have a game this is a quote game like fascination um with
winning they love to win they'll do anything to win but they they you know you talk about this in the
book um you talk about the team player yeah the team guy versus the seal exactly so the person who um
and we should do a deeper dive into this because it's very interesting their whole modus operandi
revolves around this self and it's really a brain malfunction and a whole bunch of
of ways, but they're not team players. They don't want the team to win. So this is a really
interesting. Even though they would probably want to be on the team so they can fit in. Oh, they want
to be on the team because, and it's another thing that you talk about is you say, you can't
achieve these things without the team. Yeah. The team is critical to success. You can't do it
alone. So they need the team to be the pawns on the board so they can take the queen and win the
game. Yeah, but they're there for different reasons than everybody else in the team. Yeah.
Damn. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It's not team.
So when a coach, like this was, I mean, something I actually witnessed myself.
My husband phoned me, our son, our older son, was a very, he's a very skilled athlete.
And basketball was like his life and his dream.
And, you know, or one of them.
You know, he loved the sport.
He was brilliant at it.
It's he wanted to play college.
Like, he just had joy when he played.
It was like his happiest place.
It's sort of like skydiving for you.
The world stopped.
He could just be in the moment and the flow of playing the sport that he loved.
And so, you know, it mattered to him.
And my husband, who was also an athlete and played very high-level hockey as a kid and, you know, farm, Ontario kind of hockey, which was very serious in Canada.
So he phoned me and it sounded like a ghost.
And he was at my son's tournament and he said to me, they don't want to win.
And I could tell by the sound of his voice there was something very wrong, but I couldn't understand.
He's like, they don't want to win.
And I was like, what does that mean?
And it's just like the penny dropped for me.
I'm like, if they don't want to win, what are they doing?
Like, what do they want?
And I now know from having studied this scenario for so long, they wanted to hurt those boys.
The coaches, you mean?
Yeah, they didn't want to win.
They had a pack of fabulous athletes.
They could have easily won.
In fact, that team beat the team that won the championship when they allowed our son to play on the court.
But they kept him off the court.
He was perpetually benched.
So he couldn't help the team win.
It was like torture.
No, it was more about the position of power and control for the coaches than it was.
And that's what I'm saying.
You have to have for people to really effectively publicly hurt others like that.
They have to have this socially accepted place of perceived power like a coach who has access and you need to listen to what the coach says.
And they're the gateway to fill them whatever the goal may be.
Yeah.
And you know, this is this is we talked about.
this with teachers back when we talked about bullied brain and we talked about coaches and it's it's a
terrible thing that we do in the school system it's kind of not on purpose it's unwitting but we we train
kids from a very early age to obey they are trained to comply to conform and obey and the school
system hammers it into them it's not like you walk in the door in kindergarten and they say you know what
there's an authority in this room that we refer to as a teacher the teacher is a human being and they
can make mistakes and they can have flaws, they can have ignorance, they can have all kinds of
things that could be worrisome and your job is to always ask good questions about their conduct.
We don't tell kids that. We tell them to respect the teacher. We give the teacher the power and the
coach as well to tell kids their value. You know, that is so dangerous. I mean, think of the
million times. I've been a teacher for a long time. I've made mistakes all the time. I didn't
know the potential of every kid, but I had to assign them a percentage, had to assign them a grade.
It's one of the things I most hated about teaching and made me feel completely like I was
just making it up on one level, because how can you ever say what the value of someone is?
You could write about it maybe. You know, you could talk about they can run this fast or they
can shoot this many hoops or they can write a paragraph that looks like this. But you can't really
say what their value is or what their potential is, ever.
Is that really the job of a teacher, though?
I mean, I would think, sure, you're going to have tests that you will give and you can
score them against an average of their peers, but leave it at that.
Like, this is where you rack and stack in these particular criteria.
It's not for me to assign any judgment or assessment of what your potential is.
But, hey, here's your strength and weaknesses.
You keep failing calculus, but you're crushing English.
Yes.
Maybe just use that as a.
a self-guiding or correcting feedback on your journey.
That's exactly how it should be, but that's not how it is.
You take a look at a report card, and it's telling you about your child's character.
It's like, no, you're not.
What kind of report cards are you guys using in Canada?
Because mine were pretty simple.
I think it had six classes, and it usually had something about a D or lower on there on each one of those classes for me.
And do you think that was an accurate representation of your potential?
Oh, I didn't look at the report card as my potential.
I looked at it as my attendance in class.
There you go.
Which was subpar.
Yeah.
But I mean, you don't, I mean, it's just indicative of school is designed for what I call
herd learners.
If you're a herd learner, you do very well in whatever the school system is at the time.
Sometimes it's very focused on, are you an auditory learner?
And can you recite poetry?
Yeah.
By memory.
Oh, that's how we're going to, like back when I was a kid, it was all about your handwriting.
You know, if you could write nicely, if you could write nicely like girls do, you were
just a star and especially math to math and nice handwriting you know if you were a boy this is a gross
generalization again but you didn't have that kind of tidy little girl handwriting you were considered
you know doomed it's like you know there's there's a lot of things in education we could switch up
yeah and do better i always just viewed education is it's the results of how you are how you are
either receiving retaining or your ability to utilize the knowledge in very narrow
bandwidths and categories, and that's kind of it.
I mean, it could be a trend indicator, perhaps, on future potential in certain areas,
but certainly not a character judgment.
I hope nobody's looking at that.
I'm trying to remember report cards from when I was in school.
And again, I don't think it had anything on there about my character other than my complete
and other just dismissal of wanting to be at school.
Maybe that's, that was like, I mean, but did they write and say, you know, clearly, you know,
Andy is rebelling against an oppressive system.
He finds it boring.
School is boring.
Oh, no.
The report card just said class grade.
Oh, you didn't have a comment about, you know,
Andy needs to talk more in class.
I definitely wasn't going to get that one, by the way.
That would have been probably talk less.
But if he was in class, he should talk less.
No, it was class grade attendance.
That's it.
Yeah, in Canada, for some reason we think we need to really comment
in bigger or more elaborate ways.
And it's so stressful for teachers.
It's hard to do and it's so inaccurate that you don't want to do many of us.
And yet it's a required thing.
Michael, you were the closest one to somebody who has gone to school.
Did your report card have any character notes on it?
Or was it class, attendance, and grade?
I think it was mostly grades.
Honestly, I don't really remember.
But I was also such a goody two shoes that if there was any.
You were the kind of person that would tell on others.
weren't you? No, I wouldn't tell on others, but I certainly... You were a snitch. You were a hundred
percent of snitch. I wasn't. Snitches get stitches, Michael. Yeah, no, I, I mean, there were
like parent-teacher conferences where, like, a few things would come up, but... We would have those.
That's where some more... I would say that would be more in-depth where you would sit down and I actually
just really disliked that time period because they would explain to my parents how little I came to
class because I was spending my time at home lying to them about how the school's attendance
program was broken more than anything where I would try to answer the phone call that came usually
around 5 p.m. and be like, oh, my parents aren't home right now. Click because they would call
if you miss class. Then when I turned 18, my parents signed a piece of paper, which gave me
the authority to write my own get out of school notes. I don't know how to this day I successfully
talked them into that. That's good. It's one of my better moments. But other than the parent
teacher conferences, I think the report cards were very cut and dry.
absent. And I'm actually almost certain that they were devoid of anything other than just the
class name in the grade. Well, report cards in Canada are the most stressful time for teachers
because you're still teaching, but you have to write about the students in such a way. Like,
you write about their projects and what they did and what worked and what didn't and how they
could definitely strengthen in this area and that they're just advancing in this area. It's just really,
it's hard. And you know, you've got 20 kids, 30 kids.
So with every single class.
And it matters.
You know, families read it.
The parents read it.
The kid reads it.
And you don't want it to be wrong.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean.
Did you ever skip school, Michael?
Did you ever cut class?
I did, actually, but not very often.
I feel like it was accidental.
No, yes.
It was on purpose, but it was probably like less than five times.
In your entire, what?
That would be a good day for me at high school.
Yeah.
No, I always went to class.
I always went to class too
I got in trouble for other things
but I was a pretty big attender of class
I didn't like it
I got in trouble for minor disruptions
but I was like what telling on other students
incessantly?
No I was just you know
dicking off in class basically
I don't there's no way
if I were to imagine you
you were in a three piece suit
front
front seat
every class, several notebooks out,
spiralized binder, and just
writing down, and then direct eye contact
with the teacher, right?
Yeah, you give me a lot more credit
than I am.
You were the one who said you were getting two shoes.
I was as far as like, I don't know,
I guess drugs and alcohol and stuff.
But, yeah, I didn't really care about my grades,
even though I did get A's and B's, but I
didn't try that hard.
I know.
Not a big deal.
4.0 didn't care at all.
He's gaslighting us.
Yeah, he sure is.
He sure is.
That's why it's important in this conversation.
Oh, boy.
Yeah, I think it's real dangerous to tell young,
to tell human beings what they can and cannot do,
especially that early.
Yeah.
From a position of perceived or real authority.
It's, it's completely deadly.
It's one of the most dangerous things you can do, and we don't treat it that way.
I'm always trying to think of how do you explain why gaslighting is so terrible?
And I'll try out my thought on it with you.
I think that what it does or what it can do to some people is it takes away your self-belief.
And your self-belief, I mean, if we look at our kids, self-belief is the fundamental level.
I mean, this is documented in science.
it's what you need to build your talent.
So if you tell, if you erode someone's self-belief,
when you think of the people that end up in the dark triad,
they're perpetually abused and neglected
and emotionally abused and put down and all these things,
their self-belief is so compromised
that they conjure up this kind of split self
that really is just a torment on many levels to them as well.
So if you erode someone's self-belief,
they don't put in the hard work,
They don't put in the deliberate practice of constant repetition, that hard work that's necessary to build your talent, to grow your talent.
All of us can do it.
We all have talent in different areas of our lives.
But we all have it.
And when someone takes it away, that's really the tragedy of gas letting.
Yeah, I think it would depend on where and when you were exposed to it.
We were talking about briefly before we started.
I didn't know what the term meant until, I'll say a couple years ago.
I had heard it, but didn't really pay attention to it.
And I'll speak broadly about the situation just because it'll save me the ability to speak
specifically about it if I need to in other settings.
But a business relationship that went awry, and I had a few conversations that were
incredibly perplexing to me and left me with questioning my own reality.
or which I guess could be the sense of belief.
It wasn't a belief in myself.
I just was almost, I was just questioning my memory.
Did I remember this properly?
Did this happen?
And then that led to other conversations with other people or you say, you were there for this, right?
Am I crazy?
Or is this what this person said and did?
And they can confirm that.
Then you go find somebody else.
And it's conversations relatively start the same.
Hey, I got to ask you something.
Am I crazy or is this what was said?
So there is that questioning.
It wasn't of like of me or what I was capable of,
but it was of my ability to remember things as if they happened.
Then I was, I forget where I was specifically,
but I remember somebody was talking about gaslighting it and essentially
described it as accusing somebody of doing something that you are actually doing
and trying to flip the reality on that.
And I'm like, got it.
I understand exactly what's happening now.
I had one more conversation with the person after that,
which was the shortest of the conversations that we had
because I understood what they were trying to do
and instead of internalizing and trying to grab on
what they were saying, I just left it out there.
And I wouldn't engage with it.
And it unwound them.
And not as like an explosion, but I got something else I have to do.
And that was the end of it.
That was the last in-person conversation that we had.
But the recognition of it and then realizing
It's almost like a game at ping pong.
You got to hit it back at them.
And if you don't, they lose their shit.
Yeah.
You know, one of the things they say that is interesting to me,
and I didn't put it in the book,
but I've just kind of learned it through a personal experience
with a colleague is you can identify a narcissist really quickly
or the dark tetrad, we might even say.
Yeah.
So again, that's malicious personality traits.
Narcissism, Machiavellianism, psychopathy, and sadism.
This same individual, incredible covert narcissist.
Didn't know what that was either until much further down the road talking with other people,
specifically a friend of mine who had a mother that was a covert narcissist.
And listening to him, explain the stories in the interactions.
It was as if this person was in the room for the vast majority of the conversations.
It was wild.
define for everyone covert narcissist if they don't know what it is.
I think you might be better off doing that than me since you have a little bit of a background
in this.
Well, I would just say it's another good example of the masking that they're very good at doing.
It's a narcissist, but they're really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really hard
to figure out.
Yeah.
Because they have honed their craft to a degree where you do not catch it.
Yeah.
You know, in fact, that can be a good measuring stick is when someone is just a little bit too good.
you should start to feel a little bit of sort of gut instinct doubt.
It's like,
but that's the number one thing they're trying to get you not to feel.
Yeah.
Very, very difficult.
You know,
I think a good example of that is Harvey Weinstein.
So for people that don't remember,
Harvey Weinstein was the Hollywood producer who completely was like it was a serial
abuser of women.
The casting couch guy.
Casting couch guy.
Brutal, yeah.
But what's really interesting about him going back to people that come from abuse and neglect,
we can't say everyone,
but it is a common background for these people.
They become caricatures of a human being.
So with Harvey Weinstein, it's a perfect example.
You know, he'd put on the same towel.
He'd be in the same hotel room.
He'd say the same rehearsed lines.
He would not be having authentic interactions with human beings.
It would just be, I have to play out this scenario over and over and over again, like a broken record.
So we could take Dr. Larry Nassar, another example, the U.S.
Gymnastics coach, doctor.
Doctor.
Yeah.
What's the doctor?
Athlete A.
Oh, God.
I am going to actually recommend people if they are going to watch that.
Strap in.
Yeah.
It is a dark, dark documentary about sustained abuse.
And I don't know if I'd share that one with kids under the teenage years if you're
going to watch that one.
But in the teenage years, yes.
Because the more kids know about these individuals, the safer they're going to be.
Even though it's painful and horrible.
Yeah.
And he's a really good example of gaslighting.
Because he had so convinced everyone, including the mothers of these girls,
that he was this fabulous doctor, that he was abusing the girls right in front of the mothers.
And the mothers had no idea because, and this is an important brain thing,
we have a very bad tendency, as humans, to look at the position and not look at the person.
