Decoding the Gurus - Brené Brown: Matt and Chris courageously embrace their vulnerability
Episode Date: November 26, 2021Brené Brown is an American professor, lecturer, author, storyteller researcher, and podcast host. She's made it her life's work to help people rise strong, brave the wilderness, and dare to... lead - all through overcoming shame and embracing their own vulnerability.So naturally Chris and Matt - being the emotionally unavailable, culturally stunted and cynical gits that they are - bemoan all this positivity and do their level best to try and drag her down to their bitter and petty level. Can you get the secret to self-actualisation in a TED talk? Or is it more a sequence of inspirational quote memes strung together? Or are these things one and the same?Perhaps Professor Brown is honing in on universal psychological truths. Or alternatively, she might be an unwitting expression of American hyper-individualism and self-obsessed culture. Well, you're gonna get the Irish and Australian take on that. Thanksgiving is obviously the perfect time for the hosts to tell their US listeners that American culture sucks and that kids shouldn't follow their dreams but prepare to be cogs in the machine.No, no, they don't do that. Well... not entirely.Well, what do they say? What is there take? You'll have to tune in to find out!LinksThe power of vulnerability (TED talk)Listening to shame (TED talk) 'If you want to heal yourself, WATCH THIS!' Brené Brown & Lewis Howes on 'The School of Greatness'Eric Weinstein: How Not to Formulate a Theory of Everything (Tim Nguyen)Live-tweet of Eric's Chicago Lecture by Sandro SharashenidzeBret and Heather Darkhorse 105: State Lies Coming Across
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to Decoding the Gurus, the podcast where an anthropologist and a psychologist
listen to the greatest minds the world has to offer and we try our best to understand what
they're talking about. I'm Matt Brown and with me is Chris Cavanaugh. Hello Chris.
No mention of your psychology qualifications, no mention of my anthropology qualifications matt what are you
doing this could be the first time people are listening like who's matt and who's matt and
chris why are these guys having the right to talk yeah i know we purely exist as credentials matt
that's all we are according to internet folk no we're real we have real qualifications i saw
your very real very impressive degree from ox, Illinois, and I'm overqualified
and underdressed as usual.
So people should know.
Well, you know, it's an annual ritual sending you scanned copies of my qualifications because
I know it's the only way that you'll deign to talk to me if you're reminded.
So this is the level of credentialism that we engage in.
You must send scan copies in order to qualify for a Skype conversation.
Well, that reminds me of the kinds of people I do date to talk to on Twitter.
And I often find myself regretting it.
I'm not a snob and I don't believe in checking people's bios and trawling
through the mutuals and their
history, looking for the dirt on them.
They're looking for something racist in there so I can hit them with it.
But you were in this argument and about ivermectin and Japan.
Oh God, Matthew remind me of the Twitter idiots.
I know the guy you're talking about, a guy living in Japan who was like
waffling on about ivermectin, right?
And trying to look impressive by sharing Japanese language articles about it.
In his case, I did have a little look at his bio and his mutuals.
And all of his mutuals were these like exotic thirst type accounts with names like lovelybaby69 and in their bios saying things
like, send me your cum tributes. I don't even know what that means, but it didn't reflect well
on him. And I was thinking, what am I doing? Why am I arguing with this person?
That frequently comes up in my self-loathing spirals if I look at my Twitter activity.
Like, why did I talk to that person?
Why?
Why?
I do think it's fine to look at someone's profile because you sometimes get people acting
like they're these kind of dispassionate scholars working through the issues of the day.
And you go to their Twitter feed and it's Jack Pasovich and
Mike Cernovich and the lies that CNN are spewing. I'm like, okay, it's helpful to know where you're
coming from. So yeah, I am relatively patient on Twitter, but just because lots of people on
Twitter have no patience whatsoever, but I am increasingly like, yeah, I'm not sure I should spend my time on this.
So, but we're complaining about Twitter.
This is not things that people on Twitter like to hear off Twitter, on Twitter, off Twitter.
All right.
I'm going to mention something much more healthy, which I've been, I'm feeling good because I've been very good.
I've been hitting the pool every morning, every weekday morning, including this morning. And I'm feeling good because I've been very good. I've been hitting the pool every morning,
every weekday morning, including this morning, and I'm feeling good about myself. I'm feeling
healthy. But there's one thing I have to mention, right? There's one thing about it that makes you
feel bad. I don't know what it's like in other countries, but in Australia, there's this little
thing called swim squad, which is squad. Now, what that means is a group of extraordinarily healthy
young men and women too, but in my case, it seems to be entirely men. These are the hardcore people.
How to describe them? They look like bronzed Adonises that have been lovingly crafted
by a cohort of angels with a deep, deep appreciation for all the possibilities of the male form.
And I feel pretty good about myself.
I'm 46 now and I'm doing my best.
And if I suck my gut in, then I think, you know, I'm doing okay.
And then these guys.
They come and they show up your insecurities for the deep wounds that they are, right?
It's not a competition, Matt.
It's not a competition.
It's just nothing.
Yeah, you should listen to Brené Brown.
She has a whole segment on the poison of making comparisons and these kind of things.
What you should pay more attention to the material that we're
covering this week, Matt.
You know, I understand that because I have the same issues, but it's just that
people always compare themselves to me and feel inadequate, so it's in the
opposite direction, but it's a dearly struggle whenever I go to the beach.
Just wow.
Wow.
See, I see heads turn.
And it's not just because of the reflective glare glistening from my alabaster skin.
Yeah, it's just the deep vibration.
I can sense it.
I'm sure.
Well, in my case, I just need to accept deeply that it's not about vanity.
It's not about competition.
It's just about fending off entropy.
That's right.
It's aging matter.
You're there to make all the people feel better.
I think I do make them feel better.
We all play our pieces in this world.
I do that for, for people online who want to feel well adjusted.
So, you know, we all have our crosses to bear.
I'm beginning to think your Twitter activity is actually a liability for this podcast because
I've seen so many comments of, yeah, I might give Guru's Pod a go.
And then they go, oh, it's that guy.
Who says that?
I don't see any of that.
All this tells me is your Twitter feed is full of terrible people.
You're following the wrong people to see these conversations, Matt.
I'll do better. I'll try to do better.
So Matt, probably listeners can tell this morning, I don't know why,
I'm just feeling the malaise.
I'm not my usual chipper self.
And you as well.
We've been beaten down by the gurus for air.
And so to cheer ourselves up, what we thought would be a good thing to do is to talk about our favorite gurus, the Weinsteins.
Let's check in on how they're doing.
They're always having a laugh and they're never doing anything annoying.
So I wonder what they've been up to.
It's like a boomerang.
It's like a strange attractor.
They keep chucking us back in, but they're a never-ending font of fascinating activity.
Tell me what they've done now, Chris.
Tell me.
Well, Eric has, for his part, he got invited to an economic seminar at the University of
Chicago.
I saw the economist talking about this.
It was kind of like a planned trap, right, where they were inviting him because of the
comments that he's made about calculating the inflation index or whatever it is, and
his conspiracy theories around the Boskin Commission in the US and how it's controlled.
So they invited him to set out his revolutionary theory for calculating this index based on gauge
theory, which is published so far in a chapter in his wife's thesis. And the plan seemed to be
to reveal him for the charlatan that he is when he has to deal with real economists and penetrating questions.
So I saw some threads from grad students who live tweeted about it.
And it went like you would expect, which was that Eric went, he waffled, he was asked various questions because it's a cross-examination style seminar.
asked various questions because it's a cross-examination style seminar and he gave confusing vague answers related to metaphors and folding of space-time and so on right and he
constantly told the audience that they wouldn't be able to follow the complex maps and physics
and he did that and he gave his talk and the response from the students
seemed to be like
bemusement, right? They hadn't seen someone
do this kind of talk
before and they were relatively
shocked that someone could do that.
They obviously haven't been hanging around Clubhouse.
So they were saying, why didn't he
put up the equations and stuff?
He just kept talking about multidimensional gates theory and waving his arms a lot.
What's going on?
To some extent, I feel that the economists work naive because if they think that is going
to harm Eric in the eyes of his audience, they're just completely misunderstanding what
his appeal is.
For him, it's now on the CV that he was invited to a prestigious economics seminar series and that he stood up to the Chicago School of Economists.
He was invited and then he was treated as an equal and he went into the belly of the
beast and told them, and that's all he needs.
It doesn't matter if they think he's a fool or whatever, right?
Yeah, that's right.
It's a win-win scenario because if they're polite to him,
which academics usually are, even to stuff they think is nonsense,
then it's a win.
If they're mean to him, then it's also a win because it's another example
of the distributed idea suppression complex at work.
So it's just part of that broader pattern of Weinstein revolutionizing science, Weinstein
getting ignored or rejected, revolutionizing science, getting ignored, and so on.
So yeah, it's a win-win.
If there's any kind of response that's even halfway respectable, it'll be complete validation
as it is.
I think it'll just be forgotten and everyone's going to move on and spend
their time doing something more productive, which will also illustrate
their close mindedness.
Yeah.
So that's what Eric was up to.
Another fellow in his cap in an academic sense of somewhat embarrassing
performance, but that doesn't matter.
And then the other younger brother, Brett, and his partner in crime,
Heller Hayne, they're continuing on their ivermectin anti-vax roadshow.
And they released a new episode recently.
There's very little surprising in what they say now.
It's like a script that just keeps running through the same talking points about the dangers of vaccines and how the mainstream is ignoring things and trying to silence the free thinkers and blah, blah, blah.
But still, they're sometimes able to impress you with the depths that they can plumb in their rhetoric.
And there's a couple of examples from the most recent episode.
So I'm going to play a few clips.
This is some extracted clips created by Dan Gilbert, Bad Stats, where Brett and Hilla
are talking about their critics and what might be wrong with them.
talking about their critics and what might be wrong with them.
And the idea is that what we are seeing are people behaving under something akin to hypnosis,
a kind of hypnosis that kicks in when these conditions attain. And I must say, I don't
feel that you and I are under this hypnosis. and I do feel that we are encountering a world full of people that is behaving almost as if they are sleepwalking on autopilot under some kind of hypnosis, who are not, in many cases, acting according to their own character and values.
And so this is very alarming.
So anyway, yes, mass formation is well worth tracking.
I don't know that it's 100% accurate as a model, but I will say if you walk around thinking,
am I dealing with hypnotized people and is that why they're behaving this way? It seems to be more enlightening than it is confusing.
So anyway, keep tracking it.
enlightening than it is confusing.
Um, so anyway, keep tracking it.
And this is in reaction to people not agreeing with him or criticizing him for his anti-vaccine and ivermectin advocacy.
That would be correct.
Yes.
So the only explanation is that they've been hypnotized by sinister forces.
Yeah.
This is such a common thing, isn't it?
I mean, you have the alt-right concept of npcs
non-player characters that all the normies out there are just kind of these automatons wandering
around in a daze and it's such a common thing with the other conspiracies like chemtrail 5g
and anti-vax for that matter where they often have theories to explain why other people can't see what they're seeing.
In the case of chemtrail people, they think the chemtrails are kind of spraying stuff
that is actually dulling people's critical faculties.
The anti-vax people, of course, believe that the vaccines are kind of making you more docile
and pliable.
So yeah, wow.
It's amazing, isn't it?
Yeah.
The level of self-awareness is not high, right? It never was, but it feels like
when you're getting to the point that all of your enemies are hypnotized zombies,
there might be some cause for reflection there.
I just think my enemies are idiots. I don't need to imagine that they're hypnotized. That's enough,
isn't it? They've really gotten worse. And a friend,
Liam Bright, he just imagined this alternate history where way back in the distant past,
that maybe if those evergreen social justice warrior students hadn't chased bread around
campus and sent them both on this trail, then there'd be thousands of people alive today who hadn't
taken ivermectin and maybe gotten the vaccine instead.
So it's interesting, this sort of alternate history to imagine the chain of events that
get thrown into motion.
I know.
Although I think that whatever multiverse we exist in, that we were destined to have
Brett become a public intellectual in one form or another.
He would eventually reach a scandal that would propel him into the limelight.
I think it's one of these regularities across the multiverse.
You're basically describing like an Isaac Asimov psychohistory thing.
