Good Life Project - Dr. Brené Brown | What If You Dared to Be You? [Best of]
Episode Date: August 14, 2023Discover the transformative power of vulnerability and courage in this eye-opening episode with Dr. Brené Brown, renowned researcher, storyteller, and author of six #1 New York Times bestsellers. Our... riveting conversation explores profound questions that can redefine your life and relationships:🌟 Daring to be Open: How does embracing our flaws and humanity unlock the life we desire?💪 Courage over Comfort: What doors can courage open that you never imagined?🧠 Understanding Vulnerability: With 60 million views, Brené's TED Talk on vulnerability has inspired many. Why is it so powerful?😢 Emotionally Stirring Dialogue: A conversation that moved both of us to tears and will likely inspire you as well.🌎 Relevance in Current Climate: The wisdom in this Best Of episode resonates even more today.Brené's relatable storytelling and insights on empathy, resilience, and living a "wholehearted life" will leave you profoundly changed. This isn't just an episode; it's an invitation to a life where owning our stories means owning our lives. Listen in and dare to be real, open, and seen.You can find Brené at: Website | Instagram | Episode TranscriptIf you LOVED this episode you’ll also love the conversations we had with Elizabeth Gilbert about bringing your whole self to your life. Check out our offerings & partners: My New Book SparkedMy New Podcast SPARKED. To submit your “moment & question” for consideration to be on the show go to sparketype.com/submit. Visit Our Sponsor Page For Great Resources & Discount Codes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The greatest pain I've ever seen in my work is from people who have spent their lives
on the outside of the arena, wondering what would have happened had I shown up.
So what if daring to be open and real unlock not just your greatest potential, but also
pretty much everything good in every relationship or experience you could ever have?
What if the thing that so many of us fear most, that others will discover how flawed and human and real we
are, is actually the gateway to the life we so desperately want to live? And what if choosing
courage over comfort opened the doors to a world and a life you never imagined? These are just some
of the questions that I dive into with Brene Brown. So Brene has spent the last two decades studying the transformational power of vulnerability.
Author of six number one New York Times bestsellers, Brene's really inspiring research on courage,
worthiness, and shame has enlightened millions worldwide.
And a research professor at University of Houston, she's a leading voice on topics like
empathy, resilience,
and living a wholehearted life. Her groundbreaking TED Talk on the power of vulnerability has now been viewed over 60 million times. And I really love Brene's ability to translate complicated
academic concepts into just accessible language and stories. And speaking of stories, she is a
deeply compelling storyteller who will draw you in, then open your heart in no small part by sharing hers with you first. In fact, the conversation
that unfolded between us moved both of us to tears at various points. Brene was so beautifully
real, raw, candid, and wise. And as a best of episode, every part of this conversation is as
relevant today, maybe more so given the current climate than it was the day
we talked. As Brene notes, there is incredible power in the willingness to be seen in owning
our stories, we can own our lives. A willingness to face uncertainty, vulnerability, and emotional
exposure together is what allows communities to truly connect. So listen in as Brene and I explore
the courage and compassion that emerge
when we dare to be open, real, and seen. The conversation that unfolded really did leave me
changed, and perhaps it will inspire you to pursue an idea you've kept to yourself for too long.
So excited to share this best of conversation with you.
I'm Jonathan Fields, and this is Good Life Project. you're running, swimming, or sleeping. And it's the fastest-charging Apple Watch, getting you eight hours of charge in just 15 minutes.
The Apple Watch Series X.
Available for the first time in glossy jet black aluminum.
Compared to previous generations, iPhone Xs are later required.
Charge time and actual results will vary.
Mayday, mayday. We've been compromised.
The pilot's a hitman.
I knew you were gonna be fun.
January 24th. Tell me how to gonna be fun. January 24th.
Tell me how to fly this thing.
Mark Wahlberg.
You know what the difference between me and you is?
You're gonna die.
Don't shoot him, we need him!
Y'all need a pilot?
Flight Risk.