So we look at the position of Dr. Jekyll, Harvey Weinstein, the talented producer, who's just such a superstar.
are so powerful in the industry.
Dr. Larry Nassar don't even question him.
He's a leading medical, very high level.
He's the American gymnastics doctor.
Who are you to question him?
Is the kind of thought process.
So position, power, credibility, and social standing.
I think of, you know, religious figures.
They're master abusers because they've got the big robe on that makes everyone think,
oh, all I see is the position.
Yeah.
And really, it's just a classic sheep in wolf's, no, wolf in sheep's clothing.
Yeah.
So, yeah, but Harvey Weinstein, what was interesting is to go back to covert narcissist,
he made a big effort, which they do, these individuals, to be so good.
So he's marching in the National Women's March.
He's created a directing special program to really support women directors.
Like, you look at the guy and you're like, he's the best guy out there.
Merrill Streep is literally quoted as saying Harvey Weinstein is a god and it's because you don't see what happens behind closed doors and you know a kid growing up with a covert narcissist oh my god they don't have a chance let alone an adult in a business relationship you're lucky you identified it before it did more harm you know this person found somebody else that interested them more than what a relationship with me was
was able to provide. That's where the cracks and the seams started to show up or the seams
in the cracks, whatever one of those, whatever words should come first. That was the opening
to whoa. What's going on? Who is the real person? Was any of this real? And a lot of questioning of
oneself trying to figure out what was imagined, what was real? And those
conversations, hey, I got to ask you something. Am I fucking crazy or did this actually happen?
It's good that you had people that you could go to to say, can I check with you? And you know,
in abuse culture, one of the things that's most important is witnesses. If you have people that
observe the behavior or we're on the receiving end of the behavior, you're almost guaranteed
that you're dealing with an abuse culture. Now, the gaslighter is very quick to say, this is a
witch hunt. If we've got a number of people, it's because they're all out to get.
me. But if you think about it, that's pretty unlikely. You know, if you've got a number of people
that saw the behavior are able to document the behavior, you are dealing with one of these very
slippery characters. And this is why, you know, like in my son's case, my older son Montgomery,
there were 14 kids that came forward that reported the abuse culture. And that's almost
impossible to do, especially for teenagers, because these people were left in power over them.
And so they were put into the position they had to speak truth to power.
And teachers, as we know, these were teachers.
They had control, control over their sports, control over their social standing in the school,
control over their reputation, control over their character.
You know, but it was mostly the athletic opportunities where they could just do whatever
they wanted.
The kids would lick their boots because they didn't want to lose their position.
They didn't want to be put on the bench.
They didn't want to miss the opportunity.
And so it's very rare when you,
you get 14 kids saying, yeah, all this abuse is occurring in identical ways when a bunch of them don't know each other.
Word for word, it's like, yeah, they're documenting the same thing.
You have a big problem.
Yeah.
No, it was wild.
That was, maybe I've encountered other people like that in my life, but that one, put a pin in that one for sure to try to learn my lesson.
And it was interesting as well.
The more questions that I had, the more anger came from that person at the question.
the more volume of data that I was able to bring, the poorer the response.
And then it became an accusation of me going after them.
Of course.
Okay, so let's just unpack that because you just said in those few sentences,
so much valuable information for people.
So the first thing that I tell people, if you're with someone like that,
if you're dealing with a dark tetrad, you're dealing with a gaslighter,
The first thing to do is stop questioning yourself.
Now, normally.
Not easy to do.
It's not easy to you.
I know, it's not easy.
Especially if they isolate you.
Oh, yeah.
That was another interesting aspect.
And I don't necessarily mean they put you on an island, even though I'm sure there's
some people out there that would do that.
But social circle isolation lets you and I go do this or just a way to just constantly control.
And you think it's connection.
So they use this, of course they use this in domestic abuse.
You think that the connection is being built because they don't want your family interrupting.
They don't want your friends around.
They want you all to themselves because they love you so much.
The love bombing is real too, yep.
It's so real.
And how would you not fall for that, right?
You think you're building this incredible relationship, but really they're isolating you.
And it's a good example of gaslighting.
And you have to really hear that expression, love bomb, that.
that those two words shouldn't be together ever,
but they are when you're dealing with an abuser.
So you said, okay, you had to stop looking within
to get the answers.
What have I done wrong?
Did I remember correctly?
Am I crazy?
Stop.
The second you find yourself doing that,
literally in these situations,
self-reflection is wonderful,
for sure, self-accountability.
We all need to do it.
Not right now.
This is one of the times where you let the cement wall go down
and you start watching them very carefully.
They do not like evidence.
They like to make the, and you'll see this, this is used all the time by gas lighters that we see in public, like leaders in public positions.
They will say blah, blah, blah, and then there's no evidence.
And it can even be reported.
It's reported by the media.
They said this, but there's no evidence.
But they know well enough that people, many people will still swing to position and go, they couldn't be in a position of power, credibility, and social standing and not be telling the truth.
Therefore, I believe them.
I believe in the bishop of the church.
I believe in the priest.
I believe in the political leader.
And so first of all, so the cement wall goes down, you start to marshal evidence and you
start to ask them questions.
Now, if you ask someone a question and they start getting emotional, that's a great
distractor, right?
Because all of a sudden you're like, oh, I'm sorry.
I didn't mean to upset you.
You start to like be empathic.
But then also, why are you upset?
It should be.
It should be why are you upset?
That's what I didn't understand.
And so the breadcrums started lining up a little bit.
Like, this is not an accusation.
I'm just saying here's some demonstrable X, Y, and Z.
Why are you getting pissed at me for bringing that up?
Yeah.
I'm not accusing you of X, Y, and Z.
I'm just saying X, Y, and Z happened.
Exist.
Yeah.
They don't like that.
They do not like facts, evidence, none of that.
That makes them completely upset.
And then when, so it's really good for people to remember.
This is from Dr. Jennifer Freid.
She's an expert in this, wrote the book on this.
And she was talking about child abuse.
So her book is called Blind to Betrayal.
She wrote it with another psychologist, Patricia Burrell, and they're in Oregon.
And so Jennifer Freid is just a master of this.
And she was an abused kid.
So when she ultimately got old enough to say, I'm being abused in this family,
her parents flipped the script, just as you're describing.
They created this thing where first it was denied.
No, you weren't.
Don't be ridiculous.
None of that happened.
Then it was attack.
I'm extremely emotional about what you're saying.
Don't say it.
just what you experienced.
And then the third part's really interesting.
So she calls it Darvo.
So D for deny, A for attack you, and then reverse victim and offender.
So as you just said, all of a sudden, the person's trying to make this your problem.
You're the problem.
Or they're literally saying that what they did is what you did.
And they are just having a reaction to that.
Reverse victim and offender.
And if you grab onto that, you'll go insane.
because that's you'll constantly be questioning your reality.
That's why I said, when I finally understood and stopped engaging and I would just let it hang there,
nuclear explosion.
Not as in an outburst.
They had to physically leave.
They no longer were interested in the engagement or conversation.
Well, and they're not interested because the only interest they had in the first place,
which is so foreign to the healthy brain, the only interest they had was manipulation.
As soon as they can't manipulate you, when they can't be the puppet master, there's no interest.
There's no engagement because that's all they do.
They manipulate.
And so if they can't manipulate, they just need to find someone else.
It has nothing to do with you.
This is what I tell to abuse victims all the time.
You know, they really want to take it on.
I'm like, you're the most random thing in the room.
They don't care.
They had you locked into their sights for a little while.
Now that you've left and you've walked away, you're not.
nobody you're random it has nothing to do with you people say to me all the time in my work
i was bullied because and the second they get to that i don't let them finish the sentence i'm like
you were bullied because you were dealing with the dark tetrad you were bullied because you were
dealing with a machiavellian a narcissist a psychopath and a how do we say it sadist
sadist sadist for my own edification what exactly is maccavillianism so interesting so in the
bullied brain i looked at the different brain structures of these people
people. They behave in quite similar ways, but when you look from a brain science point of view
on a brain scan, you see differences in their brains. And as Dr. Michael Mersenick says, who's just
my absolute favorite person, who's a neuroscientist, who supports me and my work and helps
me all the time out of the goodness of his heart. He's American too, of course. He says,
and it's a great thing to remember, brain scans don't lie. So the brain scan can tell you a ton of
stuff. I wish we could do them more often.
But so the Machiavellian brain is what the psychology of it is, the kid has grown up in a house where the parents have really high expectations.
But the kid doesn't have the brain or capacity to fulfill them.
They just didn't get the whatever it is these high level parents expect from the kid.
It's impossible.
And because the kid can't fulfill the parental dream, they get very adept at.
kind of manipulating things so that they can fulfill it.
So, for example, they will steal other people's work in the workplace.
They will take things, lay claim to them, put their name on it, present the presentation as if it's their own.
They do a lot of stuff like that.
Anything to ascend to the a throne, basically.
Yes. They want to be, they don't want to be a loser.
And they feel they've internalized this parental, they've failed their parents,
they feel like a loser, so they'll do everything in their power to be a winner.
and if that means not telling the truth, so what, right?
And the narcissist is different.
The narcissist is not kind of, the narcissist has this odd combination of self-loathing
that they got from the abuse and neglect.
So a lot of self-loathing, but the way they try to compensate is through self-aggrandizement.
So in a strange way, everything that they do in their haughty kind of,
they put other people down, they hurt.
hurt them, they humiliate them, they degrade them, cast them to the wolves, put them in jail,
they do whatever to other people. It's all to shore up their own lacking sense of selfhood.
So if you marry someone like that, your marriage partner, if they have these narcissistic
tendencies, what they need you to do is mirror them as bigger and greater and stronger and
more divine than they really are. And when you can't do that, maybe you're exhausted. Maybe you're
you're the one that needs emotional support. Maybe you've had a suffering of some kind, and they're
suddenly not there for you. The carpet's pulled out from under you, and you realize, oh, my God, I never
was a person for them. I just was the mirror. And now that I can't hold the mirror up, they're not
interested. I feel like for the narcissist, they live their life in small time capsules, because they
have to go from one of those situations to the next. And you have to almost to a degree, rewrite.
your own story for that to work.
So it's time capsule to time capsule to time capsule.
What I wasn't aware of at the time with the experience I had was essentially something
like that, multi-year chunks, but then lifting and shifting of geography as well too, which is a
perfect opportunity to rewrite your narrative, especially if the people that you are now interfacing
with have no connection to the previous world that you came from.
another very interesting mechanism for control. Well, and it's exactly how abusers work. When they get
identified, and what fascinates me, one of my biggest puzzles was the institutional complicity with this.
So you see this all the time in the Catholic Church, for example, or other religions too, but the Catholic
Church really has just done, it's a kind of spectacular job of this. It's, I don't like the expression.
They do it with teachers as well, but it's called pass the trash. And I don't like the expression because
it's dehumanizing.
And even if you have been abused and neglected and you're an incredibly destructive person,
you still shouldn't be dehumanized.
But it is what they do.
So I was abused as a child.
There were three teachers involved.
And for 10 years, they ran an outdoor education program.
And they abused, I don't even know the numbers, just unbelievable numbers of kids,
me being one of them.
And so I ultimately, like I put that away in a box for a good portion of my life.
I was like, I just not opening that box.
don't care. It wasn't, you know, I wasn't an abuse victim. Like, it just was gone. But you knew that
box was there. Not really. You buried it that deep. That deep. Yeah, I wouldn't, I wouldn't say I knew it.
It wasn't. And the funny thing is, I was seeing psychologists and I was something wrong with me and I was
doing a lot of cutting and I had an eating disorder. But those were all my fault. I was doing a lot of
looking inward like, oh, and never once with these psychology people or psychiatrist, did I ever mention,
mention the abuse done to me. Why do you think that is? I think it's the fault of psychology and
psychiatry, on one hand, not that I'm casting stones, but I think that psychology and
psychiatry, certainly back in the day when I was young and trying to get help from them,
they were too focused on the family. So they were asking me all kinds of questions about my
family. And Lord knows, my family is hilariously dysfunctional like all families are, and we're
also super close. My parents were fabulous, and they made a thousand mistakes and whatever.
But I wasn't abused in the family home.
But they never once asked me questions about tell me more about school.
What happened in school?
If they had, would you have led them towards that box you had buried?
I think so.
So it goes back to what you were saying about, I didn't know about gaslighting.
And you know what the neuroscience says?
And I think this is so interesting.
And good for all of us to know and learn.
the neuroscience says if you don't have the language, you can't tell your brain what's going on.
So when you didn't have the word gaslighting, it took you longer.
Luckily, you were able to figure it out. Lots of us don't until it's too late.
You were able to figure out this colleague is lying to my face, manipulating reality,
trying to make me think I'm crazy. Maybe you didn't have the exact term, but you unpacked it
and figured it out. That takes a huge amount of brain power. And it's hard to do.
But if I had had the word grooming when I was a 13-year-old,
old, I would have been able to say, go home to my mom and dad and say, my science teacher is grooming
me. He just gave me an A and I'm a terrible science student. And he put his arm around me and he told me that
I can come and talk to him anytime I want. Do you think he's my friend or do you think I should be
careful? My dad's a lawyer. My mother works in politics. Like they would have unleashed and unholy hell.
But of course, I never told them. I never could tell myself.
let alone them because I had no vocabulary for abuse culture, none.
You know, I've had to learn it myself.
So it wasn't until my son was being humiliated.
So he was in grade 10.
When I was in grade 10, I started to be the target of these three teachers, outdoor
education teachers, unbelievable humiliation.
And it's because I wouldn't have sex with them.
But I wouldn't, I couldn't put it together because I had a grade 10 brain with no vocabulary,
no experience.
I had no idea.
I'd never even had a boyfriend.
I was like, middle-aged men want to have sex with me?
I don't even know what sex is, and that's really confusing.
Think this is pre-internet.
We knew nothing back in the day.
This is in the 1980s.
So they humiliated me around the clock in front of my peers
because I wouldn't engage.
Other girls my age, 15-year-olds, 16-year-olds, they were.
And, you know, it makes me feel incredibly sad
because I feel like if I had half a brain,
I would have, so they bullied me, which drove kids into their arms,
because no kid at 15 wants to be bullied, especially by a teacher.