It was inevitable.
It's the point you cannot change.
He's a force of nature.
But I've got another clip, Matt, which is another illustration of the remarkable level
of self-awareness.
In this case, I think it's mostly Heller.
So let's see if she does a bit better than Brett.
For Brett, his enemies are zombies.
And what's Heller's issue?
It's not there's everyone else, but that is one of the ways, that is one of the dichotomies
that I am seeing now.
There's the smug who largely are actually functionally innumerate, I think, and who
say things like follow the science, but wouldn't recognize a hypothesis if it smacked them
in the nose.
And then there's sort of everyone else.
And yes, there are degrees
to which the everyone else have conclusions that they're certain of or not certain of,
or have investigated them as much as possible for risk principles. But there is a degree of
uncertainty. The smug are inherently certain. And if you're certain right now that the thing that got handed you by the
CDC or MSNBC or anyone is simply true on account of it got handed to you,
then you're not doing your thinking for yourself.
And frankly, your smugness is, should evaporate right away because
it's based on nothing good.
Yes.
Is she talking about us?
Is that us?
Are we the smug ones?
I mean, indeed, probably.
But Ma, the fact is there is no one on this earth.
I think that can compete with the Weinstein's for the level of smug
satisfaction that they emanate and seem to exist upon by them complaining
about excess smugness is like me complaining about cynicism and sarcasm.
Like, oh, well, people are always so sarcastic and cynical.
How ridiculous of them.
You know, Stuart Ritchie said it about his book.
They're like so self-satisfied, so constantly smug.
And that notion that they're not certain, it's such fucking lip service.
It's such lip service because they're 95 or 99% certain.
And adding in rogue disclaimers about, well, we don't know.
We're just asking questions.
You have spent a year telling your audience that vaccines are very likely dangerous.
They're being underreported.
Look at all these cases.
You've had endless guests from fringe theorists talking about babies' brains exploding
and about the cover-up of all these terrible things.
And they've talked about thimerosols and vaccines and all of this shit.
And it's a complete smokescreen.
It's a complete smokescreen to claim themselves as, well, we don't know.
We're just, you know, we're just interested in the truth.
And they are remarkably, incredibly smug about the sense in which they are superior in their
scientific knowledge, their scientific approach.
So I just can't map.
I can't deal with them.
They're, they're getting worse.
They're getting worse.
It's
they actually are getting a lot worse.
They're much worse than when we originally covered them and they weren't good then.
And to your point about smugness, they're quite explicit about this in the self
congratulation for being really
almost the only people who can see through the veil of lies and evaluate
evidence correctly and do science properly.
Like they're explicit about it.
They award each other noble prizes.
I know.
I know.
And okay.
So we're going to get off them soon because it hasn't worked, Matt.
It hasn't improved my mood.
But there's two things that I want to just note,
two more clips, and I'll try not to rant about them.
I want a bit of pen in this
because I think they're going to turn anti-mask
now that they were riding high on that
they early identified the importance of masks and we
don't need to relitigate the mask gate 2020 but just listen to this clip they don't dwell on it
but i'm putting my flag here there's an anti-mask turn coming you know the the waiter comes over
wearing a mask right and you're sitting there not masked and actually my sense is to the extent that
this does any good at all we're more or less morally obligated to put them on at that moment
to protect this person right it is only because i don't think this is a very effective remedy that
i don't think this is a glaring error because it's you know i mean that and that's what i was doing
until i started to see all of this all of this work suggesting that they're not actually particularly effective.
Yeah. But anyway, yes. A little bat signal that suggests I don't think this policy is all that well thought out is liable to put you in contact with others who have those doubts and are likely feeling very isolated about them themselves.
and are likely feeling very isolated about them themselves.
So the CDC or whatever, we're bright all along, Chris.
We've come full circle.
This is great.
This is hilarious.
I'm sure that'll be their take when it emerges.
But yeah, they don't dwell on that,
but I think it's definitely coming, right? Whatever the contrarian view is,
that's what they're attracted to.
That's the secret. And that's why they're always wrong. I mean, statistically speaking,
if they were just making random guesses on things, they'd be right at least some of the time,
but their ability to be consistently wrong about everything is because of that, what you just said.
Yeah. So even when they take a position, which is, you know, relatively correct that like masks
are useful in the pandemic, it's motivated by contrarianism.
It's not motivated by this parsing of evidence that they pretend.
They don't read the studies.
They don't know how to assess literature and look critically at it.
They've demonstrated that in a way that's undeniable with the ivermectin literature.
So their advocacy for masks was primarily promoted by contrarianism.
So that's a case of like getting a point right doesn't vindicate your approach or way of
thinking about things.
A little while ago, my colleague described this kind of love for these mysteries and the idea that things are being hidden.
And you described it as this sort of hidden world.
They just love a world where in which there are these fairies at the bottom of the garden in which all of these amazing or frightening things are happening.
But the main thing is, is that it's hidden.
It's, you know, other people can't see it.
I think some people sort of don't want a world in which what is plain and in front of your
face is kind of all there is.
No, they don't.
It's more exciting to live in a world of mystery and intrigue and you uncovering it.
So I get the psychological thing.
And I have one more clip, but I don't know if it's even like how, this one is not so bad.
It's just illustrating this tendency.
I see all over the heterodox sphere where people essentially like some people have talked about it being love bombed by the right or theorists or any group can do it. But you take a stance that fits with what other people like, and then they treat you nicely.
And Brett and Heller, as with so many in this space, they kind of wax lyrical about that process.
I find no mystery to it because it's you tell people something that they want to hear,
and they treat you nicer.
Like, where's the mystery, right?
But just listen.
And we have lost quite a number of friends in recent times over calling it like we see it with respect to issues related to the pandemic.
Guess what else, though?
The other thing, though, what they don't manage to convey
is that this causes a kind of upgrade
in your social life
because the people who, you know,
publicly chastise you in such circumstances
are actually not high quality.
They may seem like it under normal circumstances,
but when the chips are down,
they won't be there.
And that's actually a very important thing to know.
We learned this
at evergreen too right but let's just be very clear and i know you know the the viewers who
are long-time viewers who are coming here because they find something of value uh will not have made
this error um but i could hear what you just said as suggesting that if you get critiqued you know
that person is oh no no no it is doing you a solid and isn't worth having a rest.
No, no. A great friend will critique you. They will do it carefully. But there is, you know, there is this public distancing thing that is of a very different sort. And we saw this at Evergreen. And of course, the first time we learned this lesson when this happened at Evergreen, you know, there were lots of people who we had thought were our friends who turned out not to be up to the challenge, but a great many people emerged. And the point was the trade was
very positive, right? The upgrade in the quality of people that surrounded us was amazing.
Now, what we would say at the time, in fact, was that there were surprises in both directions.
There's a couple of things, right? One is that they've upgraded their social circles.
And in regards to the COVID controversy,
like who they're condemning now is people like Sam Harris.
And who they've replaced him with are people like Robert Malone and Steve Kirsch.
And whatever your take on Sam Harris, I'm not sure that's an upgrade.
Now you're hanging with the anti-vax guys.
Yeah, this characterization of being ostracized or canceled in some ways is something that's attributed to the left.
Probably quite fairly, I suppose.
I mean, look at this recent story where Tucker Carlson is recently hosting a three-part series on this conspiracy around the Capitol building riot called Patriot Purge.
Just complete lies around stolen elections and so on.
There's a couple of writers for Fox News who have quit in response to that.
I don't think that their conservative friends are going to be saying, well done, you, sticking
by your principles.
I may disagree with you about this particular point, but, you know, good on you.
As soon as Brett and Heather depart from the anti-vax stream, if they were to do so, which
I'm sure they wouldn't, then their anti-vax friends would drop them like a hot poker.
Yeah, so that was a cheerful up there. then their anti-vac friends would drop them like a hot poker.
Yeah, so that was a cheerful up there.
A nice thing to pep our spirits up. I had a story about going to the pool, and you brought me down.
Just thinking about it.
So we've waffled around.
We've dwelt in the swamp of Weinsteinicity for long enough.
Let's turn to the guru of the day.
Who is it?
Who will we deal with this week?
We are dealing with Brené Brown.
Brené Brown.
So she's someone you tend to see on TED.
Yeah.
Doing those kinds of talks.
She's been on Oprah Winfrey's show, a bit of a celebrity.
And her thing is very much self-help.
She does have a research background.
She's published papers on various negative emotions and how people deal with them.
She's written a bunch of bestselling books.
I might read them out because the titles actually give a good sense of who she is.
So we have The Gifts of Imperfection, Daring Greatly, Rising Strong, Braving the Wilderness,
Dare to Lead.
I like that one, Dare to Lead.
And also has a couple of podcasts.
Her TED talk was called The Power of Vulnerability.
So she writes basically self-help books and talks about
dealing with emotions positively and rising above various kinds of trauma and negative rumination on
emotions like shame vulnerability that kind of stuff yeah the talks that i've clipped from are
the power of vulnerability and listening to shame which are two TED Talks, extremely popular.
The Power of Vulnerability, 16 million views. Listening to Shame, 5.6 million views. And also,
she was interviewed by another kind of self-help guy, an athlete, who is also a podcaster,
content creator, Lewis Howes, called If You Want to Heal Yourself, Watch This,
Brené Brown and Lewis Howes.
So these are the episodes that I've clipped from.
They're kind of interviews with her or the two TED Talks.
And I will say that whenever we were suggested to do her,
one, we wanted to have a break from the culture war sphere.
And I think that is achieved.
She is not really dwelling that much on culture war topics.
And then the second thing was to take some, well, we're in our season of self-help.
She's definitely a self-help guru.
So she fits that.
But also we actually got quite a few people suggesting her, but the general comment from
people was like, they had a sense that there's guru-ish content there, but they didn't think she was all bad.
Or they were saying, you know, a lot of people are recommending her to me and I get a guru vibe.
So like there was a mixed sense from people that she would be a good person to look at, but reluctance to say that she's bad.
There's this mistaken perception, Matt, that all the gurus we cover must be bad.
And that is not the case, right?
That's true.
It's not the case.
I didn't know anything about Brene Brown before we looked into her.
And so I came to it with absolutely no preconceptions or assumptions.
Look, I generally don't have a hugely positive view of the self-help literature generally, but I think there's value in self-help, as we said with Jordan Peterson.
So I think I was able to come to this pretty well.
But as she says in an interview with The Guardian, people will find a million reasons to tear your work down.
And I have a feeling you might be.
Well, yeah, there was a talk she gave to creatives,
which I also listened to, and I didn't clip from a 99 conference. And she talked about critics
and how to respond to them. I do have a clip that relates to that. And I put it in a folder saying,
is this us? So it's a bit of a random point to start, but let's hear this clip about critics.
of a random point to start, but let's hear this clip about critics. A lot of people refer to it as the man in the arena quote. And it goes like this. It is not the critic who counts. It is not
the man who sits and points out how the doer of deeds could have done things better and how he
falls and stumbles. The credit goes to the man in the arena whose face is marred with dust and blood and sweat.
But when he's in the arena at best, he wins.
And at worst, he loses.
But when he fails, when he loses, he does so daring greatly.
And that's what this conference to me is about.
That's what life is about, about daring greatly, about being in the arena.
Not seeing any blood or sweat on your face at the moment, Chris.
We're in the peanut gallery.
Yeah.
But on the critical side of it, to take my designated role,
this is a convenient framing to essentially posit that critics are just there to tear you down and they do it because they
cannot do what you do so it's the people who dare to go out and make themselves vulnerable
they're better than the people who would just criticize them for the effort and there's like
validity to that right because you you do get that it's easier for people
to tell you for example how to do an interview with sam harris than if they had to do it themselves
i'd rather have a pick puck from the air so i get that i understand why somebody who creates content
would feel that way and i think there are malignant criticisms, but I also think there's
a category of criticism, which is not that, which is properly engaging
and that people can point out issues and flaws in your content in a reasonable
way and even in a way that makes you feel uncomfortable, but which is accurate.
Yeah.
It's reminded me of the skin in the game concept.
Yeah.
Of Nassim Taleb's. Yeah. Who's that? Who's that? Yeah. Yeah. It's reminded me of the skin in the game concept. Yeah. Of Nassim Taleb's.