I want to go through a whole bunch of different things with you,
and I want to get into the current sort of like topic that you're exploring,
but one of my fascinations with you, you present so like, when I first saw your TED
talks, I was blown away, as were millions and billions of people present as this radiant,
wise, snarky, funny presence. And I'm always curious when I see that somebody, somebody who's
so strong and so powerful and so full of life. Is this something that you sort of like,
stepped into later in life? Or were you the kid who sort of manifested this also? No, I was not a definitely I was not the
kid. You know, I'm a shame and vulnerability researcher. So we teach what we comes from
somewhere like you have to be forward to know that there's, I think, no, I think I stepped into it much later in life. And I think what I stepped into was understanding that the weird, introverted, pattern seeing person that I was, what I stepped into is a sense of, I like that person. And I want to be that person.
And but I think I dreaded being that person growing up. I think I thought,
something's off base, because it's not like, you know, I grew up watching, you know,
I went to Greece 25 times when they came out. You know, like, I wanted to be that person. I
wanted to be Olivia Newton-John with a cigarette in a cat suit, you know, winning over John Travolta. Like I didn't think, you know, I'm awesome. I'm 13. I'm going to be a that I love now, they were painful probably then. Like I've always seen things in patterns. And I didn't know that there was like a job, like that's what qualitative researchers do. So I just thought maybe I was a part of the underworld or something. And I thought it was weird. And I didn't fit in really. I had a sense of belonging.
I mean, which is probably a more common experience than most people own up to.
Yeah, I think that makes me in the majority for sure.
Yeah.
I just, yeah.
So at what point do you start to realize in your life that, in fact, that does make you in the majority?
When I started doing this work is that I know no matter how bleak the feeling, how desperate the feeling, how weird the experience or smell or idea that none of us are alone.
I did a radio show on Wisconsin Public Radio a couple days ago and a caller called in and shared a Thich Nhat Hanh quote with me that just brought me to my knees. It said, our purpose, and I'm kind of probably
going to butcher it a little bit, but our sole purpose here is to get over the illusion of our
separateness. And I think that's what my work is. We're all in this together. And I had no idea that
the things that made me feel so much on the outside were the things that would ultimately,
when I stepped into some self-worth,
be the things that connected me to strongness to other people.
Does that make sense?
Yeah, I mean, I think it does.
I'm curious also whether it was an evolutionary experience
for you to realize this or whether there were moments,
you know, were there sort of like decisive moments
or experiences with people or things that made you say,
okay, I'm starting to get that there's a different way to live in the world and I want to be a part of figuring that out?
No, there was a decisive moment.
So there were, yeah, I'm not like a slow unraveling kind of person as much as I would like to be.
No, there was a moment.
I mean, I can picture, I know what I was wearing. Like it was in November of 2006. I was at
my wooden, red painted breakfast room table. I was sitting at the table. I was coding a bunch of new
data, asking this new question for the first time, going back into the shame data and saying, well,
okay, I understand what shame is and I understand how that operates in our lives. But what about
these men and women who are living wholeheartedly, like who are really all in? What did they have in common? And I had
giant, you know, those post-it notes that are poster side. I had them all over my kitchen
and my living room. I was writing down words. And basically what emerged from that process
were two lists. Like here are the behaviors that the wholehearted folks are engaging in.
And here's what they are trying to let go of. Here's what they're trying to move away from in their lives.
And the move away from list was, it was as if someone described me on a list. Like I was every,
I called it the shit list. I was everything on that list. Judgmental, perfectionistic,
all work, not only no play, no rest, but kind of disregard for play
and rest and people who thought it was important. So you're coming at it from this like science
mind, like, let me just figure this out. And then you're looking at this, you're like,
oh my, this is personal. Oh, I was devastated. I couldn't believe it. I just remember folding
my hands up on the top of the table and putting my head down and just thinking,
because, you know, I think up until that moment and then the whoop that followed,
I trusted my professional self immensely, but didn't trust my personal self as much.
So I knew that I know I'm a good researcher. And so I knew if these words were emerging,
like these qualities were important, these choices, doing something creative,
you know, like that's a great example. Creativity emerged as so important.
Comparison emerged as the shame counterpoint to that. And I was the most comparative person.
I was always comparing myself to other people. And I was scoffing at creativity.
People would say, hey, do you want to go to a painting class with me? Or do you want a scrapbook? And up until that moment, I would say no.
I thought it was flaky and self-indulgent.
I'm not going to really do that kind of crap.
I'm busy working.