You don't want a teacher saying you're frigid in front of your peers.
You don't want a teacher going, and she won't slow dance with me and making a mockery of me.
Because I was like, slow dance with you.
What?
You're a dad of three kids.
Like, what is this?
I could not understand.
I couldn't understand.
And so my son started being the target of Montgomery was the target of, like, just
relentless humiliation. And this is a terrible story, terrible parenting story to tell. But when he first
came to me at the start of grade 11 basketball, he said to me, I'm the target of relentless
criticism. He did not have the vocabulary to say, I am being psychologically tortured day
and day out. I am being repeatedly assaulted. They are grabbing me and holding me in for more
yelling in the face. They're calling us fucking retards, fucking pussies. I did not repeat any of that.
He said to me, I'm the subject of relentless criticism and I said, you're lucky. That's how you're
going to get better. They want you to, they know how good you are. They say you're going to be
sought after on college teams. Give it your all. Just, they're giving you attention because they see
your potential. Terrible mother's response. And when I said to him ultimately, when the whole thing
blew up and I'd heard now from other kids describing what had been done to him. I said to him,
I looked up at him, he's six, four. And I was like, Montgomery, why didn't you tell me? And he took me
by the shoulders and he said, I did. And he said, I hate those guys. They're freaks. And I did not
hear. I hate those guys and their freaks as I'm being psychologically tortured dandy out in the
sport I love. They're destroying me. Well, it falls back into
this, what I'll call is a false narrative that to achieve greatness, it has to come through
torture and suffering.
Yep.
Yep.
On the hands of others.
You know, these people are doing it for a good reason.
It was like, oh, anyways, you know, there's...
There is an appropriate way to motivate people without destroying who they are as a person.
There's a way to make things difficult that has a net positive with zero destructive
nature. And it's not holding a kid and yelling in their face. It's not demeaning their character.
It's not the ruthless and endless criticism. I'm remarried now. So my wife Leah, how would I describe
her missing the parenting of three children? She's real fucking lucky.
We do the best that we can.
There is no instruction manual.
And I have no doubt that I've missed some cues from my kids as well.
And it's not because I wouldn't have instantaneously done something about it.
Sometimes you're just not attenuated properly or in the moment where they're trying to share with you.
You're not present enough.
Good luck to all the parents out there.
I know. It's parenting is the hardest thing on the planet and you make so many mistakes and you actually care. You know, like you didn't care about school.
That is a true statement.
It's like you really care about kids though. You care about your kids and messing up in that regard is so painful. But you know, I mean, my kids are super forgiving too. My husband does less bad parenting than I do, but I have failed.
But I think we all learn together.
It's like when you were able to go out to those people and say,
okay, look, is this real or not?
Did you see this or did you see that?
It goes back to being a team player.
We need each other.
And the best way to create reality is as a team.
That's where we can have each other's backs and learn new vocabulary and learn to be better.
Like discover ways to, you know, how do we train people to the high?
highest level without unleashing wiring that we had that told us that this is what we needed to do
to raise them up. This is a great neuroscience line for everybody listening to this. We've been told
that seeing is believing. Seen is believing. We're told it over and over again. But the truth
of it is from a neuroscience point of view. And this should like make everybody stop for a second.
Believing is seen. So whatever you believe is what you see. So when my son came to me and said,
I'm the subject of relentless criticism.
I saw potential.
I saw fabulous coaching.
I saw coaches trying to take him to the next level,
really showering him with attention because they knew he was so good.
I saw what I believed.
And that is a big mistake.
You saw a business colleague that you thought was a good person.
Yeah.
That was, you know, really connected.
And you guys were going to do great things together.
And it turned out that that was a false narrative.
And, you know, I guess we've got to let ourselves off the hook for false
narratives because you almost can't avoid them, you know.
Well, I only could control so much. It's interesting you bring up teamwork.
Collaboration, I think, is the narcissist's worst nightmare in post-mortem afterwards because
these conversations of, hey, am I crazy, would lead to other conversations, sometimes around
the same person. And what I realized is that in many ways,
that particular individual was exerting control by isolating people when they were having conversations,
which reduced the number of opportunities for you to go out and collaboratively talk with somebody
for your reality check.
Because they could always just say, if it was just two people, they could just say, that's not what I said.
And which leads you on this self-leaking ice cream cone, never-ending hamster wheel.
Like, okay.
And then you go talk to the person again.
Hey, didn't you tell me that this, yep, that's 100% on it. You go back. This person, nope,
they're misremembering. Definitely not the way that it. And so then you go back. And at some point,
you just throw your hands up. Yeah. You know, it's a good thing for people to know is one of the
greatest techniques of these individuals is in abuse cultures that they create. They create these
incredible abuse cultures around themselves. And everybody dances. They're like jump and everyone's
like how high. They, they are masters at it. And what they do is they have to split the crowd.
So they have the favorites who they're connected to and talk to and have those sidebar conversations
and they meet eyes and whatever. They've got their favorites and they're treated in a particular way.
They're given opportunities they don't deserve. So they're beholden to the person with power.
So you've got the favorites. And then you've got the targets.
The tiered system. This is how my wife describes it.
That's exactly how it is. And so the.
targets are all going, oh, I must, it must be me because they treat these guys over here like really well.
So I think I deserve this maltreatment. And I got to try harder. I'm going to try harder and really give it my best. I'm going to work double time. I'm going to overcome all my, my weaknesses and vulnerabilities and flaws. I'm going to work out harder. Everything. I'm going to be in the gym, shooting hoops until I'm blue in the face. Because that's how I'll move from this camp to this camp. But you never will.
Because these people are just as dispensable as these people, and they know it.
The only reason they get these privileges, like if we're using a sport analogy, playing time, position, not screamed at, they're not called, you know, whatever, fucking retards.
They are isolated and coddled and protected, but it's only because of the person with power.
And so the person with power, as soon as they're displeased, they get rid of them.
So in the workplace, you can easily be the golden worker until you get fired.
And you will be fired because they actually don't care at all about you.
You're just so important to make these people believe they deserve maltreatment.
And so if you think geopolitically, of all the ridiculous geopolitical things we're all faced with having to look at, you know,
and it goes back to what you said about reversal, which I think is a really good example.
You've got Putin.
Putin tells the whole world, I have to go and take Ukraine.
they will come running into my arms because I have to take them because Zelensky's a neo-Nazi.
And you're like, wait, what?
He's not.
He's like he's a child of Holocaust survivors.
What are you talking about?
No, he's a neo-Nazi.
I'm going to be the savior.
I'm going to go in.
I'm going to liberate these Ukrainians.
And, I mean, it's a completely false narrative.
And yet he's publicly saying it to the world and he marshals an army to do it.
And he marshals other countries to support him.
that's how much we are all susceptible to false narratives you've got an enemy that the power broker
the person that runs the abuse culture has to have four things and it's all hinged together with
gaslighting the manipulation only four things and everybody can do a quick checkmark in the workplace
in their personal relationships is this what you're dealing with because you just need to identify
them do you have favoritism check do you have bullying targets that are maltreated
Check. Okay, you got those two. Do you have humiliation? Yep. And is everybody afraid? The favorites
are afraid they're going to get booted so they'll do anything for the person with power.
And the targets are afraid that more is going to be heaped on them and also that it's their fault.
And gaslighting is how you make it work. Oh, retaliation is the next one.
If you dare to speak up, ask too many questions, you're going to suffer.
Bless you. You're going to suffer retaliation. And so you're terrified.
The Ukraine one's interesting.
I think some of those allies that he rallied could give a shit about the narrative.
They just have ideologies that align with that.
They're anti-Western ideologies, essentially.
Yeah.
The China's, North Korea's.
So they could have said that they needed to invade Ukraine because to build a candy factory.
And there's a certain segment depending on the alignment.
But yeah, I mean, I think you nailed it when you said we are in the gas lighting.
era. If we define it as somebody who is demonstrably saying something that is untrue for the purpose of
manipulation, why don't you just go ahead and turn on any TV channel? Yeah. Yep, I know. It's amazing.
It's amazing. I mean, if we live in a world where, and I'll use two examples of news, I'll use CNN and Fox,
I am aware there's MSNBC and Newsmax and all of those things, but I'm just,
one that if you're team blue, you would understand CNN, team red, you would understand Fox News.
They can talk about the same subject in a manner, depending on which outlet you go to.
And again, I'm just talking about the environment that we are in.
I'm not judging either of those networks.
But if you have the same subject that is talked about and portrayed in a manner that becomes, it's almost indistinguishable.
about what they are talking about, then we have a problem. Because I don't think we're in a place
where either of them are telling the truth. So it falls into what you were saying. The willingness
to put out information with the intent to manipulate. What I will say is this. I bet you there are
people on both of those sides that probably recognize that they are changing the narrative
to manipulate, but they will tell you with their last breath. They're doing it for the right
reasons for good to save whomever. Yeah. It's an interesting dichotomy and an interesting
pressure that's on them. And it's another good thing all of us can do in our own lives,
whether it's with the media, which we can do, or in, say, the workplace or personal relationship,
is to say, what is the source? So who's got the power, first of all? Is the person with power
wanting to get the truth, is, is accuracy of the truth their goal or is viewership their goal?
As soon as you've got that, you're like, okay, you got to take it with a grain of salt,
because if viewership is driving it and making money, then you have to pay attention to,
you know, got to take it.
Is this true?
And both of those examples I used.
And I would say every traditional media outlet, although, yes, they are putting out information
if you think for a second that it's not a click driven
or a content driven or advertisement driven medium,
we're not living in the same world.
You can choose to believe that those aren't the case if you want to,
but objectively that is the world that we're living in.
And you'll be better served if you can at least start from that position.
And I think so as well.
And I think that the gaslighting has really gotten accelerated in our time,
and it's moving very rapidly because of social media
and the collapse, if we can say that, of traditional media.
Not the traditional media ever was telling that truth or giving you reality.
There was always a spin, always.
I think we did a better job of it earlier on.
And I'd have no reference on this, but people of my appearance era would say the Walter Cronkites.
If Walter Cronkite said it, it was true.
Maybe that was a little bit too much faith and trust put into that individual.
But I also feel like there was at least less.
of a heavy hand of manipulation involved.
Probably never pure, because they were selling soap on ad breaks as well, too.
Let's be very clear.
My doctor likes Marlboro Reds.
To me, those are still the most fantastic commercials, the dock and the white coat.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
I grew up with it.
Oh, my God, your doctor would literally smoke a cigarette while he wrote your prescription.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, and the Marlboro man, of course, that's all anyone wanted to be was that guy.
I mean, if cigarettes was the way to get there, who's not going to do it?
Yeah.
And that was present even on the cleanest Walter Cronkite.
Let's be clear.
They're selling ad dollars.
Exactly.
But I think what's happened now is it's so much and it's so fast.
So one of the things each one of us can do from the neuroscience is we can pay attention to source.
So they call it either meta-information or metacognition.
You hear that interchange.
sometimes, but the neuroscientists are like, look, the research shows that if you take the time
not to go for the clickbait, if you take the time not to have the emotional reaction, or to get
the confirmation you want, I want blue confirmation because I'm blue, I want red confirmation
because that makes it easier for me to navigate my ridiculously busy day where I've got
way too much stress and pressure on me. And that just makes a lot of sense from the brain point of
view. But if you really want the truth, so this could be politically or professionally or personally,
you want the truth. You've got to go that extra mile and it takes resources. So you don't want to do it. You want to just go with the faster, faster version of events because it takes less brain body resources, but you can't. And it's, there are times when we need to slow down. And when you really, like you needed to figure out what's the deal with this person at work. And so you slow down. It sounds like to me. Oh, and there's that, it's a classic Navy seal. What is it?
slow is smooth and smooth is fast so therefore slow is fast exactly which is a perfect it's perfect though right
so if you if you go fast from the get-go and you believe what's being said to you and you whether
you know regardless if you believe what's being said to you and you have that emotional reaction
and then you act on it that's not good that is not good one of the things that the neuroscience shows too
that's really interesting is all it takes for us to believe things when we're using our
fast, the fast brain. When we use our fast brain, we will believe anything. Absolutely anything.
And so they use the greatest example of this, of course, always is World War II and how Hitler
and Mussolini and what was his name, Tocco-Hajodhi in Japan. I can't remember his name exactly.
But the bottom line is they convinced whole populaces of untruths or falsehoods. Like everybody
believed it. And all it takes for the brain to believe something is represent.
repetition. That's all it takes. The belief systems that they were able to instill it weren't,
it wasn't overnight though. It wasn't overnight, but it just took repetition. Nothing fancier than that.
No evidence. So it's like you saying, okay, here are the facts. Here's the evidence. That was not supplied.
There was no evidence. There was lots of repetition. And the bigger, the repetition of the falsehood,
the more people believed it. And so what happens in the brain is the brain create, so imagine in the
workplace, you hear, you start working and someone will say to,
you, yeah, you know, watch out for so-and-so.
You know, just I wouldn't like to, you're a young kid.
I wouldn't like you to, I wouldn't want you to get into any of that stuff.
Watch out for so-and-so.
And so you're like, okay.
And then you start to see so-and-so do some things, the way they talk to people,
the way they yell, maybe they punch someone in a face, maybe they.
Jesus, what a job are we talking about here?
Oh, the tough job.
I was trying to think of like a really tough job.
What, hold on.
What tough job are you thinking in your mind?
What office setting is this?
What in the hell is going on in Canada?
Yeah.
Now,
Canada is out of control.
Okay, so you're in your job.
Yeah.
You're told it's so-and-so.
Hopefully not getting punched in the face.
Well, okay, well, okay, let's put it into my world where we had our teachers across the
hall from the principal and the vice principal and the school counselor.
It was all about hugs and massages.
Nobody said anything about that.
Oh, yeah.
Nobody said anything about that.
And it's still even.
use today that same kind of garbage. It's really unbelievable. So yeah, so you learn so-and-so.
So what your brain does is it builds a representation of this, so-and-so. It builds a simulacra
of that's so-and-so. And so when you encounter him or her doing whatever it is that they do,
giving massages or punching something on the face and particularly rough and tumble workplace,
you just, your brain goes, I've seen that before. I normalize it in the sense.
science, they call it habituate. I habituate to that. And we can habituate to Hitler or Mussolini.