Who's that? Who's that? Yeah.
Yeah. A quiet, unassuming guy called Nassim Taleb. I guess it's the same take really,
isn't it? I think there is validity in that. Like the concept of betting markets and so on are kind of good in that you tend to get better information when people have put something at
risk in order to participate. And there's certainly a never-ending number of people who will make
low-effort criticisms of things. On the other hand, I'll offer as a canner example, we could
even link to it in the show notes. A couple of researchers in my field, a fellow by the name of
Paul DeFabro and another guy called Daniel King, they wrote commentary, quite a detailed paper describing in painful detail how my research was
wrong, right? How it was flawed, how it had all these problems with it and so on. And that was
an extraordinarily positive contribution, I think. I've since responded to it,
telling that they're completely wrong and given the reasons. But it has inspired a lot more empirical work, which I think has comprehensively demonstrated
that they're wrong.
But opinions vary, and that's what good inquiry is all about.
To her credit, though, she does acknowledge that there is that legitimate category of
criticism.
And really, when she was talking about critics, I got the impression
because she gave some examples and it was people critiquing her appearance
and saying various disparaging comments about her and I'm sure that's very
common, especially when you have like a million view thing, there is a value
to tell people don't listen to your worst critics,
even though we have a negativity bias within us. And actually there's a clip where she discusses
negativity bias without using the word, which I thought was quite good. It seems relevant.
So let's hear her illustrate that. Well, you know that situation where you
get an evaluation from your boss and she tells you 37 things that you do really awesome and one
thing that you can't, you know, an opportunity for growth. And all you can think about is that
opportunity for growth, right? Well, apparently this is the way my work went as well. Because
when you ask people about love, they tell you as well, because when you ask people about love,
they tell you about heartbreak.
When you ask people about belonging, they'll tell you their most excruciating experiences of being excluded.
And when you ask people about connection, the stories they told me were about disconnection.
Yeah, we have a negativity bias.
We do have a negativity bias.
We fasten on to the criticisms and we often overreact to them.
And a different kind of person, or many people rather, can actually be demoralized by that
kind of negative feedback.
Or as she talks about, avoid taking risks and avoid things like public speaking for
fear of exactly that, which is obviously not a healthy approach. So I think
the value of that, even though like everything, it can be taken too far. I think the message of
a podcast is always this golden mean type thing, but given that people do have a bit of a tendency
in the other direction, there is value in that. Yeah. There's also Americanisms, right? About the
growth opportunities. I can't remember how she freeased it and 37 areas that you're awesome in I've never heard that in an evaluation in the UK
or Japan nobody has ever called me awesome and that's something that I mentioned because it's
kind of pervasive in this material and in self-help material generally. A lot of the self-help gurus are American
or they're into the kind of American culture
of individualism and self-help.
And they take that.
I mean, I don't think we can entirely blame them
because they are talking to an audience of Americans.
But it's kind of spoken as if it's universal truths
instead of culturally specific.
And maybe I'll give you an example of the kind of thing I mean.
So here's a little extract.
Yes, I'm very excited to be here.
We have an event called the Summit of Greatness every year, an annual event.
And the people on my team in our program, write down the person that they want to have
on the school of greatness.
And most of our team is women.
And most of them put your name down as the people that personally want to have on.
So we're finally making it happen.
And my team can stop asking for Brene.
It's happening.
And, uh, I'm very excited about this because you have a new book out called braving the
wilderness, the quest for true belonging and the courage to stand alone.
Make sure you guys get this book right now. It's going to change the game. And I got a chance to
go through it. Love everything that you write about in here. And I feel very connected to you.
Yeah. That's like her being introduced by the guy interviewing, right? But you,
the title of the conference, the book and the kind of glowing recommendations,
it's, it's, it burns my soul, Mark.
Yeah.
I'm having to put aside my natural kind of, so at a cultural level, it all just runs me
the wrong way.
I should probably get that out of the way.
Yeah, me too.
We are bad people for this reason.
There's also the factor that she met, or he mentioned that she mentioned that she is very popular amongst his female staff.
There is a clear thing in Brene Brown's work that it's popular with women.
And we aren't that necessary.
Well, I think we are the target audience as well because she makes it a universal thing.
well, because she makes it a universal thing. But the thing that she's critiquing in a lot of her material is the cultural value that
men should be emotionally unavailable and that people don't focus enough on themselves
and these kinds of things, which in a sense, it's kind of kryptonite, right?
Because I'm not just talking about with like men but i have a general cultural
value attached to not focusing so much on yourself in a self-indulgent way and not being strongly
impacted by your whatever your emotions are and that kind of thing so the thing that she's critiquing
is the culture that likely influences a lot of the way that I view things.
Yeah, yeah.
There's probably more clips that will make these points better.
And I've got some thoughts about the way in which her ideas exemplify American values around confidence, around risk-taking, around individualism, around growth.
Yeah. I think that's interesting, but I think there's better clips that will speak to this. confidence, around risk-taking, around individualism, around growth.
Yeah.
I think that's interesting, but I think there's better clips that will speak to this.
Yes, that's right.
So let's see.
We can go to, which would you like to go to, Matt?
Vulnerability or shame?
Oh, let's go with shame.
Okay. This is something we're both familiar with.
It is.
Yeah.
Okay. This is something we're both familiar with.
It is. Yeah. There's a lot of coverage of shame. And maybe to start off before we get deep into what shame is about, there is her talking about the reluctance that people
feel to address these topics, which we may be illustrating, right? But here we go.
I thought I'm going to leave that
shame stuff behind because I spent six years studying shame before I really started writing
and talking about vulnerability. And I thought, thank God, because shame is this horrible topic.
No one wants to talk about it. It's the best way to shut people down on an airplane.
What do you do? I study shame. Oh, and I see you, you know.
Yeah.
So, you know, just people don't like talking about shame.
But at the same time, while Northern Irish and Australian culture values being what they are,
being aware of being ashamed is not something I lack or guilt, right?
And people being unwilling to talk about it,
it's a very common cultural topic, like Catholic guilt, right? Or Catholic shame, for example.
Yeah. Yeah. Well, look, shame and guilt is the only reason I check my emails and
read my graduate students' papers. It's a great motivator. But what does Brene Brown say about the role of shame there, Chris?
It's a bit more complex than simply saying shame is a negative emotion.
It makes you feel bad.
So forget about that.
Just be super happy and confident and feel good about yourself.
That's not quite her take, is it?
No.
So, okay.
There's two clips, I think, that outline her view about shame.
So one is distinguishing shame and guilt.
Okay. So the definitions are important. So this is her kind of making an important distinction.
The thing to understand about shame is it's not guilt. Shame is a focus on self. Guilt is a focus
on behavior. Shame is I am bad. Guilt is I did something bad. How many of you, if you did something that was hurtful to
me, would be willing to say, I'm sorry, I made a mistake? How many of you would be willing to say
that? Guilt. I'm sorry, I made a mistake. Shame. I'm sorry, I am a mistake. There is a huge difference
between shame and guilt, and here's what you need to know. Shame is highly,
highly correlated with addiction, depression, violence, aggression, bullying, suicide,
eating disorders. And here's what you even need to know more. Guilt, inversely correlated with
those things. The ability to hold something we've done or failed to do up against who we want to be
is incredibly adaptive. It's uncomfortable, but it's adaptive.
Yeah. So this speaks to pretty common cultural values that are around at the moment, which is
that you affirm individuals, whether they're children or adults, as being legitimate and good,
et cetera. And you focus on the behavior and you look at bad behaviors, look at problematic behaviors and
look to change them and acknowledge that they're a problem without it being a reflection of who
you are. And the idea is if you do that, what it does is it reduces resistance because if you could
sort of decouple your identity and your sense of self-worth from the problematic
thing, it makes it easier to change that problematic thing.
Because obviously the hardest thing to change is something that you actually personally
identify with.
So it all makes sense.
It reminds me also of the Christian concept of love the sinner and hate the sin.
It's kind of the same thing really in sort of new age language.
But, you know, it's not not we should talk about emotions i think
and their their role yeah not not our emotions yeah okay i don't want to know about your feelings
but in an abstract sense we could talk about them but it's not inconsistent i think with
sort of practical applied psychology but what i didn't hear her talk about at all is just some of
the more basic stuff about why people even have emotions in the first place, what their functional
role is, because they're not like a disease, whether it's shame or guilt or fear or whatever.
These things, I don't necessarily think she's saying this, right? But in the self-help literature generally, there can be a tendency to think of all of
those aspects of negative affect as being a problem somehow that you need to deal with.
So, yeah.
Yeah.
So, you know, like you said, her take on shame is not just that it's inherently bad. It's the not talking about shame,
which is the issue,
the unwillingness to acknowledge shame
or that kind of thing.
I have a clip which highlights this a bit more,
a bit more about her views on shame.
So here we go.
And it turned out to be shame.
And shame is really easily understood
as the fear of disconnection.
Is there something about me that if other people know it or see it, that I won't be worthy of
connection? The things I can tell you about it, it's universal. We all have it. The only people
who don't experience shame have no capacity for human empathy or connection. No one wants to talk
about it. And the less you talk
about it, the more you have it. Yeah, that illustrates the idea. And it ties into her
delineation of shame being bad, guilt being good, that kind of thing. But I think she neglects the
role more generally of these negative emotions. So just from a cognitive psychology point of view,
negative emotions. So just from a cognitive psychology point of view, all emotions serve functions. We're evolved to have them and they're just a normal thing that humans and very likely a
lot of other animals have too. So one of the functions that emotions have is to modulate
behavior. So as opposed to just being a purely rational brain in a box, making deductions and
forming stratagems and so on, being in a state of fear, for instance, and having the fight or flight
response is going to put you in a mode of behavior that is going to instigate and sort of adds the
flavor, if you like, to the cognitions in order to instigate behaviors that are more appropriate
to the given situation, which could be a dangerous one. Another aspect of emotion is in terms of modulating interpersonal relationships too,
because an awful lot of emotions are social emotions. So, you know, she talks about shame,
that's a social kind of emotion that it's got to do with how other people view you and even the
internalized aspect of it, how you view yourself, something that is not highly regarded that's going to decrease your status in the eyes of others.
So being aware of that can modulate behavior in order to help you navigate social relationships
better. Feeling jealousy, feeling anger, feeling like you're not being recognized, whatever.
Again, you can easily see how these emotions are going to modulate social behavior and serve
as a kind of a signal to instigate behaviors that will rectify a problem.
So pretty much all emotions have a valence.
There's a couple of schemes of emotions.
One quite neat one sort of organizes it in a two-dimensional kind of way.
So one dimension is a positive-negative valence.
Yeah, does it feel good?
Is it a signifier that things are going well and, you know, say the course because this
is a good thing.
So, so feeling love and happiness and excitement and interest, that kind of thing versus feeling,
you know, fear and self-loathing and so on.
And then the other dimension is got to do with sort of activity is an emotion that kind
of heightens your arousal or depresses your arousal.
And this has got to do with
using your energies effectively, right?
So emotions that put you into a heightened state of arousal
are going to instigate more activity, essentially.
It could be that you're feeling hungry, yeah?
Or you're feeling bored or whatever.
It's going to instigate you
to sort of go out there and do stuff
where you might be feeling satisfied and content and so on. It's a signifier that everything's right in the
world. You can relax and take it easy and conserve energy. So just with that general framework of
emotions, I think is helpful because the self-helpy stuff, I think there's some good in it, but it
kind of misses, I think, some of the useful functions of negative emotions.
So I believe you're talking about the circumflex model of effect, which I know well, Matt,
because it was a core topic of my thesis related to rituals and dysphoric and euphoric rituals
and the level of arousal.
So I just signed off.
I'm just saying, I'm just highlighting.
I know these effect models too.
I couldn't remember what the model was called.
So you're one step ahead of me.
I bow to your superior wisdom, Chris.
That's right.
But I'm not so sure that she doesn't, I think her work is like relatively
nuanced in terms of the books that she has.
I would be surprised if she doesn't talk about positive functions that she can fulfill or
that kind of thing.
But it is true to say that her work is more focused on social work, applied counseling
settings rather than down at the level of cognition and evolutionary origins for emotions.