So yeah, there was a moment that shifted.
I want to kind of go a little bit deeper there.
But before that, you use the word wholeheartedness a lot.
Talk to me about that.
What is it? What do you mean when you use that phrase? It resonates with people. And so I was trying to figure out what's a word for people that I would describe as all in,
who are just really living and loving entirely.
And wholehearted is language in actually in the Book of Common Prayer that in the Episcopal Church that we use.
And there's this line that says, I have not loved you with my whole heart.
And that was always very powerful for me when I said it.
And so the word that came to mind was wholehearted.
So which was just kind of fascinating right there, too, because you're you're taking some a term which comes from a place which is very not scientific.
It's very faith based.
Super faith.
And then you're bringing it into like your world, which is like totally linear, like prove it or, you know, it doesn't matter, you know, what happens.
You're like, how do you measure that?
No, it's true.
And I've received, I got a lot of flack from it too.
From the academic community?
Huh.
Yeah.
Just for the use of the term.
Yeah.
You shouldn't name construct things that are immeasurable. And so that was hard for me because, you know, one of the things I talk about in the TED Talk is that I had a little sign in my office when I was a doctoral student teaching that said, if you can't measure it, it doesn't exist.
And I loved thinking that we could live in that world.
Now I have a sign above my study that says if you can measure it, it's probably not that important.
I love it.
Looks like the shadow side.
It is the shadow side.
And so I think I didn't care at that point.
I just felt like I was onto something
that was super important for me personally,
and it resonated with me.
And what else would you call it?
Social adaptability.
That's not what I was looking for. I was looking for wholeheartedness. Yeah, and it's something that the common person, and what else would you call it? Social adaptability.
That's not what I was looking for.
I was looking for wholeheartedness.
Yeah, and it's something that the common person can,
I mean, I'm sure there's enough ambiguity so that people can kind of like say,
like, this is how I feel wholeheartedness applies
in my world, in my life,
but there's enough universality to the term
that I think people just kind of get what it's about.
Yeah, and I think that's my job as a researcher.
Like one of the things, I've never really talked about this before, but I think you're
an interesting, you'd be as the uncertainty person, you'd be a great person to talk to
you about this, that there is one of the greatest losses I think that is happening in our world
today is that academics are shamed for accessibility.
I mean, it makes me teary eyeyed because it makes me think how much great information we're losing,
even whether you buy into it or if it's real or not real, that we're losing the debate and the discourse.
Because to be accessible is some kind of really like albatross.
It's like if you're accessible and people understand your work, that means you're not very smart.
So basically you're writing only for people that are in rarefied air. And if the average person on
the street can understand that there's something wrong with what you're doing.
Right. And there's, I mean, and really there's like interesting journal articles that say,
you know, the average academic journal article, the average one, not the one that makes it into
the times or something is read by 10 people. And then I think eight of them are probably just checking to see if they're referenced in it.
And so to me, I had no interest in that for this reason. It's an interesting backstory.
When I did the shame research, because I'm a qualitative researcher, I would sit down like
we're sitting down and collect data and talk to people about their stories. It was the first time
I'd ever done research when people, when we were done with the interview, looked at me pleadingly and
said, when you figure this out, you're going to tell me, right? And my answer in the beginning
was no, I'm going to publish it in something that you'll never have access to. Right. That was my,
I didn't say that, but that's what I thought. And then I thought, you know what? I'm not going to
do that anymore. You know, I don't want to, I don't want to spend my time. I mean, I still have
to do it and I probably should do it more, but I don't want to spend my time doing something that's
not, in my opinion, moving people forward. And if I can't pick it up and read it and my friends
can't pick it up and read it, and I have to look up words in a thesaurus to sound smart,
I'm not doing it anymore. It's
not why I'm here. It's not in service of my work. And my faith is really an organizing
principle in my life and it pushes up against that value. So that's kind of how wholehearted
I was scared at first.
I would imagine you would be. I mean, because you're really bringing two worlds together in a way where each world probably has substantial doubt about the validity of the other
one. And also, like you said, especially because you operate and you're in your living, like in an
academic setting. So, you know, that's got to bring on a lot of fear. It's like, you know,
am I going to be drummed out of my profession? And am I going to like, just, am I going to be still there, but I'll be the laughingstock of my profession for
the rest of my career? You know, versus is this work so powerful that it needs, it's the work
that I can't not do and it must get out. Yeah. And I think it's interesting because
grounded theory in itself is very controversial, I think, in a lot of academic places, because
you don't start with existing theories and prove and disprove them.