We can habituate to anything, no matter how heinous, how untrue, how destructive. I mean,
look at the places where you go and fight. Those people are habituated. This is normal. This is what
life is like. And the ideology is it could be backed by zero. It's not even backed by religious
tax. It's made up by the power brokers that do it. Or they manipulate the religious
to their own end state.
Yeah, which is apparently not hard to do.
We've seen ever since the, you know,
arrival of the religious texts
in whatever.
Yeah, only since the inception of religious texts
has that been happening for people's personal gain.
Yeah.
In the modern era where information is just shotguned out
at a velocity that it's impossible to consume,
how do you find the source?
Yeah, that's a...
It's the million dollar question.
Because people ask me all the time.
or where do I go for the truth?
I don't have great answers.
No.
I mean, the best answer that I can give is one that requires time if they have it.
And it is I can't necessarily point you at the fountain of youth coming out of my coffee cup.
The best thing I can say is you need to aggregate out your research and you're probably going to have to find an average of sources.
And the answer is going to be somewhere in there.
You can't just have a torch that is your guiding light that you're only going to in one place.
But that sucks.
Most people don't have time to do that or a willingness or, quite frankly, an interest.
Yeah.
You know, it's Chris Hedges, I think put it the best way.
The title of his book was the empire of illusion and the decline of literacy.
And that's what I hear you describing.
I think when people, and of course this is going to sound like, it's so old fashioned and it is my world and it's how I process information.
I process information through books.
So I read.
I read articles.
I read books.
And I try to learn from that.
And I read multiple books on a single subject to try and get, as you say, these different angles because no one can never.
Give it to me from the three degrees from the outside of that lens.
It gives you at least the opportunity with one ray of light.
you see only what's illuminated in that light.
If you can bump off three degrees, where is the overlap?
Where's the shadow?
If you can bump off even more, it starts to illuminate even more.
You are from a world of academia, though, where that's your jam.
Yeah.
Most people, to include myself often, are from a world of seeing something in a passing scroll
with your thumb.
Yeah.
Which is largely often, not always negative-based.
Yeah.
And, you know, not that you should be doing this, but I think a lot of people are checking news when they're driving their car.
It's a real tough place to go find the source.
Yeah.
No, it's true.
I think we're going to all have a different relationship with media as time unfolds.
Like I read a substack about gas lighting.
So I try to choose stories from all the different news sources.
But I find myself defaulting a bit to the Guardian only because it's not owned by someone who makes money from it.
it's based on people donating or giving money to keep it up and running.
So I sometimes think that might be the best, but people will tell me.
Depends on where the vast majority of donations comes from.
I know.
And people will say, no, it's not.
Because my Montgomery.
Well, first off, find me one that's pure.
Yeah, yeah.
Good luck with that.
Yeah.
So again, that kind of goes back to the argument for aggregation of sources to find an average,
which is going to require critical thinking on your part.
Yeah.
And understanding that, yes, people will manipulate information to an end state.
Sometimes you agree with that end state and motivation.
So you want to accept it.
But sometimes you can't.
Yeah.
Both my guys listen to podcasts all the time.
Like they're so, they listen to podcasts, they watch podcasts.
They listen to a lot of music as well.
And, you know, I think the arts.
Slayer?
Metallica.
What are we talking?
We're talking.
I don't.
I don't remember.
Death metal?
No.
Are they in their shredding?
No, no, no.
Unbelievable.
Miss opportunity.
No.
No for whom the bell tolls by Metallica, enter Sandman.
What?
Come on.
No.
They for sure don't listen to Metallica.
I think it's probably like...
Like Yanni and Chadeh?
What are we talking here?
I don't know.
I mean, because I'm put on the spot, it's caused extreme anxiety.
You know, you can't remember anything when someone asks you a question.
Like, if you asked me what I read yesterday, I'd be like, I have no idea.
I can't remember.
But yeah, they both listen to lots of music.
I think art, music, nature, conversations, podcasts, media in its own place.
You know?
Podcasts as, and this is obviously as somebody who creates this type of content,
people bring with them their own internal bias and experience.
It's not as pure as, just people.
Yeah.
I have biases that I am aware of.
I probably have biases that I'm not aware of.
Yeah.
I try to do the, the utmost and best of my ability to explain to people when I'm talking
about a personal experience I had, the limit of my knowledge, which is substantial, substantially
limited, things that I have heard, things that I have seen, but I'm not perfect in that
by any stretch.
It's fascinating to me, too.
A lot of people think because of my military background that I lean hard to the right.
My politics are pretty purple.
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I'm in between on both. It really depends on the issue. You know, I think that is a goal that all of us
right now in this particular moment should strive for. There's a French philosopher named
Jacques Derrida, and he talks about how our brains are kind of really geared for binary opposites,
but that's not where you find the truth. You're never going to find it there. You're always going to
find it in a colleague of mine calls it the messy middle. And the purple messy middle where everybody
has a point of view, everyone has an emotion fueling what they're saying. Everyone's afraid on
one level, and that distorts all of us. People are in a stress state. They might be in fight mode
or flight mode. I mean, there's so much going on. And if we just try to do that empathic listening
to both sides and take, you know, what works and what doesn't and it's going to be better than
a hard line, this is always right and this is always wrong. And, you know, a really great experiment
for this. And it goes back to that idea, the neuroscience idea of believing is seeing. You are going
to see what your brain is wired to see, which is going to instantly make you think that this
group is an enemy or that group's an enemy. And once you start on that platform, you're never
going to get to some kind of useful, productive, empathic, caring place. You're just not. And a really
good experiment, probably people know this one is the gorilla one. Do you know the gorilla experiment in
psychology? No. Oh, okay, it's cool. They had these people that they were, you know, signed them,
got them all organized and they said, look, we want you to watch this screen. And people are passing
back and forth. There's the black team and the white team and they're passing back and forth,
balls. You have to rolling them on the field.
And isn't it a gorilla on like a unicycle or something like that?
It's a guy in a gorilla suit. It's a guy in a gorilla suit. He's dancing around. Have you seen
this one, Michael? Yeah. He runs through the field. Thank you, Michael, for finally doing
something. See, she understands the homework, Michael. You're not even talking into your microphone.
Nobody's going to hear you defending yourself. I do know what you're talking about. Yeah.
So what I love about it. They get so transfixed on following the assignment that they don't see.
see, they will be asked, yeah, selective attention test.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Skip to the middle if you, yeah, somewhere in the middle where the person makes the
appearance, if you will, Michael.
What people, the vast majority of people, so they are asked about it's how many times
the ball is passed, correct?
They're counting it.
For the people who are audio only, go back a little bit, Michael.
So he just hit podcast.
There are, of course you're hiding.
There you go.
Hip-paws.
There are three people in white t-shirts, three people in black t-shirts.
They're in a, it looks like there are an elevator bank where there are three elevators
just to give some people some relative scale.
They are inside of the boundaries of the space of three elevators that are side by side-by-side-by-side.
They're passing basketballs back and forth.
And at the end of this, the first time they show it, you are explicitly told, go to the very
first slide now, Michael, the very first slide.
beginning. I just want to see the instructions to make sure I'm not. Okay, go forward.
Count how many times the players wearing white pass the basketball. So you are transfixed.
You're transfixed. You're watching it. You're watching it. And then at the end, what they say is,
go to the end, Michael, just again, so I can demonstrably. Okay, so go back, go back. How many passes?
They oftentimes are able to tell you that. This is where they get people. It says,
did you see the gorilla?
And people will argue until they're blue in the face that they don't know what you're talking about.
There was no gorilla.
And then you have it played again.
And you say, don't worry about the number of passes.
Just watch the video.
And a gorilla comes out and it blows people's minds.
Well, and what's so for me, and this is not what the psychologist say, but it's what I say.
When I see that, I think about Stanley Milgram's experiment at Yale, where he, it was the, it became his book,
the perils of obedience. And it's the instructions that get me. If the instructions were,
do your own thing, we're going to show you a video. You know, imagine your, watch the video in the end.
We're going to ask you what you think. Yeah, we'll ask you, what was your experience of that?
You would catch the gorilla every time. You wouldn't miss the gorilla. But because the command,
and this is going back to, we've been talking about command and control, how certain people,
the command and control to them leaders is the most important thing. That's all they care about.
and they work to consolidate power.
And oftentimes they've got issues around why that is.
But if you don't give a command, you get a very different outcome.
You get people having to think about their own agency, their own observation, their own self-trust, their own self-belief, and you get diverse perspectives.
Some people will notice all the people in the black t-shirts.
And they'll be like, I saw these two guys in black t-shirts.
They weren't very good at passing.
Someone else will be like, did you see that all the girls were wearing white?
That made me think about, how come the girls are in white?
You know, everyone will have this diverse point of view.
And, but when we get commanded to do things, we do as we're told.
And it's all of us.
Like they had, they were randomly bringing people off the street saying, you know, they use
prestige.
So they're like, oh, this is a Yale experiment.
Would you like, would you like, give you 20 bucks?
Everybody was like, well, yes, sir.
And these were just regular people.
I call them the average Joe's off the street.
The average Joe's get into that, they put, they have a booth and they're sitting outside
the booth.
There's a glass wall and there's a person hooked up to electrodes.
and the instructions are from this guy in a white lab coat.
Now, he's just a random guy.
But because he has a white lab coat on, instantly we think position.
This is a Yale researcher, power, prestige, social credibility,
who am I to doubt this guy or to question him?
I'm just going to do as I'm told.
I've been taught since kindergarten and had the lesson reinforced until I was 18 to do as I'm told
and that one person in authority will tell me instructions how to think what to feel, what to do.
that's the teacher.
So this guy takes a teacher lab point of view.
And he basically, most people know this experiment,
but he says if the person gets it wrong,
you have to give them a little electrical shock.
And they've got a dial in front of them that shows
if you go to this part on the dial,
you could hurt the person.
If you go all the way on the dial, you could kill the person.
And the statistics on her are unbelievable.
It's something like 68%.
They take it to the place where the person is suffering agony,
and there's some that take it right to.
They're willing to kill this random person with electrodes,
with electrical, and it was actually Stanley Milgram
who plays the patient.
And of course there's not any real electricity going,
but he was a great actor as well as being a researcher.
He portrayed agony, writhing and screaming and falling to the ground.
And the person just kept saying, you have to do this.
This is for research.
You have to do this.
And all of the people, yes, sir, no, sir.
All because it comes from a position of a,
authority. Yeah, command. And so, you know, it's not good for kids, that's for sure. We wonder why
there's so much child abuse. Well, maybe it's because we set kids up, hand them over to abusive
individuals who are very, they're not a majority by any stretch of the imagination. But all it takes
is one or two, or in my case three, in my son's case two, you know, and they normalize it
because they don't call each other out on the destructive behavior. And you're like, if one teacher
was hurting me, but the other teacher's not saying something, then obviously it's okay.
It's, I've got the problem. And any little thing that someone does to habituate, our brains fall
for it every time. It's a tough one too. You were saying, you know, at kindergarten, there's long
conversations that we could have with kids. I don't know if they have the processing ability to
understand it at kindergarten. No, they don't. You'd have to start small. Start small and build up.
That's the thing is this isn't a one-time PowerPoint slide that you put up and say,
a watch out for predators we're good here no this is reinforced over time and changing as their
understanding and their vocabulary and vernacular increases because if you don't you are setting them up
they may not understand what you're trying to warn them against but i tell you what they're
susceptible to grooming and exposure to those behaviors at that age even though they probably wouldn't
be able to articulate it well as you said in drown proof which really startled me because i'd
never thought of it that way you said when you give your kid a
you're giving the world access to your kid.
Someone's never phrased in that way.
It's I want to, I need to give my kid access to the world, which is true.
I don't know about your kids.
My kids came to me and it was all through the lens of my entire social circle is on this.
How am I supposed to?
And of course, as a parent, you don't want to alienate your child.
And do what you want to when your kids say this.
I'm just saying that this is probably a very common thing in the digital world that we live in.
my parents you know my kids came and they said well I want to go hang out with so and so and
it got to a point where well I want to be able to communicate with so and so and this is how my
friends are all doing this I'm the only friend or person in my social circle that doesn't have
this is just how we communicate it's okay because you do want to have you don't want your child
to be an outlier so you think that you are giving them access to the world but what you're
really doing even though you are giving them access to the world you are giving the entire
world access to them as well. And if that doesn't scare the crap out of you. Yeah. It is,
I have just had too many conversations now with people who specialize in anti-human trafficking
and the digital nature and the way that predators will find a way, they will find a way to get to
their victims. Full stop. That is just what it comes down to. I know. It's really disturbing.
And, you know, again, going back to we talked a while back about the lack of regulation.
It's like, why does the internet have no rules?
I'm sorry.
They're allowed to do the most unbelievable things that nobody else ever is allowed to do.
It's like because they're the tech bros, they're allowed to do whatever they want with very little lawmaker control on them.
I mean, as soon as you found out that serious depression spiked 83% with Facebook, Facebook should have been shown.
shut down massively. Didn't they just get hit with a multi-hundred million dollar judgment,
which I'm sure will be appealed and who knows that'll probably be adjudicated until the people
who need the money or were suffering from that and the money was going to be awarded to far,
far later in their life or until they can find a way to just grind it in the dust.
Yeah. But I mean, that's 40 years later after the fact that they got that information.
It's like, you know, and it goes back to punching someone at work what I wanted to say when we were
I'm still waiting to hear the job in your mind in the work setting that you are.
Okay, let me explain why I said that.
Because really, we think that it, so if these teachers that I had in high school had punched me in the face,
it would have been a lot better than what they did to me.
Because what they did was they absolutely hijacked my brain.
Yeah.
They wrecked my brain on a whole bunch of different levels.
And the constant refrain to me as a kid was how stupid I was.
It was a constant mockery about my stupidity.
and, you know, it's still hard for me to shake that.
It doesn't matter what I do.
So if I go into an interview situation, I'm riddled with anxiety.
I have it about that I'm stupid.
I mean, I would never say those words to myself because I also know that doesn't make sense.
My track record shows, and this is actually another great gaslighting thing that happens.