And I think we can see this in an example where she's talking about the level of cognition and evolutionary origins for emotions. And I think we can see this
in an example where she's talking about the kind of damage that the shaming experience in childhood
could have on somebody's behavior in adulthood. So here's like a story she tells.
And so I must've had fear on my face because my coach looked at me and said, don't be a P-U-S-S-Y,
get on the line.
And he said, that's the day that I learned that the way you deal with that is you change that fear into rage.
And he said, and I just plowed over the guy across from me.
And then he said, then I spent the next 20 years plowing over my wife, my children,
my colleagues, the people who worked for me.
He said, that's what I did with my fear. Yeah. I mean, I don't disagree. I mean,
I know what you're saying about that. She's not talking to a theoretical psychology audience,
right? She's talking to people that aren't happy with themselves or their life to some degree
and are looking for some positive messages. And look, there certainly are people,
especially men, right, who will translate a negative emotion like fear or rejection or whatever
very maladaptively into a kind of overreaching towards aggression and dominance or whatever.
Or alternatively, people can respond to it maladaptively in the sense of feeling cowed
and sort of internalizing that and
thinking that there isn't an option to rectify it. I think you just have to be careful not to take
simplistic messages from this. Sometimes the correct response to fear is to be a little bit
aggressive, you know, in an adaptive way. Sometimes the response is to actually put your head in
and maybe not do that risky thing that is making you feel fearful
and she similarly like eating cookies in a shower when you're hungover there's the
like feeling shame from that is in some ways it's good because you realize like maybe i
shouldn't maybe i made the wrong choices or or arguing with that person on Twitter in the middle of the night
and then just thinking like, what have I done?
Self-shame can be useful at times to make you realize like, maybe that behavior wasn't
good.
That's very true.
That's very true.
That's another random example that you picked there.
That's um, it is, it's a very, it's just, you know, something that could happen.
I will, I'll divulge my own vulnerability that when I was a teenager, we'd go out
to nightclubs in Belfast that, you know, you were trying to get yourself significantly drunk
before you went to the nightclub
because beer is expensive when you're out.
So friends would come and we'd drink.
And I do remember a non-glorious time
when I didn't have very much time to prepare before going out
and I was doing shots of aftershock liqueur in the shower
before I went to a rock club.
So that's pretty bad too.
Rock on, dude.
Rock on.
That's bodacious.
I don't know what you're talking about.
Respect, man.
That's not bodacious.
Aftershock is not an impressive thing to be taking as a shot.
So yeah, I think cookies in the shower is more impressive oh well look that that
was an admirable instance of you getting over your northern ireland emotional male repression
and divulging that thank you for sharing that with me chris that's all right yeah
but okay so let's just check with brené like would she agree with us here is there any way in which
her messages are kind of departing from the stuff
we're saying about shame the stuff that we're saying that shame can be useful no i get like i
think she does say that and okay maybe it's a good time to switch to talk a bit about because the
other thing that she talks about is vulnerability and she offers this framing about the way that people conceive of vulnerability normally as a negative thing and what it actually is.
Let's hear her talk a little bit about that.
So here's the power of vulnerability.
Vulnerability is not weakness i define vulnerability as emotional risk exposure
uncertainty it fuels our daily lives and i've come to the belief this is my 12th year doing
this research that vulnerability is our most accurate measurement of courage. So is that how you think of vulnerability?
Because it's quite a kind of like, I mean, at least it's
framed as counter intuitive.
I like, I will say listening to your material did make me think, do I actually
think that, or are you telling me that I view things like that, right?
There were some parts where she's like people think like this
and i'm like do i like do i think vulnerability is bad like yeah i i'm not sure you do or most
people do there's that trope it's an internet thing so so boomers cover your ears it's called
big dick energy yeah which in that kind of idea is that it's it's such
a coarse term but the idea with that is that people who are genuinely confident and not just
sort of superficially confident with bravado and bluster and so on have a kind of self-awareness
self self-confidence that allows them to essentially be vulnerable to you to use that
language so you know just like you sharing your story about tricking the alcohol.
That was big dick energy.
I look at the, the thing I will say about that is I know what you're talking about with
big dick energy, but let's stop saying it.
BD energy, BD energy.
Let's say that.
But I will also, like, this is what I mean where I'm a little bit conflicted about things because I don't think she's recommending having BD energy.
And I also think when I see people who are talking about that, that
they're not doing it in a ironic way.
They're actually saying like James Lindsay, it's sort of tongue in cheek, but actually
he does think he's this impressive figure that standing up and doesn't give a shit.
It comes across to me as remarkably weak and insecure, the opposite of the effect.
So you're saying that she is calling that out as well saying that people who project that they are invulnerable
and that they don't have weakness are actually insecure and the people who are vulnerable and
don't feel strong right that it can be a kind of math at times that's how i took it but i guess
maybe that's one of the issues here that in some ways it's a tautology, right? So people can take from what she's saying what they will, right?
You're right.
Your summary was what I took from it.
But in some sense, she's saying a tautology.
She's saying you can't be courageous without feeling fear.
Well, the very definition of being courageous is to be afraid and to act bravely.
If you didn't have any awareness there was any danger, then that's not really being brave. So it's a tautology. It sounds nice, but I'm not sure if
there's much depth to it. Yeah. And there is one bit where this happens. It's a TED talk thing.
It's also something people do in presentations that I wanted to highlight because it's not
specific to her, but this is a very common thing. And I'm always very suspicious when people do this
about the level of research they put into the claim. But she talks about the original definition her, but this is a very common thing. And I'm always very suspicious when people do this about
the level of research they put into the claim, but she talks about the original definition of courage
and let me just play what she describes. What they had in common was a sense of courage.
And I want to separate courage and bravery for you for a minute. Courage, the original definition
of courage, when it first came into the English language, it's from the Latin word cur, meaning heart. And the original definition was to tell
the story of who you are with your whole heart. And so these folks had very simply the courage
to be imperfect. They had the compassion to be kind to themselves first and then to others,
because as it turns out, we can't practice compassion with other people if we can't treat ourselves kindly.
And the last was they had connection.
And this was the hard part as a result of authenticity.
They were willing to let go of who they thought they should be in order to be who they were,
which is you have to absolutely do that for connection.
So I'll get your thoughts, Matt,
but just, you know, there's this phrasing of,
I want to distinguish between seeking the truth
and searching for the truth.
I got a Jordan Hall vibe when she said,
courage and bravery.
There's important distinctions there.
Like, but you know, the
general thing about the definition of the word potato comes from pot, meaning
small round object in the old Irish, right.
Or this kind of thing.
It's just a trope of presentations that it, uh, like it brought, it's not her
fault, everyone, lots of people do it, but it's a trope-ish so i want the flag
well look i had the same thought and i think it is kind of her fault because i didn't really
buy like this big distinction between shame and guilt being entirely different things
i don't quite buy that and the idea of courage and bravery being entirely different things like
you're making them different by giving them special definitions. And then you're working with those definitions as if you've outlined a new theory. But actually,
with the shame and guilt distinction, all she's doing is saying, you should have good self-esteem
because having decent self-esteem and not feeling huge degrees of self-stigma,
that's actually a barrier to actually challenging negative things that you might be doing.
Then that's a very anodyne point that kind of is just common knowledge. And this courage and
bravery thing as well. I'm just not sure that anything's being added here apart from
packaging. Pretty good advice, but it's kind of just homespun wisdom. I'm not seeing any new ideas
in it. No life-changing lessons, Matt. Well, let's see if that's the case. Here's some more on vulnerability. This
one, maybe you just need to be a bit more open. They are vulnerable. The other thing that they
had in common was this. They fully embraced vulnerability. They believed that what made
them vulnerable made them beautiful. They didn't talk about vulnerability being comfortable,
nor did they really talk about it being excruciating,
as I had heard earlier in the shame interviewing.
They just talked about it being necessary.
They talked about the willingness to say,
I love you first.
The willingness to do something where there are no guarantees, the willingness
to breathe through waiting for the doctor to call after your mammogram, the willing
to invest in a relationship that may or may not work out.
They thought this was fundamental.
So did that alter your, the examples are pretty, I think one of the things that she
does well is when she gives examples of like people feeling vulnerable or taking risks and how
it can be a difficult thing to do, but a source of strength and that kind of thing. So, but what
about you? No, I think it's excellent advice. You know, when she's talking about courage,
she's mainly talking about it in the realm of personal relationships and perhaps the tendency
of many people to shut themselves down or avoid taking risks of various kinds. And that can be
a self-fulfilling prophecy, especially if two people are doing the same thing. So look,
it's obviously good advice. I'm trying to think of it as something, anything more than that.
I'm impressed when people, when I look at the comments on our videos,
the level of, you know, there's a really powerful reaction
from a lot of people saying, I'm so glad I saw this.
You know, it's helped me so much.
And like, there are people sharing all these intimate stories
and I, like you, just have a more of a reaction like of yeah I guess it is helpful to be like that but it doesn't
feel like something that I never considered that opening myself to another person or to the
possibility of failure could be a strength.
I do remember though, when I started looking about some of the psychology research on
interpersonal relationships, that the discovery that like a lot of things that build a relationship
is about disclosure of information, right? And information that you don't disclose to other
people. There are some studies about tricking people into creating feelings of intimacy by staring
at each other's faces and telling secrets, exchanging secrets, and that you can actually
generate feelings of intimacy with relative strangers and stuff like this.
And to me, that was kind of insightful that when you start to examine relationships through that framework, and that was kind of an insightful that you when you start to examine
relationships through that framework and this is kind of related yeah no it is it is just an
interesting aside a lot of known people who did that deliberately and in a very instrumental way
because they knew that saying something that came across as being a very personal thing. Manipulative narcissist.
Malignant sociopaths.
Yeah, and I don't think they were that malignant,
but they were just very socially capable people who wanted a response and knew how to instigate it.
There's a fine line.
There's a fine line, that's right.
Yeah, no, I'm with you.
This is the thing with self-help.
If you feel like you're basically fine, then you're going to be like us.
You'll go, yeah, that's good advice, I guess.
I don't think I'm basically fine, but I also think that knowing.
I'm sure I'm self-delusional in this.
You know, I'm complacent.
Put it that way.
I'm well aware of all my feelings and bags of neuroses that I carry around.
You don't want to get better.
I live in the darkness.
Yeah, right.
But I also think that knowing things and like putting them into practical application is different. And also that there is a sense in which I don't want to be the way that self-help people
want me to be.
I don't want to, I don't want to be an American.
So I'm, I'm content for the model adjustment in some extent, but there's always things
that you can improve with relationships with other people or your own, you know, you've got,
we've all got work to do, Matt.
We've all got work to do.
You gotta do the work.
Okay.
Well, I, I wanna change gears here for a second, cuz there's something I wanted
to ask you about because one of the takeaways I had after listening to a
lot of Brene Brown was very much how the messages she had for people were like
extolling American values, as you said, right?
It's about opening up, communicating, being yourself, growing, changing and striving and
achieving greatness and being independent and not caring what anyone else thought, being
that tall poppy and standing out from the crowd, right?
These are all very, very American values.
If you go to Japan or Northern Ireland, say, right, there's a slightly different pattern of things that are considered healthy and good.
So in Japan, I think, well, it's changing now, but in traditional Japan, a lot of those values are like, no, you shouldn't do that.
Don't, you know, be a good member of the team and be respectful and you should feel shame,
right?
When they're telling you you've done the wrong thing, you should feel bad about that because
you need to be trying harder to fit in.
So what do you think, to what degree is it, should we be concerned about extolling a particular
set of cultural values as than being universal psychological things?
No, there's definitely, there's a lot of stuff in this, which is like very
individualist culture focused and even within that, to some extent, a lot of
the examples and stuff are fairly elite middle-class kind of stuff. I'm not saying that her work primarily focuses on that, but a lot of the examples and stuff are fairly elite, middle-class kind of stuff.
I'm not saying that her work primarily focuses on that, but a lot, just because
of the nature of who she is, the anecdotes are about giving speeches at conferences
and about taking business class flights and talking to people and, and there's
a lot of reference to high school sports clubs and so on, and it doesn't fit.
I'm a middle class person as well and have give conference presentations.