As soon as you are the person who reports abuse culture, your track record does.
disappears. You know, it's like it's like it didn't exist. You are suddenly the problem. So you saying to your
colleague, it's a smaller version, but same thing, you basically identified abuse culture. You identified
that they were abusing you and you called them on it. And all of a sudden, you just didn't exist.
Your track record, who you are, what you offer, what you bring to the table. None of it mattered.
It was all gone. That happens to people in the workplace all the time. If you're the whistleblower figure who goes to Boeing and says,
You know what?
The safety measures aren't safe.
The engineers are having to work too fast, too long, too hard without the right resources.
I'm concerned about that plane.
Bang.
You're out on the street.
And then you kill yourself by shooting yourself in the back of the head.
And the plane goes down.
Yeah.
And it's not like any heads really rolled for that, right?
It's like, I don't know.
There's something, I think our laws need to catch up better and be more informed by the brain science.
And so punching, my point being, punching someone in the face, that's a six week, four week, six week recovery.
Doing what was done psychologically is a really hard recovery.
And we're not told we have a brain injury.
We're not told that on a brain scan, it can be seen that our brain actually has physical damage to it from the way we were maltreated.
No one touched our body.
But our laws still treat any, our laws are still geared to be the more active and physical, the more serious.
And that's not the world we live in anymore.
So our laws don't work for the gaslit era.
Yeah, I feel like if Elon Musk and the team of people he has working for him can catch rockets that have gone into space.
Yeah.
I feel like that we can at least do far better with what is happening on the Internet.
Now, having said that, I am not an expert into the safety protocols that do exist.
But again, I have had, I'll use one that I had recently, a company.
called Roblox, that from an outside non-legal expert, non-tech expert perspective,
listening to the company in their own words in press releases and in videos is pretty damn aware
that there is a problem. Are they acting as if they're doing something? Hard to say.
But at what point does the money that you're making on that platform stop you from turning it off until you can put the proper protocols in place to protect people, then turn it back on?
If we can catch rockets that have been into space and reuse them, I think we can solve the internet stuff.
I think we could solve a ton of things.
But that's not where, I mean, it's really interesting.
I see it as a left brain, right brain crisis, basically.
So the left brain is, and this is all the work of psychiatrist Ian McGilchrist, brilliant guy.
And he has an enormous book, the documents, the brain science on this as well as he draws on poetry and philosophy and art.
But it's the brain science I'm talking about right now.
He says that our brains, and most people don't know this, I certainly didn't until I did a deep dive into his work.
Our brains are divided.
So we have the left side of the brain, we have the right side of the brain.
and they're different.
And the great goal in life,
and if we could teach our kids this, it would be great.
The great goal in life for all of us
is to have the two hemispheres
talking to each other
and caring about each other.
But what's happened is,
McGilchrist argues,
we've shifted left.
And the left side of the brain
is the opportunist.
I thought about this a lot
when I was reading your book
because you talk a lot about
zeroing in on something
and then pulling back.
So when you're skydiving,
you're in the right side of the brain.
It's the most glorious.
I've been paying attention anymore, to be honest.
That's right, because you're in the right side of the brain.
It's where you feel connected to something universal, something bigger than life itself.
Your ego is gone.
Everything is gone.
You are just in this glorious experience, and that is the right side of the brain.
You've never been skydiving, have you?
Never, and I never will.
I wish it was as poetic as you just described.
I would never.
I couldn't be paid to do that.
I'm a chicken.
It sounds like a hairdrier and things start off small and they get bigger.
That's about what it is.
Well, I mean, you almost get convinced reading this.
I also read James Hatch's book, which also makes you think you really should skydive one time.
But I'm like, no, I'm like pathetically scared.
But the left side of the brain is where Elon Musk is.
Sorry, Elon.
I'm just going to say something in it.
I'm just, I'm not diagnosing.
I'm just merely saying from what I see of how you're conducting yourself, this might have
happened to you.
The left side of the brain, and it's where billionaires reside, it's the opportunist.
call it the opportunist, the right side of the brain is the altruist. You're not going to survive
if you're in one side or the other. You can't be the altruist all the time because you're going
to miss opportunity. Then you can't survive. You can't put food on the table. You can't keep yourself
safe. I mean, come on. We have to be in the opportunist side of the brain. It's not good or bad.
It's just that you don't want one side in balance with the other or controlling the other, which is what
has happened in our era, I think. So the left side of the brain is very narrow focus. And it's all
about gas grasping, getting, and feeding. And it's never enough. If you get locked in.
It's not the dark trite. What's the dark what? Dark Tetrad. Is that where a lot of those
people are living? That's where they are. Okay. They don't have altruism because they don't have
empathy. Because they don't feel empathy. And I mean, Elon Musk is the first one to say empathy is a
weakness. Do you think he actually believes that? I do. I think his brain got wired that way,
not any fault of his own. Even as a parent, though. I mean, he is a very much as a parent. He does
what psychopaths are well known for having many, many, many children that they have no relationship
with or very little relationship with because you can't be pulling rockets out of this guy and spending
time with your kids, especially when you've got 11 or 12. Why do kids? Why do kids? Why do psychopaths want
to have so many kids? That's interesting. Because it's this repetition of themselves. It's more mirrors.
It's all these women can mirror you. All these children can mirror you. And you have a lot of-
creating your own audience. Yeah. Oh. Yeah.
Well, they, you know, think of the bully, that the kid bully all the way up to the adult bully,
it's all about the audience, right?
They need people.
Elon Musk stated in a February of 2025 appearance on the Joe Rogan experience.
Yeah.
That, in quotes, the fundamental weakness of Western civilization is empathy.
Must clarified that he believes in empathy generally, but argues that weaponized or excessive
empathy, which he termed civilization suicidal empathy, is being exploited as a bug to threaten
societal ability. So he tried to walk it back. Do you know where he's getting that from?
No. He's getting it from, I'm extremely sorry to report, a Canadian professor. There is a Canadian
professor named Gad Sade who says that empathy is a suicidal civilization.
tweeting, rexing, whatever the term is.
Yeah.
He recently, Gadsad just came out with the book and Elon Musk retweeted it said must read.
Yeah.
He didn't do that for me.
No, he didn't do that for me either.
Thanks.
But, yeah.
Elon.
Thanks, Elon.
I feel like I would have sold some more copies.
Me too.
It worked for Gadsad.
I'll tell you that.
Michael, how many followers does Elon have on X, but 7.8 billion?
Oh, Jesus.
Well, let's take a guess.
700 million.
Well, he is a genius.
Not having 700 million followers doesn't make you a genius.
No, but he is a genius.
It's not, his followers follow him because he's a genius.
What's your guess?
Oh, my guess?
Oh, gosh.
I'm bad at these kinds of games.
I would, what did you say?
I said 700 million.
700 million.
Okay, I'll say 800 million.
Okay, fine.
Just a.
240 million.
Oh, okay.
We both suck.
That's why he didn't tweet our bucks.
$240 million?
That's a lot.
I'm glad he did.
How many does Taylor Swift have, though?
Oh, Taylor Swift is probably not very active on X.
Oh, no, she wouldn't be.
If you want to have a massive number of...
Instagram.
Yeah, what does Taylor Swift add on Instagram?
On X, it's 80,000?
80,000 or 80 million?
What does she have on Instagram?
Yeah, I'm going to guess close to a billion.
She's pretty popular.
274 million.
So she and Elon are the same.
She's not a genius, though.
But Elon Musk, why he's...
She's a lyrical genius?
She is a lyrical genius and a damn hard worker.
She's so successful because she works so hard.
She wears good boots.
She wears good boots.
Elon Musk, what's interesting to me, so I was so distraught, mad, really, about this empathy,
civilization, suicide thing.
I was like, damn, what is Gadsad talking about?
Where is he getting that from?
Where's Gadsad?
Where's he going with that?
I don't know where he's going with it, but where he gets it from is he uses.
He is a professor in Quebec of marketing.
And he gets this idea from, is it entomology when you study insects?
I think it is.
I think it's entomology.
Etymology is the study of words.
History of words.
Entomology.
He takes it from entomology.
He talks about the bugs.
There's one bug that will ferry in the water, another bug, and the other bug, and the other
bug knocks them off and wipes them out.
That's probably not exactly accurate, but that's the gist of it.
The gist of it is a messaging around, you know,
we're so nice, we're so caring, we're bleeding heart liberals that we're just going to destroy the
world. This care, this compassion, this, you know, whatever it is, I don't know how they position it
exactly, but they say it's going to ruin civilization. Maybe Elon Musk thinks we can't advance
technologically if we are all worried and coddling children and caring about mothers and all this
wasted time and money. Man, that's an extreme view on what empathy actually is. We're politically,
Mr. Sad is he left or right of center?
I don't really know.
I just, I know that that's his theory.
I wonder if it's a weaponized talking point politically.
Well, it certainly is serving political beliefs, I would say.
However, I was like, who is this gad sad?
Why is he saying this?
Why is this Canadian professor arguing that empathy so terrible?
This is not a good time in the world, I don't think,
to be arguing without a lot of knowledge about empathy being.
you know, a negative.
And I looked him up and he's a refugee from Lebanon.
So as a child, he came to Canada and he would have come face to face with a ton of empathy.
Empathy would have saved his life.
And so I think it's really sad that he is trying to tell other people that it's a negative
when in his life he went from refugee to Canadian professor.
And that's because of Canada.
That's because Canada opened it.
stores, it cared about these refugees, it tried to do something that was going to help this young,
gifted child and his family subtle. I mean, it's a very Canadian thing, you know, like, you know,
when 9-11 happened, all of the planes went to Newfoundland and Canada went, well, empathy city,
let's open our hearts and our homes and get care for these people. There was never any question
of anything other than that. Like, empathy is a superpower for humanity. It's built into our brains for a reason.
when our empathy is eroded, and this is what I wish Gad's at and Elon Musk talked about,
when your empathy is eroded, you can do extreme cruelty to people and to animals. That's why
we don't want empathy eroded. A affective empathy can lead to the kinds of things that you've
witnessed. Most of us never have, but you've seen firsthand. That's eroded empathy. I don't know.
Was it civilization you were seen? Would you call that something that we should model ourselves on?
No.
No, the model doesn't scale.
It's, I think empathy is probably one of the most important character traits that human can have.
Having said that, any trait can be weaponized and taken too far.
Of course.
You hear another super common vernacular of the day, toxic masculinity.
Well, yeah, masculinity taken too far can be toxic.
So can femininity.
So can empathy.
Keep throwing them out there.
Guess what?
there's probably a normalish in air quote range.
But if you take anything to the extreme to include the water or drinking in our cups,
you can fucking kill yourself.
Yeah, no, I agree.
It's the messy middle again.
It's the purple.
Like not the binary opposites.
We've got to understand that there is a complexity to it.
But that's not what I hear Gadsad saying publicly to millions of people listening.
He's not giving you really great examples of that.
And also, why is he using, you know,
the analogy of these insects to say, you know, we're all going to drown if we have too much
empathy or empathy when he could just be using the brain science. He says it's a noble emotion.
And I'm like, no, it's not. It's not an emotion at all. Empathy is not an emotion. It's a
brain structure. It's a circuit in the brain. Talk accurately about it if you want to talk about
it is my thing, especially if you're a professor and you're standing there with your robes on,
your academic, you know, position. It's like, come on, do your research. Don't talk like that.
I wonder if Elon really believes that.
The fundamental weakness of Western civilization is empathy.
What I would love to ask him, what, okay, using that as the premise, what is your perfect civilization look like?
Well, you know what I think he might believe?
And this is a massive guess and very presumptuous of me to say this.
But Elon Musk came from what I've read,
a really, really disturbing amount of cruelty.
The kids around him could not understand he was a genius, and they were cruel.
His father probably outshone those kids in cruelty.
And so Elon grew up with that belief system that happens to people, you know, this cruelty was the making of me.
Look at me.
I am remarkable.
And because he is believing what he sees, he believes that this, he believes that this,
this kind of crucible of cruelty was what led to his greatness.
And he believes that abuse is a necessary evil for greatness.
People do come to believe that.
And they especially do when they come from those kinds of extreme abuses.
And, you know, I thought about this a lot reading James Hatches' book.
Because from what I can gather, and he's very, he's not, doesn't supply detail.
I know him well.
Oh, okay.
I don't know if you would confirm this or say this, but it seems he came from a very,
a childhood that was extremely painful.
I think he would agree.
Okay.
So my theory was he's come from a,
and I think this is important for veterans in general.
I'd love to just put this out there to see what you think.
Reading his book, I got this sense of,
okay, so his childhood was really painful.
He went into the military and was a superstar,
and he loved it.
It's where he found family, it's where he found love.
And he was looking for that,
and he found that in the military.
I'll add one thing to that.
he found a place where he could step in between what he perceived to be abuse or the abuser and the abusee, I guess it would be, the victim.
We've had some real interesting conversations with large cohorts of my friends post-military that we didn't talk about while we were in.
There are many, and I've said this on the show many times, and I'm going to keep saying it because I think it's important.
There's so much focus on the trauma that you might be exposed to while you were in service.
there's less focus on what you brought into it with you.
That's exactly what.
But think about that.
If you were bullied and you, through whatever mental geometry,
arrived at a place where you thought that that particular line of work
where you got to go out and literally end those that were bullying other people,
you're going to want that job.
You're going to do anything you can to get that job.
It doesn't surprise me.
I'm not going to say the vast majority,
but a surprising anecdotal. I have no data to support this. This is just me conversations
with people that I know have the story of not the best upbringing. But that also, I mean,
I won the genetic lottery with my parents. They were fantastic. That doesn't apply to me,
but it applies to a lot of the people that I worked with and I had no idea.
So here's what I think. They come from extreme trauma in their childhood. They go into the military
and they find a remarkable experience of camaraderie and love and care and family.
And as you say.
And extreme trauma.
Yeah.
Okay.
Like I don't want to.
I'm not side.
We're going to put a little bit more of that in your backpack.
And he also said, what does he call it?
The offenders of decency?
Is that who he likes to?
Probably.
Yeah.
He likes to take out the offenders of decency, which I relate to.
But not, I'm not like you guys.
But with that professional ability or anything.
Not with that attitude.
No.
Exactly.
Yeah.
But he.
So he comes, he gets injured.
So the injury stops you.
Multiple times, by the way.
Multiple times.
Well, he didn't talk about the, he talked a little bit about the concussions, but he has
the catastrophic, like you did, a catastrophic injury, he can no longer be part of that
family, have that love, take out the bad guys, all of the thing and not to minimize the trauma.
But he's not prepared for, and many veterans, of course, aren't prepared for the extreme trauma
of coming out of that world back.
And so I wonder, is it just that civilians are complacent and kind of pathetic?
I can well imagine what that was superficial and daft and cruel for no reason and just
unbearable on many, many levels.
I get that.
But is it also that what really is happening is your brain is like, wait a second,
you kind of promised me, like you created this, you made this place for me.
And now you're telling me it's gone and we've got to go back to that world where the trauma exists,
where cruelty dominates.
I mean, someone like Elon Musk doesn't ever want to go back there.
So he's created this world around himself, and rightly so,
because he's worked hard for it.
Plus he's just a remarkably gifted individual.
But he believes that it created him.
And that's where I think the flaw is.
So his empathy is broken up, whereas James Hatch's empathy is intact.
And his journey, when he comes back,
is to take the empathy and the love and the camaraderie
and build it into his civilian life.
And I feel like if veterans were taught
that that model actually can move into the civilian world,
even though they didn't experience it as a child.
No one's ever helped them understand.
You escape that world.
It's like you escape prison.
You get locked up and you do remarkable things to escape prison
and then you have to go back into it.
But you don't know that that's actually the injury
that you're navigating.
I don't have a good answer for if whether or not, obviously everybody's on their own journey.
I'm sure there are, you can put them into cohorts of people that would have a very similar
experience to that, a divergent experience to that.
It's a little bit, I think it's a little bit deeper than the subconscious as well because
there's ties to lost purpose, lost meaning, tugging it.
your ego, relevancy, the acceptance that, you know, you're probably not physically able to,
you know, there's, I mean, there's compounding issues and factors with that.
And quite frankly, and I can only speak about the time that I was in and they were making
strides, I believe in, in the correct direction of integrating family, but counseling at a much
deeper level.
If you bring a lot in and you stuff even more into your backpack,
In addition to the things that you talked about, maybe the subconscious worry of, I don't want to go back to that, you still have this thousand pound weight that you're carrying around that you have to deal with or it will rear its head up and deal with you.
I saw a huge shift towards mental health and the focus on that.
And just the understanding of the burden, the mental and physiological and psychological and psychological burden of that job.
And addressing that earlier as opposed to later, the military is not a fast moving.
machine by any stretch of the imagination, but I did see trends that was going in the right direction.
So I would say, I can't answer for anybody but myself, I think for some people that that would be
true. And I think for other people, they could come from an amazing background with almost no
trauma, but be exposed to things that could break them inside as well.
some beyond a degree with which they have the tools to fix even with professional help.
So I don't think there's actually absolutes when it comes to that, but it's certainly interesting
to think about.
Well, one of the things that struck me was he was so hard on himself when he compared to other
people.
So his, you know, only my leg, but when he was dealing with other veterans or with Gabby
Giffords who had suffered this other kind of injury that was, you know, that lost their legs
or and the kind of pain that they dealt with her,
had their faces extremely damaged.
And he was sort of like,
why am I suffering so much
when I haven't had as big an injury as these individuals?
And I kept wanting to ask the question,
my guess would be Gabby Giffords grew up in a home
where she was not told that she was a liability.
You know, so he's carrying the liability thing.
And he's like, if I'm not being an asset at war,
then I must be a liability.
And it's back to this binary opposition piece.
And that word really got me because,
So with my son's situation, Montgomery, there were girls that were also being, they reported being
abused by the female coach who's a teacher and was also the athletic director.
And she would tell this one girl who was probably, arguably, the best player on the team.
She kept telling her that she was a liability.
And so when I heard that, I was like, God, you know, these adults who tell kids their liabilities,
that's another kind of a psychological burden that you carry that you don't know is really an injury
in your brain.
So that is a very common phrase in the teams.
You're either an asset or a liability.
And the training and the occupation truly does teach you to care about the people to the left
and right of you to an equal level, if not sometimes more than yourself.
That is very hard to put down when you.
when you leave that community.
And also, just because you come from that world,
these are exceptionally normal people
that are asked to do abnormal things.
I think one of the most dangerous traps
people can get into
is this competitive suffering realm.
Yeah.
Which is what he is kind of describing.
And, you know, why am I feeling this way?
This person's injured way more than myself.
How much are each on your own individual journey?
And the physical injury in and of itself,
sure, I guess you could rate it on a medical chart
that he has more entries here or it involved more limbs.
But that is only that one instant and moment in time.
What about the remainder of his life or her life leading up to that point?
Competitive suffering leads to nothing good at all.
I've participated in this game.
It doesn't get you anywhere you need to be.
It's a loss for all parties involved.
Yeah.
And it's the comparison piece all the way back to social media that we talked about at the beginning.
that comparison piece is not good for kids either.
That idea, or adults, obviously.
But yeah, the hierarchy.
I had never heard that expression,
the hierarchy of suffering.
But I did a presentation in Europe at one point
and a woman came up to me and said,
my whole family was built on that.
They were Holocaust survivors.
And so nothing bad that happened to me
was ever, you know, the camps.
Not like it seemed ridiculous.
Anything that, so I never learned
to have any kind of relationship
with my own emotional self
or my own trauma.
or anything because it was never good enough.
It was never the top, top level, you know.
And you can, I can see that completely from both sides.
I can see the parent being like, you know, you're worried about, you know, your boyfriend
rejecting you.
I'll tell you what to worry about, you know, like I can see that.
And then I can also.
Both things are real, though, is the problem.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And if you're, if you're, Jesus, if your standard for suffering is surviving the Holocaust, I mean,
Yeah. Don't play competitive suffering.
I know of no other way to say it than just don't play competitive suffering.
Especially if your standard is surviving the Holocaust, you lose.
That's it.
Nothing is going to compare to that.
And that doesn't mean that you aren't suffering.
But if that's your metric and that's what you're using as your yardstick,
you're setting yourself up for failure for life.
Oh, exactly.
Yeah.
So how do we survive in a gaslit world where what did you call it the gaslit, not society era?
I said era.
Gaslit era.
Gaslit era.
Where are you not seeing it? Let's go the easier direction. Because if I were to ask you where you are seeing it, we don't have enough time.
No, exactly. That's actually a really good way to think about it. I mean, it's a hard question for me because for the last 12, 13 years, I've been studying abuse culture. I've been trying to understand it. And, you know, I think it goes, I think one of the key things to do is watch out for leadership that is, is, you know,
is falling prey to the susceptibility of our brains.
That's sort of that's an awkward sentence, but let me just explain it for a second.
It's actually something that you speak about in your book really well, I think,
because when you have an abuse culture, you end up with institutional complicity all too often.
And that was the thing I couldn't figure out.
Like, I understand the abuser.
That makes sense to me.
I understand the victim.
That makes sense to me.
I understand bystanders.
Yep, that's very reasonable.
What I cannot understand is why the leader wants to protect and harbor the abusive liar at the heart of the organization and boot to the side the whistleblower, the truth teller, the integrity person, the one who's worried about the organization, that person gets punished all the time.
I was like, I couldn't, that didn't make sense to me.
And when you study the brain, the read the neuroscience, it makes perfect sense.
So all of us are susceptible to this, but especially the leader.
We have what's called the remembering self and the experiencing self.
This is Daniel Kahneman's. He's a neuro-economist. It's his research.
So the experiencing self is in the middle of the abuse culture.
It's like the bad shit's going on.
You know, bowing. It's not safe.
They're cutting the corners here or so-and-so maltreats so-and-so.
You're seeing it. You're experiencing it. You know it's wrong and you've got to do something.
That's experiencing self.
And the most diverse thing that you've been through, your brain is,
is really good at avoiding that ever again.
It doesn't want that.
So it likes to focus on the positives.
Any woman who's had, any woman who's gone through labor knows the story of this.
You go through labor and it almost destroys you.
And then you're like, so I'm going to have another child.
I'm going to do that again.
It's like, really?
It's amazing that that decision has ever made.
That's, it's all because of the brain.
So what happens to leaders is they get laser focused on their remembering self.
And you kind of can't blame them.
But you call it out in the book.
And I'll go to the page because I think it's really important.
The remembering self is laser focused on you.
And it really doesn't care about the organization.
You will say you care about the organization.
And you have to do what you have to do.
You have to get rid of the whistleblower.
You have to tell the shareholders this or that.
You have to pay the CEO 200 million.
And you have to do all these things to protect the organization,
but it's really to protect yourself.
And it's the remembering self, which is very vocal,
is talking to you.
And it says to you, look, all that really matters here is your story of integrity.
All that matters is you are the hero of your, you're the decent hero of your own personal narrative.
And all I want you to focus on is the future.
Now, if you let this whistleblower keep talking like this and telling the truth, you're going to blow this whole spectacle up.
Everyone's going to know that you made a mistake.
You failed.
Abuse happened on your watch.
safety measures happen, environmental degradation happen, do you really want that? And the
remembering self is just like, really? Because it's your choice. Well, far too many leaders go,
no, I don't want that. I will do everything in my power. I will lie if I have to. I will cast
the whistleblower under the bus and everybody else in order to protect my own personal narrative
where I'm the decent hero. And you say the opposite. You say the only true leader is the person
that has the capacity to look their own failure in the eye.
You have to.
You have to.
But lots of leaders don't do that.
And they are the institutional complicity people.
So you just answered your own question.
Well, there's a difference between being a leader and being in a leadership role.
So where do we find that there isn't gaslighting, where we find true leaders?
And it's painful.
It's no fun to take accountability.
Oh, no, it sucks.
It sucks.
It's so painful.
And my heart goes out.
to people that do it because it's so painful, but it really is the true leader. And there's
lots of examples. Lots of, you would have had true leaders. You talk about horrendous leaders and how it's
the team that carries them and makes them look good. And they pat themselves on their back. And they say,
I never know from the outside. Exactly. It's one of the biggest myths of military leadership.
Yep. You could line up a command of 500 people and you bring in outsiders and they would just say,
this is an amazing group of people, look at their accomplishments. And internally, the divisive
and the differences and where everybody knows who the strong leaders are and the weak ones,
but there's always mission success.
So they assume that they're all the same, but it's the exact opposite.
It happens in athletics too.
They will be like, you know, there's no way so-and-so could be abusive because the team did so
brilliantly.
And it's like, that's because the athletes, as you phrase it, the team did it despite the
abuse.
Same thing with athletic teams.
The team did it despite the abuse that was happening.
Yeah, in spite of not because of.
Yeah.
What are you going to write about next?
So my next book, I'm...
Because we're almost out of the gaslit era.
It's getting way better.
I think so?
You think so?
No.
Oh.
You're trying to give me a little bit of hope for a second there.
I'm not seeing it at all in politics or mainstream media.
No, it's just fully going away.
Did you hear Mark Carney, Prime Minister Mark Carney's speech at Davos?
No.
I think you would like that.
He talks about...
truth-telling. He talks about leadership. He talks about being pragmatic and principled and that they
aren't two opposites. They go together and yeah, it's tough, but it's the only way forward.
It's really a stunning speech. And you can see, you can tell he wrote it himself. It's not a spin-doctor
speech. It's really Mark Carney telling you. And I mean, he's as flawed as anyone else. He's not
perfect. I'm not trying to put him up on a hero pedestal. But he's pretty damn close to being a hero.
I think that you'd really like his speech.
I think politicians should have to write their own speeches.
I do too.
I think it would be amazing.
I do too.
It would be a lot more interesting than what the, you know.
Well, I think you would see a better indication of who they are,
as opposed to a team of people who are probably out there researching talking points for audience reaction, rounding edges.
Yeah.
Having said that, it would probably be very difficult if you were the president to write your own speeches because I know it would take time.
I'm just saying I'd love to see it.
Yep.
It's like leadership became reality TV.
And, you know, that began with Reagan.
Reagan was such a good TV star.
He was so good on TV as a speaker, as a politician.
Everybody, like, voted for what this great actor was doing.
You know, and we are caught in that world between not being too, too sure about what's real and what's not.
But I have two books.
You tell me what you would rather read, what you think is the better book.
Okay.
Okay.
So one book is what would be fun.
And I call it the brain at home.
And it would be about how we could design the spaces that we live in to be more attuned to and caring for our diverse brains.
There's no one size fits all.
It's what you're saying about our journey and path.
All of us, every single one of us, which I think is kind of miraculous, we have a unique brain.
Our brain is so unique that when a neurosurgeon is going to operate on your brain,
They have to spend 11, 12, 13 hours mapping your brain because it's not like any other brain they've ever seen.
So we're born with a unique brain and then it gets wired in all kinds of different ways.
So it gets a double whammy of uniqueness.
So there is no one size fits all.
So I wouldn't write the book saying, oh, you have to design your house like this.
But I would write the book going, okay, you need to do all these different exercises to get to know your brain really well.
It's a good way to teach people.
Brain science and everyone's obsessed with house and space and architecture and interior design.
Lots of people care about it.
Also, biohacking in the modern era you're talking about, you know, this isn't an aura ring that you could slide on your finger and get feedback, but you're definitely going to be preaching to an audience that is interested in understanding the metrics of their body.
Yes.
And metrics of their body in relationship to their brain.
I don't know why nobody's paying attention to the brain.
Here, here, I'm going to give your whole audience a fabulous business idea that I have failed to get off the ground for myself.
but you know, you're very connected to the fitness world.
I think what we really need to be doing is getting people to pay attention to the fact
that, and I think lots of people do, but just make it more mainstream.
You know, half of the houses in the U.S., half the houses in Canada, the people have a wearable.
So you have your wearable device.
Everybody will talk to you, but their 10,000 steps and they, you know, their sleep patterns
worth this and their blood pressure maybe if someone's got an advanced one is that.