So I get some of the references, but I also think that there's an alienating
aspect of that, that if you're talking to people cross-culturally that
a lot of it wouldn't relate.
I don't know the extent to which she intends for it to be a universal thing versus primarily speaking to an American audience or at least a Western audience.
But I agree that in general with the self-help oeuvre, there is this universalizing of American values and
the American individualist values, which creates a little.
And it's not to say that the other cultures, they just value that you slam your individuality
into nothingness and you just simply conform.
But it's more that your personal self is not all that matters in the world.
There's a interdependent network of relationships that you exist within.
For you to function well in those kinds of societies requires that you sometimes will
put your self-development and the interest secondary to your network. Like, I mean, an illustration I can give from a personal example is that whenever
my kids were born and at the time people were, or was using Facebook and I would
have been sharing pictures on there would be fairly normal in a UK context to do
that, but my wife, who's Japanese,
had some concern about sharing pictures
because it can make a lot of people feel bad
about their situation.
And something that's like, to me,
was a relatively illegal concept
because it's like, well, that's their issue.
Why would somebody feel bad about my happiness?
But it's just a different focus
i don't think one is better or worse but definitely the uk one is more individualist
focused and america is more towards that than the uk so yeah i completely agree like australian
cultural values aren't that different from american ones, but they do value that risk-taking
and entrepreneurialism and individualism and sort of self-prioritization and, dare I say,
self-aggrandizement in a way that Australians would just sort of naturally, we go along a fair
bit of the way, but not quite that far. So when I would hear sort of self-helpy type people on
places like Oprah at length about how you
need to focus more on yourself.
Stop thinking about what other people, about them.
You need to focus on yourself.
You know, that was a really strong message.
And there's obviously some truth to that.
I'm not saying that's a completely wrong thing, but it did rub me the wrong way.
I don't think just because of a cultural difference.
Yeah.
And so I have a clip that is
talking about this and it's talking about belonging and fitting into groups. And as we'll
see, you know, there's good parts and there's parts that might kick issue with, but here's a clip.
And that was my biggest fear was being alone. Oh yeah. Cause that's what, that's what teams
and groups deliver. They deliver this thing that you're not alone. The problem is there's just,
I was so shocked to learn in the research that the opposite of belonging is fitting in.
Because fitting in is assessing a group of people and thinking, who do I need to be? What do I need
to say? What do I need to wear? How do I need to act? And changing who you are and true belonging never asks us to change who we are it demands that we be who
we are because if we if we if we fit in because how we've changed ourselves that's not belonging
that's not belonging because you betrayed yourself
for other people and that's not Yeah, you start to lose yourself.
You start to lose yourself, exactly what you said.
And so I think it's hard.
You have to show up as who you are.
How do we find out who we are?
That's the life's work, right?
That's freaking hard.
Do you know who you are?
Yeah, I do.
Who are you?
In what way?
That's a perfect clip.
I almost can't add anything to that because Brene has, I think, made my point.
Well, yeah, again, there's that parsing of belonging is different than fitting in, right?
There's a kind of, I get what she's's saying the distinction she wants to draw but they are
in some ways synonymous yeah i mean it's not it's not even a criticism right it's just saying that
this is a very american take on belonging and being part of a group which is that you it's a
zero compromise approach right you know you know you do not change yourself or moderate yourself at all. You're a force of one. And you need to find groups that completely accept your individuality. And, you know, that's not a bad or a good thing. That's the interesting thing about cultural values. They're just, you know, they're just different.
heard Matt the question about who you are right and that this is the in some sense this is the most important question that exists on the earth and like I I I you know
I get why people I know you know everybody wants everyone's thinking about themselves and their
place in the universe and you know what kind of person they are.
And these things are like,
I get why that's interesting,
but at the same time,
I also feel like how much time can you spend just so fixated on your unique
self and how you,
what kind of beautiful butterfly you're
transforming into through the various stages of your life.
Is there that much of a puzzle?
I'm like, given that I'll just give an alternative take.
So this is the interviewer asking her about who she is.
And this is what she said.
We heard the start of it there.
What makes you complicated?
I don't know if I'm complicated, but i'm complex um you're interesting i hope so very interesting i think what makes me complex
is i think what makes everyone complex is the paradoxical nature of people so you know like
i speak in public i love doing that but i'm incredibly introverted
um i'm kind of a traditionalist around things my kids say yes ma'am no ma'am but i also raise
them to challenge authority every time they get the opportunity to do that but to be really polite
when they're doing it yeah so i think i'm um i'm unapologetically earnest. I believe in the goodness of people,
but I believe it's hard work to stay out of fear and stay good. And so
I think I understand people. I think I have a lot of empathy, but I'm also not afraid of discomfort.
So I think there's just a lot of push and pull.
Sure.
And I think that's true of all of us.
I do not like to be defined.
I think that's true.
Do you?
I was going to say, I feel like my entire life, I didn't want to be defined as well.
There's this thing called Barnum statements.
Sorry, I was just laughing at the expression on your face as you were listening to that.
Yes, Barnum statements.
Horoscopes. You know, sometimes you like going to parties you're introverted but sometimes you like being around people and you're a private person but sometimes you want to talk about how you feel
as she said everyone thinks that yeah i'm literally wrapped inside an enigma
but the thing is that she's kind of saying it's not special to feel like that
because everyone feels like that.
But I'm not sure she's really taking the lesson of that,
which is that sense, in a way, it doesn't tell you very much
because everyone has a mixture of values and feelings and so on.
And so, again, the parsing of I'm not complicated, I'm complex.
I'm not a sense maker.
I'm a maker of sense.
Yeah.
This is, again, this is the cultural difference, right?
Cynical bastards like you and me, people describing themselves as this rich tapestry, as this person who's in a process
of transformation into a beautiful butterfly.
And it's just got so many fascinating layers for people to delve into and explore that
can be revealed to the world.
That's super self-helpy.
And for many people, it helps them feel positively about themselves.
But I think for guys like us, I feel like I have good self-confidence, but I just don't
think I'm special in any of those ways.
I could point to a bunch of people that are pretty much a copy of, and I don't feel like
I need to have all of that story, all of that background in order to feel okay.
Yeah, Matt.
So there's two clips
that I want to play related to this.
One of them is, it is reiterating a point,
so I'll make it briefly,
but let me play the clip
because I think it speaks to this exact point.
Yeah, you start to lose yourself.
You start to lose yourself, exactly what you said.
And so I think it's hard.
You have to show up as who you are.
How do we find out who we are? That's the life's work, right? That's's hard. You have to show up as who you are. How do we find out who we are?
That's the life's work, right?
That's freaking hard.
Do you know who you are?
Yeah, I do.
Who are you?
In what way?
If someone just said, who are you, Brene, what would you say?
Brene Brown.
name what would you say uh renee brown mom partner researcher storyteller texan i don't know i ask them how much time they have because you know the thing is that we want to
when we ask people who they are we want to know we'd like those really easy files to put them in
but i'm a complicated person are you yeah
and so i think i know who i am it's just that but i just imagine meeting someone and saying
well who are you like i would never ask someone up but just say i didn't like how much time do
you have five i've got 30 seconds you've got 30 seconds before i lose interest
i'm just gonna say before i was just going to say before,
I was just thinking about how this focus on self-growth.
I don't want to.
I don't really care about that.
I think I'm good enough.
Chris, Chris, look, I pay my taxes.
My kids are fed.
I'm not committing any crimes.
I donate to a couple of charities.
That's enough.
That's enough.
I just want to have a good time.
I want to have fun.
Is it, Matt?
That's that.
Let's talk to your wife.
No, yeah, I get the point.
And, you know, look, we are completely aware.
I want to just flag this up for everyone that's listening
and Americans who might be getting frustrated.
We are very aware that this is like us butting up against our insecurities or
our cultural backgrounds or whatever the case may be, but one, this is your
fault for telling us to do this content.
I think that's important to just make it clear that, you know, maybe we're wrong.
Maybe we're being defensive in some respect to it.
But also, maybe there is not a one-size-fits-all for these kind of topics and that there are
things that different cultural values, different personality types, that there's value to be
taken from the content, but you don't have to buy into all of it.
You don't have to make your personal self-transformation,
your life's work, your Michelangelo painting.
We all do that anyway.
We don't have to make it our central narrative.
Yeah.
We all have autobiographies and we derive meaning from them.
I don't know if there's an unfair comparison,
but it's Jordan Peterson Peterson in a way, not reading this kind of importance to your identity and meaning. And I
really get how that is important to people who are a bit lost or the people who are struggling
to find themselves, especially like when you go through adolescence or you're having a difficult time.
Like I get it and I get why that's helpful.
I'm sure I could listen to this material, various self-help material and gain benefit from it.
But yeah, but I guess there's a but.
I mean, there's a big but, but yeah, yeah.
Look, I'm going to say something similar, which is like with reference again to Liam
Bright, who I mentioned before, he's a logical positivist and logical positivists have this
idea of verifiable statements, statements that can somehow be checked and verified logically
and empirically and seem to be true or not.
And self-help is stuff like Brene Brown is not that. It's like the stories we weave and the stories we tell about ourselves in order to sort of construct a kind of meaning around our lives and give it a kind of a direction and a flavor and a narrative. So that's fine. But I guess what you're saying is that other options are available.
You could make a different story.
Brene Brown's is nice.
I don't have a problem with it.
And I can see it being very helpful to some people. But it is, to a large degree, an anthem of American values, the American narrative of
being a good and wonderful and worthwhile person.
There's nothing in this which challenges self-help,
spirituality, wellness industry.
This fits right in there.
There'd be no issue with Brené Brown talking to lots of the kind of
spirituality gurus that we would look at,
René Paltrow or this kind of thing,
because it nestles into there quite nicely.
And I will also say, Matt, that you mentioned that you, you know, you're not that special
and you're a dime a dozen psychologist, Australian.
You're not that unusual.
And except for my character flaws, I would say I'm the same, you know, like the character
flaws might be more extreme than for some other people, but in other respects, you can find plenty of me in Northern Ireland, just go to the local
bar, to the corner, throw a rock, you hit a belt.
Yeah, misanthropic bearded man in the corner.
But that is not the way that Brené and the people that she's speaking to see
themselves and there's an
illustration of it here. I'm always looking for, I don't know about you, but I'm always looking for
the roadmap. Like I want to find the researcher, storyteller, Christian, lover of all people,
fighter of the resistance. I want to find the blueprint of who's ahead of me believing what I believe in and doing it really well.
But there's not really a blueprint sometimes.
We're all trying to figure it out.
Yeah.
We're all trying to figure it out.
I don't get to copy anybody.
And so it's hard.
Yeah.
It's still hard.
But here's a thing that has changed everything for me.
I belong to me
so even when i feel alone and i wonder like who's my crew and who are my people um
i belong to me for sure for the first time in my life maybe yeah it's she does a lot of work
with that belonging idea hey and you think you can belong to yourself, then that's, that completes the circle really, doesn't it?
Yeah.
The snake is eating itself, but it's the thing that they mentioned that
you look for figures to idolize, but then the indication is that there's
nobody that's quite blazed the path that she wants to walk on, which I'm not so
sure that's the, the the case for public inspirational speakers.
I also think there's value.
I don't want to sound too negative because the notion that feeling secure in yourself
and accepting yourself for whoever you are, that gives you a strength that then you can
forge out and be parts of groups, but you don't use that to define your worth.
That's a valid, valuable thing for people to realize.
It's hard to put into practice.
There's value in what she's saying, but despite the lip service paid to not fitting in and
being okay by yourself and so on, there's still a lot of focus on finding your crew
and the groups and how you'll be successful and stuff and there's
there's talk about failure and the importance of failure but the people at ted conferences
are the successes right and they're the people who are writing books about how to do well and stuff there. There.
It's, it's like a prosperity gospel.
No, no.
I think I know what you're saying, which is it's a bit like a prosperity gospel type of thing, you know, or the secret where you believe it and it'll happen sort of thing.
And the people saying that kind of thing are the people who have succeeded and say, you
can be like me, right?
This is very much like the people who they could be selling you secrets to invest on
the stock market or whatever.
I do want to give her credit for one point because she does say when she's talking at
the TED conference, she kind of highlights that, that the people who are successful there
are people with a litany of failures.
So that being aware of that
and not seeing them as just these hyper-successful people,
it can be useful, it can be humanizing
because you can recognize that their success
is built on the back of risks and failures.
I'll play the clip just so you can hear her say it.
You know what the big secret about TED is?
I can't wait to tell people this.
I guess I'm doing it right now.
This is like the failure conference. You know why this place is amazing?
Because very few people here are afraid to fail.
And no one that gets on the stage so far that I've seen has not failed.
and no one that gets on the stage so far that I've seen has not failed.
I have failed miserably many times.
I don't think the world understands that because of shame.
Yeah.
I think I could be being a bit uncharitable too.
Yeah.
I just like a tightrope to walk, right?
Yeah. Look, I think I'm struggling to say much about Brene
because I'd like to have an inspirational speaker who, who really still is a failure.
I could talk to her about how to deal with that.
There's some anti-comedy that does that kind of thing, you know, comedians who talk about how terrible they are at being comedians, but it's sometimes funny and sometimes incredibly self-indulgent. Look, I think I'm struggling to say much about Brene
because the advice is consistent with most of the stuff we know
about what makes for healthy psychology.
But at the same time, it also feels like a huge procession
of inspirational quote memes.
It's like they're not wrong.
They're not bad,
but it's hard to find for me much to get my teeth into.
Yeah, I did have that sense
at various times
that there's a lot of pausing
for dramatic effect
after an inspirational comment.
And there's some triteness
to the insights as well.
I think that's always a mixture in these kind of talks.
But at TED Talks, it's often framed as if this talk is extremely important and that I'm distilling for you the most fascinating thing that I've discovered in the past 18 years of laboring in the minds of research to distill this one crystal.
I'm going to give it to you and it's going to transform your life.
And it's not, it's not.
It's just a talk that's interesting to listen to for 30 minutes that you might get some
value out of.
Here, I'll give you an illustration.
I'm going to spend a year.
I'm going to totally deconstruct shame.
I'm going to understand how vulnerability works and I'm going to outsmart it.
So I was ready and I was really excited. As you know, it's not going to turn out well.
You know this. So I could tell you a lot about shame, but I'd have to borrow everyone else's
time. But here's what I can tell you that it boils down to. And this may be one of the most
important things that I've ever learned in the decade of doing this research.
And this may be one of the most important things that I've ever learned in the decade of doing this research.
It's so TED talking, isn't it?
That's a telepersonal anecdote.
If I'm going to critique my speciality, that's American style self-deprecation of, I thought it was going to change the world.
We all know how that's going to go, right?
Just subtle as a god sad sweat but we're sorry don't don't don't stop subscribe for our patreon oh god this is we love america polarized it isn't it but look okay i'm gonna
say something that i i like which i find quite americany and a specific part of america like
texas so she does a kind of folksy charm thing
where she'll make reference to her upbringing
or her traditional values.
And here's an example.
I like this one.
In surviving this last year,
I was reminded of a cardinal rule,
not a research rule,
but a moral imperative from my upbringing.
You gotta dance with the one who brung you.
And I did not learn about vulnerability and courage
and creativity and innovation from studying vulnerability.
I learned about these things from studying shame.
So she's going to talk about shame,
even though it's not a topic that people like,
because you gotta dance with the one who br brought you, I didn't do a Texas
accent, but I feel like if I do the same thing with Northern Irish aphorisms, is
that the term for them or idioms?
It probably doesn't have the same poetic quality.
Wind your neck in.
I thought wind your neck in.
That's a good example.
That's actually a good example about the cultural value, right?
Because wind your neck in means don't get over your skis or whatever the equivalent is.
And a lot of the Nicaraguan thing is about that.
Well, exactly.
Yeah, I've got a terrible memory for these sorts of things off the cuff, but I swear to God, two- of Australianisms, they're all oriented around people who take themselves too seriously and people who think
they're better than everyone else. And yeah, it illustrates the cultural values at play.
And just thinking of Robert Wright, right? And he made the important point that this is not all
American. America really is very, very diverse, but it's this sort of California morning news type
chirpy daytime television thing is kind of the dominant one.
Yeah.
I don't, I get the feeling that whatever Robert Wright's subculture is, it's not
the dominant one in the media.
It's not selling the big books and so on.
Yeah.
In terms of media coverage, probably, but just to start thinking of
counter examples, like the popularity of Curb Your Enthusiasm or that kind of thing.
Like Jewish neuroticism then and so on.
Woody Allen.
Yeah, still, it's still very much a subculture though, isn't it?
I mean, it's not.
That's right.
If you had to pick one, if you had to pick one, you'd pick this one.
That's true.
Matt, this is probably shoehorning this in this clip,
but I wanted to talk about it because we've stepped off the topic of vulnerability.
We're not going back there, but there's this one part where she's talking about
sports team that was vulnerable versus one that isn't,
and which would have the better outcome.
I find it interesting, as I'll explain.
Let's just do the sports thing.
Let's do it.
Okay, ready?
Okay.
Two football teams. You're going Let's do it. Okay. Ready? Okay. Two football teams.
You're going to place a bet.
Okay.
Both of them have hurt quarterbacks.
Both of them are playing.
Well, both of them have hurt quarterbacks.
This team over here recognizes its vulnerability.
It's going to put in a second stream quarterback.
This team ignores its vulnerability and pretends like it doesn't exist.
Who are you
betting on? Hmm. Depends on the injury. Hey, because I played her my whole life, you know.
Yeah. I would say that most of us would say you are more, you are less likely to win if you do
not acknowledge your vulnerabilities as. So even if you play your quarterback, you got to make sure
your line is ready. Exactly. And you got to switch the plays up. Right. So a if you play your quarterback, you got to make sure your line is ready.
Exactly.
And you got to switch the players up.
Right.
So funny thing is that the guy that's interviewing is like a world-class
level athlete who I believe played that.
So he was kind of like,
yeah,
you know,
that's not what he was supposed to say.
What was the track like?
So Chris,
have you seen a show called Ted Lassu?
Ted Lassu?
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. That's a good, it distills that. I know it's good. That's why I brought it up. So Chris, have you seen a show called Ted Lasso? Ted Lasso? Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, that's a good, it distills the-
I know it's good.
That's why I brought it up.
It distills it, right?
Season one is good.
And yeah, like the stuff we were talking about,
the sort of cultural differences and so on,
that's the point of this show, right?
This Ted Lasso guy, he's like her.
You know, and it's great, by the way.
I really like Ted Lasso.
And it's got this- Season one. Season one. Yeah, he's like her. You know, and it's great, by the way. I really like Ted Lasso. And it's got this uplifting.
Season one.
Yeah, it's better.
Yeah.
Uplifting tone and themes and people learning to communicate
and these sort of tough, cynical English soccer players,
English people gradually overcoming their Englishness,
which I fully support.
They should.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But yeah, that's kind of it in a nutshell yeah he overcomes them
with niceness and folksy charm but the thing that this makes me think about is i don't know if this
is me stretching because you know the quarterbacks and all that doesn't the gel i have no idea about
that american sport but what i can translate it into is Karate Kid where you
have the bully Cobra Kai
don't show weakness
kill and then you have
Daniel-san who is
just trying to get by and he's
helping the old man out and all this but
in the end even when he's injured
he's the one right that can
do it I suppose it doesn't really affect
because he fights for an injury and beats the guy no chris no chris i think i think you're underselling it's the
difference between courage and bravery you see he's been courageous it's shame and guilt that's
the difference and actually now they have a corporate guy series where they make it more
complex that like it shows the effect
the whole thing had on the bad guy.
But you know, let's not get into the lore
of the Karate Kid.
Let's try to keep our cultural references current, Chris.
Karate Kid is out of the game.
Well, not with Cobra Kai.
That's out now.
It's on Netflix, man.
But there's still a couple of points
that we didn't talk about.
There's various talks and references to the amount of research that
Brené has done to prepare for this.
And I'm not doubting that she's clearly published and spent many
years working on these topics.
But it's, you know, when someone keeps telling me how many books they've
read about climate change, or they keep referencing their evolutionary biology
expertise, my suspicion begins to increase. I want to see their data. That's the thing that begins to
percolate in my soul. So she refers to herself as a researcher storyteller. And then this
Jewel Vang where she mentions that she's mainly concerned with
qualitative data, but she also presents herself as a very empirically minded person. She just
wants to base the data and put things down. And if you can't measure something, it doesn't matter
and all this kind of thing. There was a bit where she described research and it just, I've never
thought about research like this, but listen to how she says it, Matt. I could not believe I had pledged allegiance to research
where our job, you know, the definition of research is to control and predict a study
phenomenon for the explicit reason to control and predict. And now my very, you know, my mission to
control and predict had turned up the answer that the way to live is with vulnerability and to stop controlling and predicting.
This led to a little breakdown.
So my version of research is it's about understanding what's happening.
It's about producing knowledge about a phenomenon.
Predictions, it's not necessarily knowledge about a phenomenon like predictions and it's not like necessarily
controlling phenomenon controls are important in experiments and that kind of thing predictions
are important if you want to have inferential models and all that kind of stuff but research
is a pretty broad category and it just is like an approach to understand things better have i got like a weird definition of
research oh look yeah you're right she does refer to her research and all the things she's like
during her research and so on very much in that ted talky way and here i am to show you all this
wonderful nugget i found in my time in the mines but i mean i get the sense that her main research
is in kind of, like that might give
people the impression that there's this massive program of work with all of this empirical
data and all these different studies and so on.
Just from a brief check, it seems more like a couple of qualitative theoretical kind of
papers written in social work journals.
Yeah, but she is referencing thousands of data points.
So listen to this.
My one year has turned into six years.
Thousands of stories, hundreds of long interviews,
focus groups.
At one point, people were sending me journal pages
and sending me their stories.
Thousands of pieces of data.
And six years.
And I kind of got a handle on it.
I kind of understood this is what shame is.
This is how it works.
Thousands of pieces of data.
I haven't been able to find it in Google Scholar.
Admittedly, I haven't looked super carefully.
Maybe it's there somewhere.
It would be more helpful if you had a Google Scholar page.
But I haven't seen any massive data sets.
You know, but like, it's not that surprising, right?
You do enough interviews, you do diary studies.
I mean, I get a thousand data points in almost every online survey I run with little.
But thousands of qualitative data points is a little bit more unusual.
Well, that's different.
She was referring to people sending her in their stories, which happens when you have
a public profile.
And I'm reminded of the owl guy who wrote stuff about synchronicity, where he put stuff out there
asking for people about their strange experiences with owls. And he also talked about the thousands
of data points that he had and came to the conclusion that owls were multidimensional
creatures from outer space. Yeah, or that crocodiles are cooperative hunters, as we've discussed previously.
But there's like this image, and this is something that you have to do if you give a TED talk,
to a certain extent.
I'd like to see someone who doesn't do it, but the image of the kind of low researcher.
I'd like to hear someone come to TED and say, here are some thoughts I had in the shower.
That would be refreshing.
No, I would like them to say, I work in the shower. That would be refreshing. No, I would have liked them to say,
I work in this research area.
Lots of people have done good work
and here's me synthesizing it, right?
Yeah.
My role is a cog in the machine.
That's not what people say.
And this is an illustration of it.
Here's her talking about
her kind of research process.
So I had a Manila notebook,
a Manila folder,
and I had a sharpie.
And I was like, what am I going to call this research? And the first words that came to my
mind were wholehearted. These are kind of wholehearted people living from this deep
sense of worthiness. So I wrote at the top of the manila folder. And I started looking at the data.
In fact, I did it first in a four-day, very intensive data analysis where I went back, pulled these interviews, pulled the stories, pulled the incidents.
What's the theme?
What's the pattern?
My husband left town with the kids because I always go into this kind of Jackson Pollock crazy thing where I'm just like writing and going in kind of just in my researcher mode.
It's the kind of model of, I'm not saying this does not happen.
People do go into hardcore research mode and dig into data and just blitz things for a
week or whatever.
But it's also this image of the crazy genius with the notes strewn over the room, just
putting things together and having this eureka moment where I've got it.
I know what it is that makes people connected.