What I want them to do, I met with a bunch of cardiologists in Canada and pitched them
on this idea and they haven't called me back, but still, I think it's a great idea. We could get
way better at understanding our environments, so not our own deliberate practice, but our environment,
because our health is relational. Our relationships with each other are going to impact our health
as much as our steps, our nutrition, are all of those things that we put all so much time and
energy and focus on. So what you do with your wearable is you really look at your heart in terms of
when you met with your colleague who you're starting to get the feeling is manipulating you,
what's your heart doing?
Because your heart will tell you how your brain's being impacted.
You can't get a quick, easy read on your brain.
Obviously, you need EEG or whatever.
But what's happening with your heart will tell you what's going on in your brain?
I mean from a heart rate perspective?
Yes, yes.
By the last meeting, it was very calm and slow.
But what was it like beforehand?
Did you look?
I don't use a wearable because I'm an expert in how my body is working at all times.
Did you feel your heart rate rise?
So it was a while ago, so I can't speak with 100% certainty, probably at times.
For me, one of the triggers of getting emotionally involved is my face will start to feel a little bit flush.
And that certainly happened when we were arguing about the legitimacy of what I'll call facts.
Oh, interesting.
That's interesting.
I used to get that a lot more when I was younger.
I'd get like the red splotches on my neck.
I could feel it.
I just feel heat.
And for me, that just means I know that I'm getting.
Your blood pressure is going up and your heart rate's going up too.
Probably.
For sure.
Probably correlated to that.
But for me, it's that my emotions may be starting to interfere with or interact with my decision-making process.
And I've made enough mistakes in those moments saying things I wish I hadn't had said or doing things I wish I hadn't had done.
So I pay attention to that and I'll put it back in neutral or I'll downshift from whatever is going on.
Yeah.
Which the person who is trying to egg on that argument or, uh,
interaction they don't enjoy.
No. Oh, God, no.
And it goes back to the media.
One of the things that we see a lot of in the media right now is they're trying to ramp
people up.
There's a lot of fear.
You know, you should be afraid about everything.
I mean, you can't open the newspaper without feeling a jolt of fear, cortisol, adrenaline.
None of that's good for you.
It's not good for your heart.
That's not good for your brain.
No, of course not.
No, it's true.
No, it's true.
So the wearable, though, will tell you.
And just when I was in the middle of like trying to make this pitch, a woman's
sent me a screenshot. I was on a board that I resigned from because I was concerned about it.
And she sent me a screenshot of her wearable. And it was saying like alert, alert kind of thing.
Your heart rate is shooting through the roof and you're not active. And she said, that's what
happened when so-and-so in the meeting was yelling at me. I was like, damn. So I think we can all
do better with that. Brain at home. That's one book. The other book I call The Liberated Brain.
And the liberated brain is a bigger concept of ways we can free ourselves from the, you know, the chains that hold us back.
We all have chains that hold us back.
But it's also really centrally on the prison system for kids.
I'd like to see kids not go into prison when they're young.
I'd like them to be rehabilitated.
And I'm not trying to be a bleeding heart.
Of course, there's certain people, certain youth who are so dangerous and their brains are so disordered, they're a hazard to others.
But many young people.
everybody. No, obviously in the circumstance. Yeah, I don't think anybody would advocate for
kids going into prison. I think anybody, any reasonable person would get behind just about
anything possible to prevent that from happening to include interrupting the behavior that would
lead to somebody having that happen in their life. Exactly. Yeah. So that's what I think about
too. That's my more responsible book. I really should do that. I'd go with the liberated brain.
That's the one I would read first. Would you? Okay. Well, I can leave that one for later, but
Well, the reason I wouldn't read the other one is because I don't have any say in the things that are in our house.
Well, that's toxic femininity at work right there.
No, that's called picking your arguments and throwing things away when they're not paying attention.
Oh, that's very diabolical.
I admitted it to her.
Then she trumped me.
Michael, were you in the room for this?
I think I was.
Yeah.
She said, oh, I know that you've been throwing those things away.
I don't say anything.
or I go get them out of the garbage.
I had nothing to say.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, yeah.
I had nothing to say.
No, she was lowering her heart rate right then and being very careful.
It's as if the wind had just was taken out of my sails because I get dopamine from throwing away her stuff.
Yeah, I'm a big believer in throwing things away too.
My husband is much more likely to keep them.
Isn't it?
Glorious to simplify?
So that's what the brain at home is about is certain brains do not like clutter.
My brain, if there's clutter, it goes.
I don't think any brains like clutter.
Oh.
they do.
Really?
Yep, they do.
They feel comforted by it.
Yeah, but you trip over stuff.
They're things.
You can't find anything.
I know, but they love their things.
Yeah.
Well, put your things in a goddamn plastic bin.
No, a cupboard, so no one has to see them.
I would like to have a house full of cupboard so I didn't have to see anything.
If it was put away, I'm fine with it.
I just don't want to see it.
I would, okay, okay.
We're talking the same language here.
I would, yeah.
And then better than that would be behind some of the covers with a garbage kid.
in.
Ooh.
That's pretty...
My wife is traveling right now
for the next few days.
I'm hoping she doesn't check
into the garbage cam
when she gets back
because we get garbage out
on Wednesday.
She's back Monday night.
Well, it is one of the classic
gaslighting tricks
is to change the
arrangement of things.
Oh, I don't change the arrangement.
Well, yeah.
We just have...
But making something disappear
is a little bit gaslighty.
She hasn't noticed it yet.
Oh.
And if she...
So you think.
She actually has noticed it.
I know.
true. She hasn't said anything to me. And if she asked me, hey, did you throw this away? I would say
yes. Oh, you would. Of course. Why lie about it? Radical accountability. Is that what you guys call it? No,
radical ownership. Extreme ownership. Extreme ownership. That's Jocko. He's at a 10. We need him at like a
six. He needs to take it easy. Yeah, he puts everybody to shame. Everything can be taken too far,
though, to include ownership. And this is an interesting one for leaders as well. Because I use this
example in the military. Extreme ownership. You are. You're in a leadership.
position, everything that happens underneath you with your people is your responsibility and
you're accountable for it. Really? Okay. Let's say you're doing everything humanly possible.
We'll do it through the lens of an alcohol-related incident, which, I don't know if you know this,
young military men specifically, huge fans of getting these things. You have your safety muster
on a Friday. You get the whole command in together. You get experts on addiction, on chemical and
substance abuse and they talk.
And you have counselors there and just extolling the virtues of making responsible decisions.
And a 21-year-old goes out and gets hammered and drives.
Ooh.
Is that really your fault?
Yeah.
At what level does the accountability need to go down to the individual?
Because you can still do everything right.
People still have agency.
Now, if you're not doing everything that you could have, that's a separate
conversation. But you can also destroy yourself by thinking that everything to include every ounce
of other people's behavior is your responsibility and accountability. It doesn't work like that.
And I also think you're not doing them a good service. Like if you look at your experience as a
young person drinking and following along with the older heroic figures, what I loved in that
story was the commander saying to you, if I told you to do that, would you follow?
me and you said, no. That was the first question that was posed to me at the oral interview,
which of course they positioned in a horseshoe shape with all these senior members of the command
you're applying to go to. You sit down, I swear it wasn't an elementary chair that had a
flip down little desk section and they're just peppering you. But that was the first question I got.
The first question wasn't actually that it was, tell us about what happened in Tucson,
which I was honest about and I had talked with the psychologist or the shrink, whichever,
because you did the psych assessment first and talked with them.
This was the next day.
I told him what had happened, what I had learned from it.
Then the command master chief said, he was the one who posed that question.
He said, yeah, okay.
So now you come to the command, we're out.
I'm getting out of control.
I'm the same person that you described and all of those things.
What do you do?
And I don't care who you are.
The right thing is the right thing.
And that's what I'm going to do.
Never have been questioned on that sense.
You see, that's the greatest lesson.
And if he had somehow, or the other guys had tried to take accountability for, oh, we let him down the garden path.
We did all.
He was just a young guy.
You know, it's on us.
They were very happy that they weren't being asked those questions.
They threw you into the bus.
They were spot.
Now, they didn't throw me into the bus.
I just managed to turn all the spotlights on me.
And everybody else said, we're going to go over here.
The thing is, though, you say that was the greatest lesson you could have ever learned, even though it hurt.
It was painful.
Yeah.
And, I mean, lessons are painful when you do that.
But what a great guy.
I still have the scar from the razor wire going over the fence on my hand.
I like the police note being like, we loved that when you did them.
They were like, see what that guy just did.
Since the book came out, one of the bouncers emailed me.
Oh, wow.
He said, hey, I've been listening to your show for years.
Did this happen at this bar, which I'll leave the name of the bar out of it during this year?
And I wrote back.
I said, yeah.
That was me.
And he goes, you mean to tell me I've been listening to the same dipshit that we were involved in this incident with for years.
Oh, God.
And I said, yep, nice to meet you.
Glad to hear things have been going well.
We had a little email exchange.
We went back for it.
So yeah, it's, uh, I couldn't believe that email.
Of course, I'm going to open it.
I arrested you in Arizona immediately click.
And I went back and forth.
There was a couple emails.
We exchanged back and forth.
But yeah, I had to put that in there.
I mean, it just.
It's a great lesson. I mean, it's a really painful, but really great lesson. I'm glad I learned it when I was young because I know people who are at the tail end of their life who have never had that shift in how they think of themselves and they are the victim of the world around them. Well, it's that horrible. I mean, the entire conversation we've had has been about, do you follow the leader? Following the leader is a very dangerous thing to do. And if you don't ever have that, like one of the things I talk about is lying in the sand. And you kind of, if you don't have bad things happen to you,
or hard things or painful things,
you don't ever really know about that line in the sand.
But while I as a kid, I couldn't save myself,
I could not be the adult.
I couldn't be a teacher and I couldn't be a mother in particular
who would let that happen to kids.
That was my line in the sand.
And it was a very, very painful one.
I mean, talk about taking a hit for the team,
but I just, that's kind of where self-hood is.
That's where self-belief is.
That's where reconstructing self-hood that's being taken away by abusive individuals when you were young starts to build back up.
And, yeah.
Yeah.
Lining the sand.
You said you had questions about the book.
What other questions did you have?
Oh, I wanted to just, they weren't questions.
They were more things I wanted to just talk about.
No, there were things I wanted to talk about because it was good.
She has notes, Michael.
She has notes.
I don't know where this is going.
Okay, well, this one goes back to what we were talking about.
the idea that, you know, for the poor leader, they're obsessed with the remembering self.
They listen to the remembering self. They cancel out the experience of itself so they can remain
the hero of their own story. And you reverse that and you say that basically what you have to do
is you have to be the author of your life and you have to, it's whether it's drawing the line in
the sand, whether it's not following the leader no matter how prestigious and powerful and
heroic they are. At a certain point, there has to be a place of selfhood where you,
make the decision based on, is this the right thing to do?
Or, like, am I going to be a puppet?
And this is the puppet master.
Or do I have selfhood?
Am I the author of my own life?
And do I write it this way?
It's about agency.
And I think I specifically say this and there.
You have no control over what happens to you in your life,
but you have total and complete control over how you react to it.
And that is something that you should never surrender to anybody.
And that is essentially what I did in Tucson.
Yeah.
And I mean, as you write here, you said it truly changed who I am.
And so I'm always struggling with how do we define leadership, especially during a gaslit era, how do we define it?
And I wrote down, based on what I learned from you, leadership is being able to refuse your leader's command.
Self-leadership has to come first, or you can never be a true leader.
Yeah.
You have to.
You can't follow blind me.
And you know, what's interesting with people in the dark tetrad, people who are, you know, the Machiavellians and the narcissists and the psychopaths,
they never have any accountability.
They are never to be held accountable for anything.
It's always someone else's fault.
They always project and reverse.
They're perpetual victim.
And that's one of the really good ways to identify them, actually,
is that they cannot take responsibility for anything.
They never fail.
They never make mistakes.
You said here that we talked about this already.
SOF leadership model can mask poor leaders.
Oh, God, yes.
So that's the mask of sanity, right?
The poor leader, like what I love to use are medical and neuroscientific terms.
So I get people to step away from the good, bad, or the ethics and just go, is that person
disordered?
If they are, then they really shouldn't be in charge of people who are risking their lives.
Just plan on the table.
I wouldn't say they're disordered.
It's just people go into things with different motivations.
And some people are more into it for themselves, another they lack certain leadership characteristics
and other people have to pick up the slack for them.
So those things, I guess, could be considered some sense of being disordered, though.
From a brain science point of view, they would use words like dysfunctional, disordered.
They have a disorder.
They have eroded empathy.
Then they would talk about like actual brain architecture.
You know, they've got a small, a shriveled hippocampus.
We've just called them shipbags.
You could call them shipbags.
But the neuroscience does give you pretty good vocabulary for it.
And then this was the final thing I loved was the idea.
that someone else can hijack your brain, hijack your mind, I think is how you put it. And I think
hijack is a really good way to describe what happens to you when you're being gaslit. Someone else has
gone into your neural circuitry and they've got it. Yeah. And they are making you do things and
say things and feel things that are incredibly detrimental to you and to others around you.
And that kind of mind control is exactly what gaslighting is. They try to take you over. And then
your whole thing is, and you can resist.
I mean, selfhood is about resisting, and a lot of people aren't taught to do that.
We don't teach them how to resist.
Did you enjoy the book?
I loved it.
Sweet.
I really loved it.
And I learned a lot.
It's like, you know, there's, I mean, as you can see, it's absolutely full of notes.
And I only write notes in things that are valuable to me.
And it's just full of notes.
I mean, I could have talked about a lot of it.
We're here to talk about your book.
You just happen to have it on the table.
I know.
No, I brought, oh, and I wanted you to sign it too.
Of course.
Yeah.
Where can people find your book?
We've been out of almost three hours, too.
Oh, my gracious.
The gaslit brain, you can buy it on Amazon, which I know is the evil empire from any people.
Is it, though?
Because it also empowers a lot of authors as well.
It does.
And that's why I'm going to say you can buy it.
It's a necessary evil.
You can buy my book anywhere.
But if you buy it on Amazon and you write a review, and if you write a review for Andy's
book, it shifts the algorithm.
It's the most important thing for us authors is it just needs to be a sentence.
I found this book really boring.
Fair enough.
I had one guy who wrote.