And my view of research is different and it's more that people contribute pieces
to a research program, which is cumulative over time and which relies on insight,
but it isn't that each person is generating or they shouldn't
need to generate an entire new theoretical system, but people do like to do that.
But I think it's an unfortunate aspect and it's not reflective really of how a lot of
actual research and science functions.
It is reflective of how people become popular and give TED talks and get on talk shows
though it is yeah so it relates to that guru quality of having these revolutionary theories
and I think a lot of her stuff is fine and good but to the extent that it is fine and good it's
congruent with stuff that is very well known and it seems to be packaged up in the self-help mold.
There's nothing wrong with that,
which makes it more about inspirational quotes.
But I haven't seen any evidence of it being a revolutionary theory.
I mean, looking at the papers, there is a lot of theory there.
There's a spider web in this one here,
which has these two dimensions.
One dimension is who you should be.
And the other dimension is what you should be.
And there's all these things, friends and magazines and media and stuff scattered around
it.
That's what some people describe as theory.
It's a chaos dragon.
It's a chaos dragon.
Yeah.
I mean, and if you look at most of the prose, there's heaps of citations to all of this
stuff and it's fine.
But to the extent that there's new stuff, they talk about various continuums,
like the vulnerability continuum and the reaching out continuum. It's very much written in the mold
of critical cultural sociology. We are showing our academic biases here in terms of the kind
of research that we like. But a point that I would emphasize, like the chaos dragon is demonstrable about this, is that people
see the problems when these interpretive frameworks are woven by people who they disagree with or find
that they think might be having a negative effect, like Jordan Peterson. So when he does these
diagrams about dragons and metamiphs and so on, people mock them as what's this supposed to mean.
But when it's more in a kind of self-help-y frame and more about reaching out and vulnerability
and shame and so on, I think people are more willing to tolerate web-style diagrams or
that kind of thing.
I'm not drawing that there's an exact parallel because I still think if somebody spends 12 years on the topic or 10 years or something, it's worth listening to them, especially social workers or counselors, right?
But that's also Jordan Peterson.
He had a clinical practice.
He counseled people and he draws a lot of his narratives, the legitimacy of them from his experiences. So if you're going to allow that in as that's valid, then people can construct
large theoretical models from that.
I don't see how you can quality control that well, because what's the test?
Yeah, I agree with you.
I think if you're going to have a go at Jordan Peterson for being abstruse, then you have
to apply the same standards here.
To take just a random paragraph from one of Brene's papers, the concepts of critical
awareness, deconstructing, normalizing, and contextualizing as processes to facilitate
connection, power, and empathy are central themes that empower theory, critical feminist
social work practice, and critical pedagogy.
Like SRT, these, I don't know what that is, these theories emphasize the need to increase personal
power by understanding the link between personal experiences and social cultural systems. Now look,
that's a bit unfair because it's just an isolated quote taken out of a technical academic paper,
but that gives you a sense of the kind of language that you're talking about. This is framed within that kind of literature where it's kind of okay to be pretty abstruse.
Whereas we've criticized Jordan Peterson for really being hard to pass and too abstract.
Obscurantist.
Obscurantist.
And I, you know, I like the same criticism here.
But I also recognize that's my taste, our tastes.
I don't generally like this kind of social constructivist, heavy going
discursive academic literature.
Some people do.
Hmm.
Yeah.
I don't know what else I can kind of, there's, there's other clips that I've got that illustrate various things, but I feel that they're all getting
a similar point.
And, you know, we've already highlighted it repeatedly.
So I'm just going to like emphasize it one last time is that I don't think that there's
no value to what she's saying.
And I do think that to some extent, the response that we might have might be due to our own baggage about things and preferences about research and that kind of cultural stuff as well.
But there still are various guru type stuff that's in use.
And I basically, I don't want to dismiss everything out of hand but I just want to say
it's not really for me so yeah it's not my style of thing well Chris I'd like to just read you out
some inspirational quotes here's one it's just randomly from a google image search the way I
see it if you want the rainbow you gotta put got to put up with the rain. Out of the mountain, there's another quote, out of the mountain of despair, a stone of
hope.
Success is not final.
Failure is not fatal.
It is the courage to continue that counts.
If you've accepted your flaws, no one can use them against you.
This sounds kind of familiar, doesn't it?
Compared to what we've just been talking about.
I don't have a problem with any of those inspirational quotes.
There's nothing, you know, I think many people could read that, those quotes and get something
from them.
And I guess I feel the same way about pretty much all self-help, not even Brene Brown in
particular.
And I agree with you.
I'm not saying there's no value in this.
And I didn't even say there was no value in Jordan Peterson.
I think if some people need to hear these messages to help them with their lives.
And there's nothing wrong with being culturally localized to the United States.
I mean, she's American.
It's okay for her to be American.
So that's not a criticism either.
Yeah.
So, you know, I think we're in a grumpy mood.
We're in a grumpy mood.
I mean, Brenna, she seems nice as well.
She does. She does.
She does.
And it's probably, it's unfortunate timing to be in a grumpy mood with material.
It's going to rub you the wrong way, but isn't fundamentally that bad.
I think she is just unfortunate.
Chris, Chris, if you want to succeed, focus on changing yourself, not others.
Yeah, shut up shut up um so hold on i'm gonna i'm gonna try to change the energy i'm gonna talk about a couple of clips
that i thought were good these are my positive points about what she was talking about just two
examples so one this is her talking about when she was talking about. Just two examples.
So one, this is her talking about when she was asked about, you know, she talked about
her upbringing and issues that she had and so on.
And then she was talking about people doing what they're doing wrong with raising kids
and stuff.
But then she said this.
I know you did something on that this morning.
So I guess how can parents listen
to this and be aware and be willing to move forward in a different way of learning something
new when they're so stuck on their ways potentially that it's worked for them to this point to get to
where they're at you know I think I believe this with my my whole heart I believe that 99.9% of parents are truly waking up every day and doing
the very best they can with what they have. I don't think there are a lot of parents who wake up
and maliciously try to screw up their kids or hurt their kids or belittle or shame their kids.
I think we're doing the best we can with what we have. And so I think to let go of the idea that
if I have done something that I could
have done better or that I could learn from. Yeah. So you get the idea. I like that because
it was a message that we've probably been emphasizing on this, that people are right
and not everything is going to go right and so on, but not everyone can do all the stuff. And
fundamentally people are trying to do what's right.
And I appreciated that sentiment being expressed on that kind of self-help thing.
Just telling people, and she does do this in her content.
I think this is to her credit, is to say, you know, you're all right.
People are all right and you can do things better, but don't be so hard on yourself.
And I think that's a nice message.
Chris, there's no such thing as a perfect parent.
So just be a real one.
And also, parenting isn't a practice.
It's a daily learning experience.
Where are you getting all these insights from?
This is my point.
This is my point.
You could do a Google image search for inspirational quotes and type in parenting and you'll get exactly the same thing. So look,
I liked that too. You know, that's a good sentiment and it's a good thing and a positive
thing to say to parents. But I felt the same way about pretty much everything she said.
All of it was not a bad thing to say. They were all positive messages that probably really couldn't
do any harm and may well help
people and make them feel better so yeah i'm agreeing with you i'm just i'm just laboring
this point i suppose that yeah it's all the same and she did show you know she mentioned her
weaknesses and stuff a couple of times and she was asked about her kids, she did say this. And so I think for parents, it's about understanding,
giving yourself permission to not have it. I'm not perfect. Like, you know, like I've never not
been a researcher and a parent. My husband's a pediatrician. Our kids will be in therapy.
And the reason why I think that'll be so successful is there's only two kinds of kids
you raise. Kids who will ask for help when they need it, or kids who won't.
And that's as good as it gets, is to raise a kid who will ask for help.
I like the notion that her kids will definitely be in therapy because of her, like her and her partner's jobs or lifestyle.
So that's self-awareness, right?
That's nice.
Yeah, yeah.
Look, and I'll stop being a cynical bastard, and you almost don't need to play quotes to illustrate my point, because I find it really likable. She seems very nice. Yeah, yeah. Look, and I'll stop being a cynical bastard. You almost don't need to play quotes to illustrate my point
because I find it really likable.
She seems very nice.
I like the folksy charm.
I like the Texan vibe.
We're kind of contrasting American culture with the cultures we're from.
But I like American culture.
I like the positivity.
I like the lack of passive aggression.
Yeah.
I just don't want to present it as the model that we should all aspire to follow.
Because you can't. Because you can't.
Yeah, because I can't. And I don't think it's necessarily the one size fits all model for all people in the world.
You have to walk your own path you have to walk your own path chris
you know there's no one that can follow matt there's no one that can tell me there's no one
doing what i do no no yeah i guess part of my issue is in the people that we look at week in
and week out the problem is not that they don't have enough self-belief and that they don't have enough
confidence in their own brilliance and willingness to ignore their flaws. They have the exact
opposite. And you just had an American leader who was the embodiment of narcissism. So whenever I
hear people saying, you know, it would be good if people had more confidence, if they focused a bit more on themselves.
I'm inclined to say, maybe not.
Maybe you're okay.
Maybe we don't need everyone to think of themselves as the most important beings in the universe, because we've had a lot of trouble with that in the world recently.
So that's my only, now that's the pushback, I guess.
Yeah, look, it is hard to articulate my pushback too, but I'll have a go.
One of these inspirational bits of advice that is very common and someone like Brene
Brown would definitely agree with is that good advice to children is to follow your
dreams.
Don't pay attention to the haters or the people that are saying that you're on the right track,
but to have that dream because there's one real thing for you and you need to figure out what
that thing is and then you need to do it. Now that can be positive advice, but as a very practical
matter, there's a lot of people out there, young people, for instance, who have decided that their
dream is to be a journalist or their dream
is to be an architect. And it can sometimes be bad advice, say, to keep barreling on with that
without paying attention to the pragmatics of the world and what the world is actually
needing right now. And maybe the world needs, I don't know, statisticians, for instance.
That's not the kind of thing that a young person is going to sort of immediately spring
to.
But the vast majority of people who are successful are often the ones who identify what's needed,
where the sort of gap is, where the demand is, rather than looking inwards and following
their dream.
Now, I may well be wrong about that.
You know, I'm sure you could think of hundreds of examples either way.
But my point is, is that the inspirational advice isn't always a hundred percent right, it might actually
sound good, but actually might not always be the best advice, maybe the best advice
is a bit more messy sometimes, a bit more complicated.
Yeah.
I think that's a nice summary note to end on with Brené.
She's definitely guru stock.
We sometimes look just at whether
we regard people as being
harmful or not overall.
I would say in my assessment
she isn't. She's more at the
Rutger Bregman side of the pool
when it comes to gurus and that.
And yeah, and I apologize
for the grumpy, snarky,
annoying Australian and Northern Irish, emotionally unavailable men have allowed our grumpiness to infect our analysis, but we're all trying. of ourselves and I accept me for who I am.
I belong.
So I don't need to try because I'm a tribe of one.
I'm a tribe of one.
You might need, you might look at it off and say this, but you might,
you might need to grow a little bit.
Uh, I did not just use specifically. Yeah. Uh, I did. No, no, no. Not that. Just you specifically.
Yeah.
Maybe,
maybe.
But,
uh,
yeah.
So that's,
that's Brene.
Done.
Decoded.
Sense mirrored.
We've done our duty.
Thank you,
Brene.
It was,
it was nice.
It was nice to spend some time with Brene.
It was,
it was pleasant.
It wasn't the least bit awful.
So good on you, Brené.
No, definitely.
Keep it up.
Compared to many of the previous weeks and for coming weeks,
it was a breath of fresh air.
So it's not her fault.
It's not her fault we are the people we are.
No, no.
Well, Matt, so now we've done that, we're going to move to the little segment we like to call
the review of reviews
i just love to hear you say that good hit me with it a good one or a bad one to start
good one it's quite a long one so i'll try to make the bad one shorter because, you know,
we got to revel in the good one, but I enjoyed this. So I'll take you on the enjoyment ride.
And the title is The Frill and Terror of Jurassic Park, but instead of dinosaurs,
it's Eric Weinstein. And this is by Lavelle in Australia, Matt, at that.
Nice.
Or Lavelle.
Anyway, academia can be a brutal and hyper-competitive environment
where those that succeed are often characterized
by senseless overworking and impressive metrics
rather than the ability to produce original, meaningful, and robust research.
Even when such research is produced,
any benefit to humanity is frequently undone by public figures wanting to make a quick buck.
As a graduate research student, this realization has crushed the naive vision of scientific research I once had, and the motivation to pursue an academic career has been severely lacking.
Isn't that depressing, Matt? It's depressing up till now.
Yeah, it's tough out there.
Yeah, let's see what the change is.
What brought the change though?
However, this has all changed
after becoming a regular listener
of the Coding the Gurus,
where two academics
entertainingly dismantled
the rhetorical devices
and Twitter habits
of Eric Weinstein
and on occasion,
other public figures. This has been hugely inspiring and has reinvigorated my enthusiasm
to pursue a career in scientific research. I now see that my previous dreams of prying open the
fundamental rules of the natural world to further noble causes, such as the curing of deadly
diseases, are simply distractions from the true reward of a successful academic career.
Run in your own niche podcast where you get to talk to Sam Harris about tribalism for three hours.
Is that it? Is that it? That's it. That's it.
Well, that's great. I mean, this is what we do.
We inspire people.
It's not about changing the world.
It's not about having revolutionary theories.
It's about keeping your head down and grinding, grinding away, getting those metrics up.
And eventually you too can have your own podcast.
That's right.
And engage with Sam Harris.
He's agreed to that if you do it.
So just contact the Pizarro.
He'll arrange it for you.
So the next one, but this is another five-star review.
I'm sorry.
They're all five-star reviews this week because that's all I've got available.
But there are two criticisms buried in the wall of Prius that will chisel out and explain why they're wrong.
So this is five stars by Your Basic Melissa,
and it's called Finding This Podcast.
I didn't know how much I needed a podcast analyzing contemporary voices
who claimed they've cracked the code of life until I found it.
Listening to it is like medicine.
I love Chris and Matt's chemistry.
Listening to their podcast on Jordan Peterson was like getting a full body massage in my
head.
Yeah, it's quite an image.
I deeply appreciate the insight they have given me into Brett and Heller Weinstein,
but I wonder why they are incapable of acknowledging that people
admire Brett because he stood up to political correctness mania and paid the
price, and I wonder why they don't recognize that Jordan Peterson has gotten
a lot of disaffected young men to clean their rooms and redefine self-respect.
But mainly I am grateful for the disciplined pursuit of honesty.
That's so good. That's great. And you know, that's, I'm pursuit of honesty. That's so good.
You know, I'm not taking that.
That's a very positive review.
It's very nice.
So thank you very much, you basic Melissa.
But there's two points in the middle there that stand out, right?
It was actually an admirable exemplar of a shit sandwich.
That was well done.
And it made me particularly receptive to the criticisms.
But you go first.
Yes. sandwich that was well done and it made me particularly receptive to the criticisms but you go first yes well all i was going to say is that i do think we're capable of acknowledging that and i thought we had that jordan peterson has helped a bunch of people and the self-help
work lots of people find it meaningful and similarly with brett part of the reason he's infamous is because of how the Evergreen
students presented next to him in the various viral clips that went around.
And you can talk about the extent to which he has over-exaggerated that situation, but
it's fair to say that he has the public profile he does because he's regarded as having took
a principled stand against
wokeness run amok.
Yeah.
So we acknowledge that you're basically Melissa.
Uh, you're right.
That's why people at least initially were interested in them.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Thank you, Melissa.
First of all, for putting that criticism within the five star review, that's
critical, critical, that's important.
Yeah.
It's important.
And it's a very nice praise there too.
But yeah, no, look.
I feel what we did.
But I appreciate in a very long podcast, some of those things can get lost amidst all of
the criticisms.
But I definitely do, like we said as much in this Brene Brown episode as well, that
Jordan Peterson's self-help is fine in the same way.
And there are some people who need to hear those
sorts of messages and it can be beneficial to people. With regard to Brett and Heather at
Evergreen, look, as far as I could tell, it did seem pretty crazy, the antics of the students
there at Evergreen. And they were probably hard done by in some regards. It's unclear to what degree their responses or behavior might have been less than ideal
and make no judgment of it.
I just make the point though, that like having sympathy for that kind of backstory doesn't
really accredit someone for any of their theories or takes or opinions going afterwards.
If I, for instance, was, you know,
unfairly dumbed by my university,
maybe expelled from academia,
I might well get a whole bunch of sympathy and support
and a raised public profile.
It wouldn't make any of my positions
any more or any less coherent
or interesting or admirable.
And so I think there are orthogonal things.
But yeah, just saying we agree essentially
with those two points,
though it may have been lost in the details.
Yeah.
So thanks for the feedback, everyone.
That's our review of reviews, good reviews this week.
Nobody said anything that annoying.
We got off lightly.
I just, I'm still enjoying imagining Eric Weinstein as a dinosaur.
Tyrannosaurus rex walking the earth and.
Yes, that's it.
That is an image.
That is an image.
That will be hard to not think about.
But the next thing we got to do, do Matt is give a shout out to our
patrons, lovely, lovely patrons who we've been scouring with content recently.
And I've got a bunch of people to shout out this time.
So I'm going to, I'm going to do it.
We're otherwise we'll never get through every quarter.
So we, you know, just, just, just bear with us.
So here's the conspiracy hypothesizers for this week.
We have Polly D'Arton, Milan Nigam, Rob W, Giovanni Dassa, Jake,
Tristan Follensby, Sharon, Mark McElman, and Matthew Hatfield.
And now Matt, if you could just repeat all of those names and give any comments about all of them, please.
That would be good.
Okay.
Well, thank you to Polly.
That's a pretty name.
Millen.
Millen.
Rob.
Giovanni.
It's a lovely sounding name.
Jake.
It's a bit, you know, it's a bit boring, but it's okay.
Christian. I don't know if you're a real Christian or if that's lovely sounding name. Jake. It's a bit, you know, it's a bit, bit, bit boring, but it's okay. Uh, Christian.
Um, I don't know if you're a real Christian or if that's just your name.
Either way is fine.
Sharon.
That's a good Australian name.
Good on you, Sharon.
Uh, Mark.
Yeah, Mark.
It's fine.
You know, that's what you can say about that.
Not good.
Not bad.
Uh, and Matthew, which is the best name of the bunch.
How's that?
Hi, did you, hi, did you write those down?
I've got this, you know, eidetic memory.
It's amazing.
I'm like a machine.
Yeah.
I'll just, no, I wrote them down.
I wrote them down.
I wanted to let everyone know that every one of those people that give us lovely, lovely
money is special to me, each in their own unique way.
Well, except for Tristan Follensby, who you referred to as Christian
and made a pun about Christianity.
So sorry, Tristan.
Sorry if you'd listened a bit better.
You might have had something more relevant to say.
You were going very quickly.
Well, they are conspiracy hypothesizers.
So thank you very much.
Thank you.
Every great idea starts with a minority of one.
We are not going to advance conspiracy theories.
We will advance conspiracy hypotheses.
Next we have our revolutionary geniuses.
And for this week, we have Adam G., Amber Rose, Alex Gillette,
Adam G, Amber Rose, Alex Gillette, and Juha Vitamaki.
Oh dear.
Yes, I didn't do that well, but I think it's a Finnish name, maybe.
Juha Vitamaki.
It's not how Finnish people talk.
I lived with Finnish people.
So there you go, Matt.
Those are lovely revolutionary geniuses.
Thank you to all of them.
Thank you to Adam, Alex, and the fourth one.
Yeah.
Thank you, fourth one.
Maybe you can spit out that hydrogenated thinking and let yourself feed off of your own thinking.
What you really are is an unbelievable thinker and researcher, a thinker that the world doesn't know.
Last month, the shining beacons in the guru sky, the galaxy brain gurus.
Not better or worse than the others, but definitely more special.
Yeah.
So we have some people we've met in the monthly hangouts.
We have lay Kilgore, Patrick Collins, a good Irish sounding name.
There some guy called Tim Nguyen.
Hmm.
It's a two rings a bell, rings a bell.
Itty bitty balls.
I think.
And, uh, Ian Steinberg.
I also to add that Tim has written an article recently debunking some of Eric's claims and it was very good.
So I'll add it to the show notes, but thank you, Tim, Ian, Patrick and Leigh.
Yes.
Thank you very much.
And hi to Tim.
If you're listening, just read an article about you and it was, it was good.
By the way, I just want to say Leigh Kilgore, I like that name, Kilgore.
And I, I couldn't remember why.
And I realized it's, it's the name of a character, Kilgore Trout, which is a
fictional character by Kurt Vonnegut, which
I thought you were going to say it's a like type of fish, a fictional fish.
Kilgore Trout.
But, uh, well, that's a, there you go.
So lucky lei.
So thank you all.
Thank you all.
Your galaxy brain gurus.
What else can I say except.
You're sitting on one of the great scientific stories that I've ever heard,
and you're so polite.
And hey, wait a minute. Am I an expert? Kind of am.
Yeah.
I don't trust people at all.
There was someone asking that I don't play the clips,
and I was thinking, you
know what, you can skip this section.
We got little bookmarks and you know, we make the podcast.
You just push the button.
All right.
Exercise your free will.
We don't live in Sam Harris's deterministic universe in this podcast.
We have to now.
Precedents have been set. It's now
a DTG tradition.
I love Patrick Collins' name. That's great.
That's the guy that needs to be
leading a kind of revolution.
An Irish rebellion.
What was the real name of Collins?
Michael Collins.
Patrick Collins sounds better.
Don't be so stereotypical, Matt.
How dare you? We're not all terrorists and revolutionaries, except in the mind.
That's all right.
You know, I'm just going on the small amount of popular media that involves you guys.
That's the limit of my knowledge.
Stereotypocracy, in effect.
So, okay.
That's us for this week. We'll try to be more chipper when we approach our next guru,
who will definitely not be annoying at all,
because we're looking at one Joseph Rogan.
Oh my God, I'd forgotten about that.
Did we agree about that, Chris?
We did, because he's a self-help guru.
He's part of our's a self-help guy. He's a,
he's part of our season
of self-help.
He's,
he's a self-help guy?
I don't even know that.
I mean,
he is,
he might not say he is
and other people
might not refer to him
as that,
but he is.
Fair enough.
All right.
Joe,
we're coming for you,
man.
Yeah.
Ugh,
get your baldy head ready.
So we'll
take care of him and I'm sure it'll
be a joy, a joy to listen
to his like four hour content.
So the things we do,
the things we do for you, but we
do have various places that you can
follow us should you be so inclined
and we've mentioned the Patreon
just now.
You can join that.
There's extra content on there and.
And there's going to be a lot more too.
There's heaps of great things envisaged for that.
It's going to be more research goodness, interesting academic stuff this time for
me, and it's going to be, you know, I could do a lot of garometers journal club stuff
where we talk about like interesting articles.
So it'll be enlightening,
elucidating,
invigorating,
and inspiring.
And for every Patreon,
Matt's going to do
a 30-minute private consultation
about any topic
of your choice.
Yeah, that's that.
So just contact Matt.
You'll find his email.
Just, you know, look around.
But the email for the podcast is thecodingthegurusatgmail.com,
which we periodically check and sometimes respond to.
I do eventually respond to everything.
It just takes time.
And then we have the Guru's Pod account on Twitter.
We are on Instagram.
And we're also on Facebook.
So there's various options available and you can find us individually on Twitter
at r4cdent and C underscore Kavanagh.
That's all our social media business.
If you're a Redditor, you could go to r slash decoding the gurus.
Or the discord or the discord. Or the discord.
How can we forget the discorder, people?
I know.
These are both unofficial, very unofficial,
not sanctioned, not condoned.
We do not.
Rampant with racism and the various.
Yeah, bigotry.
So, yeah, just be careful.
Be careful out there, guys.
Well, what was I going to say?
It was something fascinating, was it?
Well, we'll just have to wait until next episode
to find out what that morsel was.
And, yeah, Matt, this is fun.
So, you know, go...
What?
Worship at the beginning of your morsel lesson.
All right.
Okay.
All right.
See you later, Chris.
Go do something productive Thank you.