Well, if he found that, the book is called Extreme Ownership.
Exactly.
So one, it's like three star and below.
It's Extreme Ownership by Laif Babin and Jocka Willing.
It's, if you got something good to say, it's drownproof by Andy.
Yep, exactly, exactly.
This one guy wrote that he said, the Gaslop brand.
So first he goes through all the things he learned from it.
And I was like, damn, this is perfect.
He took everything out of it that really was important.
Wow, that's great.
And then his final paragraph is kind of along the lines of, you know, this woman is a terrible writer.
He's like, I don't mean to be mean, but her sentences are bad, and she does all this repetition, and she makes it emotional.
And, yeah, you know, I'm just, I'm sorry to say that about the book.
And I was like, oh, because it's written that way on purpose.
It's a neuroscience experiment because the brain learns by repetition at timed intervals.
You set it yourself today.
If you don't get the repetition and if you don't get the emotion and it isn't told to you in a narrative form, that's why this works.
You don't retain the lessons.
I could read these eight lessons on how to drown proof and walk away and not retain them.
But because you told it to mean a story and it was very emotional, I don't forget any of that.
And then you also reinforce, reinforced.
So the repetition in this is meant for you never to forget these lessons.
Because if you are face-to-face with a gas litter, it's dangerous.
Have you ever gone on to Goodreads?
Yeah.
That is a cesspool of angry book reviewers.
Is it?
Oh, God.
I'm not a great technology person.
So I go in there and I get lost.
Michael,
go to Goodreads.
Yeah.
Goodrease.com.
Pull up drownproof.
Oh, no.
Did they say something awful about it?
Oh, I love it.
There's a one, one star review.
And I'm going to read a portion of this because I'd love it.
I don't know what type of person takes the time to write something like this.
It is amazing.
I know.
Oh my God.
I know.
Are you going to read it to us?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh, you're going to read it to us?
No.
Stumpf is a man who wants to have it both ways.
He disparages and rolls his eyes at Navy Seal books and yet has written one himself.
He sneers at those who utilize their trident as nothing more than another line on their resume or make it their entire identity.
But surely he has to know he got as far as he did in podcast his podcasting career in parentheses and got as many sponsors as he did because of that trident.
There is a blog post mini chapter included in this book about the difference between seal guys, guys who see their service as a tool for their future, something that will open doors that they are likely, have no business.
through instead of as a tool for others and team guys first up there's no seals guys and team guys
it's the difference between seals and team guys guys guys uh so team guys are guys who do not care about job
titles gear weapons uniforms or any of the other countless shiny objects that can distract them
those are exactly the words i used have you seen his podcast studio it is garish gross interior
with unsheathed knives a bunch of guns the black rifle coffee logo plastered on wooden paddles
and photos of himself and his callings doing le epic stuff?
What is le epic stuff together?
By his own definition, he is not a team guy.
I have no idea who the audience is supposed to be for this book.
I don't think Stumpf knew either.
He is all over the place.
There is no flow or structure to this book.
Some people have the ability to take a bunch of disparate pieces and string them together
to form a cohesive story.
Josh Johnson is a comedy master at this.
But this is a skill stump does not possess when he isn't talking about his time and the seals are going through his buds as a student.
And then as an instructor, he spouts out general advice about controlling one's emotions and getting through the worst of it, breaking whatever it in parentheses is down in chunks of time to your next meal, to the next 10 minutes, to the next step of the process.
Well, he learned something.
Scroll down, Michael. Look how far this continues.
Oh, my Lord. Oh, my God. Oh, my God. Oh, my God.
Okay. I've read better. Oh, there's a lot. Let me see. All in all, this book is mid. Oh, this might have been my middle son that wrote this.
Some of the advice is fine, but stump focuses on the individualistic, individualistic changes as a person's need to make without ever considering the systematic issues that are in play.
He insists over and over, we are ultimately responsible for ourselves, for ourselves. Why you wrote that twice? I don't know.
which I agree with by and large and that we have greater control than we think we do,
which I want to push back on.
He fails to consider life in whatever form it may take will fuck people over.
Oh, last sentence.
I hope you kept the receipt when you purchase this.
Maybe the return window is still open.
I love it.
Wow.
I love it.
Do you know, can you fathom a healthy, well-functioning, well-adapted, well-adapted,
enriched life person taking the time to write that.
No.
No.
No, I cannot.
Michael, you're welcome.
Also, if I catch you writing a review like that again, it's going to be your ass.
Just wait.
One lady wrote, she gave me a one star on bullied brain, and she said, this book
arrived in the mail, and she took a photograph of it.
I was like, wow, she's dedicated.
She took a photograph of it.
She goes, this book arrived in the mail, and it was banged up and kind of the cover was
How could you do that, Jennifer?
Because you obviously personally packaged.
I think she thinks I'm in the Amazon factory and didn't do a good job.
It was like, wow.
That's good reads for you right there.
Yeah.
Stand by.
Yeah.
No.
I mean, people, the reviewers always love to do stuff like that.
Yeah.
Like when I did the bully brain, I read through the comments because I wanted to engage with people.
And some of the comments were hilarious by the by.
Probably were bullies finding the comment section, which is ironic.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, they were actually really good.
Like one guy said something along the lines of, you know, I don't know why she wants to rehabilitate people.
I'd like to see, you know, that guy doing all that bullying and abusing at the end of a 9mm.
I was like, yeah, fair enough.
I agree.
But we should do the brain rehabilitation.
You know, so I tried to engage them right with people and be like, I know what you're saying.
And I agree, but blah, blah.
But one guy wrote, oh, you know, as if he was trying to protect you or she was trying to protect you.
And it was like, oh, Andy, you know, you should do better.
You can't have her on.
She's a snake oil, snake oil salesman.
I was like, well, I haven't been called that before.
That's a new one.
I've been called too militaristic, a one woman wrecking ball, and a pit bull that won't let its jaws go or teeth go of abuse.
It's like, yeah, yeah, yeah, fair enough.
I can wear it.
But snake oil salesman, I was like, yeah, no.
So I found that today.
and this morning.
I don't know what the person that wrote that,
if they thought that was going to change or alter who I am as a person,
because it doesn't.
At the end of the day,
I feel bad for whatever is going on in that person's life
because I can tell you right now,
I am not the source of the pain that they are feeling.
At the end of that,
if they in any way,
shape or form were able to put down an ounce of that through the lens of just trashing me,
I'm okay with that because you actually read the book. I bet you they did an AI summary of the book
and polls, which I'm fine with that as well too. I am not everyone's cup of tea. I say some dumb shit.
I have beliefs that people may not agree with. Yes, I redesign the studio and it doesn't
suit everybody. But I hate to tell you, this is based off of the John Wick's Somali,
room, not a Navy SEAL armory. So sorry. It's, uh, I, I hope that whatever is going on gets better.
And if you don't like the book, return it. I don't care. I did the best I could using the writing
structure that I know how to use. And I don't expect it to be perfect for everybody.
No. And it never is going to be. No. The storyteller, the person that writes the book,
the person that does the play or puts on a musical thing or composes or draws something.
Or, you know, it's the second you put something creative out there,
especially if you put yourself into it,
you are free game for all the people that are going to review you based on whatever they have.
Oh, and I'm here for it.
Yeah.
What I'd love to see, let's play a game show where I get a couple days to review your life,
do a little research.
I know.
Would you enjoy the same level of scrutiny back at you?
Yeah.
But here's the reality.
I wouldn't actually do that because, like I asked you, I've never seen or met someone who's healthy, who's happy, who's successful, who is thriving, who is well adjusted that does stuff like that.
Well, the other key question always to ask for these things is what's the name?
Did they put their name there?
Yes, they have 25 other reviews.
Oh, interesting.
Whether it's their real name or not, no idea.
Yeah, because I think that's one of the problems with the internet.
That's been one of the worst things that's ever happened is that people can create identities and they have anonymity.
It's a disaster.
I think that if you want to publicly speak, you need to attach your name.
And, you know, in abuse culture, they use that mask all the time.
No comment.
Oh, I can't comment.
I need to protect the confidentiality of the.
It's like, no, you don't.
You could speak to this.
You could explain why you made the decision you did.
You're a public regulator.
You're the head of an organization.
You're a director.
Like, speak up.
If you can't speak up, then say, I can't speak up because of, I'm a coward.
Anonymity is for one reason and one reason only to hide.
Exactly.
It's like, yeah.
So what else did they?
And here's the thing.
What else did they review?
I put my name on it.
Oh, I didn't go into it.
I honestly, I just read through.
I was on a, yeah, I looked at some of it.
And again, you have this tug of one.
to get emotionally attached to it, but I just put it down at that point.
Yeah.
Could care less.
Oh, yeah.
No, you open yourself up to attack for sure.
One of the things I learned when I wrote the bullied brain, so I ended up getting an agent,
which was a miracle.
He's this fabulous guy in New York.
I wrote to him about COVID.
I'm like, John, are you okay?
You know, and he goes, I'm an old Irish New Yorker.
COVID doesn't have a chance.
I'm like, okay.
I don't think that's scientifically back, but okay.
No, you never got sick.
He said, you're a really great guy.
But I wrote my first version of bullied brain and I sent it to him.
And he's like, nobody wants to read this.
He goes, they want to know you.
They want to know your story.
If you, and I had written this very academic book,
which probably would have put everyone to sleep.
But it was very hard for me.
I don't know if you found,
as a podcaster, you probably don't find it as hard.
But with that academic training and plus being told I was stupid for three years in high school,
I'm very introverted, shy, awkward, didn't want to put myself in.
But he said, I'm not necessarily extroverted.
I'm just used to what I do.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, I think when you practice.
So when I started teaching, I kind of put my ego to the side and started teaching and
caring about the kids and just not worrying so much about myself.
I was really in my own way.
But, you know, I rewrote the book, putting myself in and trying to say why it mattered
to me.
That's what readers want.
So they can attack you for your story.
But it just is your story.
So I try to be honest about my.
good days and my bad.
Yeah, it's all you can do.
People want to focus more on my deficiencies as a human, of which I don't have enough
ink to list.
Go for it.
Nobody's a harder critic on me than I am.
I know.
I was going to say, you're like the most, you have so much humility and so much like.
Because I'm a dipshit.
Yeah, well, no.
No, but you do have a lot of humility.
Michael?
Dipshoot or another.
I would agree with that statement.
See, we spent a lot of time together.
How amazing was that review, though?
That was pretty crazy.
I'm just surprised at how much she wrote.
Let's do this.
Let's frame it for the studio.
Let's put it on the brick.
That's actually such a good idea.
Let's put it on the brick.
Yeah, that's a really good idea.
Let's do it.
I'm going to empower you to do that.
Just let me know the cost.
Sounds good.
I'm not saying it has to be Florida ceiling,
but like let's celebrate.
It'll be pretty big.
Let's celebrate the influence and impact
we have on somebody's life.
The thing is with that person,
it's the same thing as the review.
They want it to hurt me as much as they are hurting.
They want to hurt you.
Yeah.
Sorry.
I already know I'm a dipshit.
Yeah.
It doesn't, it doesn't hurt.
I mean, even snake oil salesman and all that, I was like, it's not actually, I'm not trying
to trick anyone.
I'm not trying to pretend to be something I'm not.
So this kind of falls on deaf ears.
Like, say what you want to say.
Jennifer, you could sit here and say, we need to stop world hunger.
There are people out there who are going to say, oh, really?
You want to make decisions for everyone?
Oh, you want to, we should.
cure cancer. Oh, so you don't care about the over exploding population? You know what I mean? You can't. It's
impossible. So don't try. Yeah, it's true. It's true. Where can people find you? It's on Amazon.
If you write a review, like the one that Andy got, I'd really appreciate it because they don't
care about the content. All they care about is that the algorithm cares about the number of reviews.
Okay. So one sentence. How many is a good number of reviews? It's really hard to get people to review
books I find and it doesn't have to be a review. I've never reviewed one so I can I
I'm bad at it too but you just need one sentence just tell you tell the people that like so I read it
so say to me go and write a review one sentence and stars just say that you think have you reviewed it yet
I haven't I know I know I'm sorry I'm sorry unbelievable the advice you are giving to people it's not
what you say it's what you do I know it's so bad I just oh I've been exposed I've been exposed
But I will.
I will write a review.
But yeah, get people to write reviews when you talk to them because it does matter for the system.
Content doesn't matter.
Just did they write a sentence?
It's the engagement.
Yeah, it's engagement.
Yeah.
Which is so wild because it doesn't wait good or bad.
It just shows you what they care about.
They care about things that are trending, not necessarily.
It's way worse than that.
People can buy reviews, right?
Because it's anonymous.
It's not like they're checking whether or not.
Michael, look into this immediately.
We're going to start a review farm.
This is, I mean, this is sometimes people write fabulous things and rightly so they get
thousands of reviews and that's great.
But there's a lot of people in the book.
I get a message every day trying to sell me on getting reviews.
I do too.
I get a bunch now.
It's book review clubs.
I have spent $0 on any marketing for the book and I won't.
Yeah.
It's not worth a penny.
Any of that stuff.
It's just the system and how they do things.
And there's tons of that kind of stuff on Goodreads.
Just ignore it.
Just don't answer them.
Frame it.
Yeah.
Frame it.
Make it part of the art.
Do you have a website for yourself or do you just point people towards the literature?
No, my website is bulliedbrain.com.
Okay.
And people can reach out to me.
I'm trying to build this whole idea.
I call it clear-sighted leadership.
So, or see clearly is kind of how I'm trying to think of the antidote.
And it's not, I'm not locked into it.
Like other people's opinions, I'd really appreciate if they want to say,
look, you're missing this or that, or I think you're overstating this or that.
That would be helpful.
So, yeah, it's bulliedbrain.com.
I do lots of, like, workshops and speaking.
I work in organizations or I've done a bunch of government work on when there is an abuse culture
that's starting to form or they're worried about it or it's taken hold.
It's not impossible to take the brain science and really turn it around.
So we have neuroplasticity.
We can change our brains.
Well, let me know when the third book comes out.
I know you've already done five.
The next book in the series of this comes out.
And we will circle the wagons again.
That would be great.
Thank you so much.
Of course.
Thank you.