You start from people's lived experiences. You often come up with conclusions that bump up hard
against what's already established in the literature. And I love it because Glaser and
Strauss who developed the, I think they were like spirited in terms of my approach. They said,
use names that resonate with people. And so one of the ways we measure the
accuracy of our theories is resonance fit. Do people see themselves in their lives and their
stories and the narratives that you're creating with your data? And I love that because if it
doesn't ring true. Which is kind of fascinating for me also because the entrepreneur in me and
the writer in me looks at that model and that's actually, that's the model that actually builds the most successful businesses. But it's the exact opposite model that most entrepreneurs
start with. Most entrepreneurs get an idea for product or service or solution, and then they go
looking for a market. And then they're like, okay, who are the people that we can sell this to? And
whereas, you know, rather than saying, okay, let me just reach out to a community that I feel like
I want to be in service of
and have really deep, intense conversations with them. And maybe I'm part of that community. Very
likely I am. So let me start with my own experience and then with the experience of
people in this community and find out what are they feeling? What are they not feeling? What's
the conversation that's already going on in their head? And can I build messaging and solutions
around that in a way that can make me of further service to them?
And in doing so, create a living, a career, a business that builds around that.
And in my experience, I love that.
Those are the people where not only individually do you really come alive, but those are the businesses that have profound impact in the world and that kind of catch fire because you're not trying to sell something to anybody.
You're simply caring about them so deeply that you take the time to understand what they need and then just give it to them.
And so many times people don't do that.
And so really, so from the business side, it's this interesting overlay with what you're saying, the approach to how you research. I have never thought about that until this exact
second. But I love that. And I think it's exactly grounded theory, because what's interesting,
I never thought of entrepreneurship, I think of, I've got a really cool thing.
Right, exactly. Go find somebody who wants it.
Yeah. But in grounded theory, the whole thing is, it's called trust and
emergence is the axiom. Trust in what emerges from the data, trust in people's lived experiences and
their perception of those experiences. But what you do is, the goal of grounded theory is to find
out what is the main concern of a group of people you want to know more about. And then your theory should explain
how they're trying to continually resolve that concern.
So it's very much in line.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, it's kind of like...
Theory of entrepreneurship, I like it.
No, it is.
I mean, the really good entrepreneurs know that you come in
and you're probably going to start out...
We're human beings,
so there's no way we can start the process
without certain assumptions.
Right. They're just going to start out, you know, you there's, we're human beings. So there's no way we can start the process without certain assumptions. Right.
You know,
like they're,
they're just going to be there.
Um,
but the most successful people will always be the ones that are open to
serendipity or open to the market,
proving them wrong.
And then listening to what the market says is right.
And then deciding whether they actually want to create that or not.
Exactly.
Yeah.
So it's,
it's gotten,
now I want to learn more about like,
sort of like their whole methodology.
No,
I will, I'll give you something because it's exactly the same. So it's got, now I want to learn more about like sort of like their whole methodology. No, I will.
I'll give you something because it's exactly the same.
And in fact, you evaluate a theory that's a grounded theory.
One of the codes we live by is, and it's so much in line with entrepreneurship now that
you pointed this incredible thing out, a theory can never be as good, is only as good as its ability to work new data.
So like a business would only be as good as its ability to address the evolving and changing
needs of the market, right?
Which is why a lot of bigger companies get in huge trouble because they started and maybe
they were actually really served.
They understood the pain points, the needs of a market when they started and they served that beautifully. But markets aren't
stationary, you know, like things. They're living, breathing beasts that move and change and morph,
especially in the last four or five years. We've seen that in a profound way. And I've talked to
so many people who are past the, you probably consider classic entrepreneur, like real big
established businesses. And their businesses are shrinking fast and they're just thinking we're going under,
you know, rather than, um, well, no, actually all the assumptions that we built around
are no longer valid. So we actually, we don't have to just keep trying to,
you know, like work on that same model. We can actually look for where the pain points
and the conversations have moved to and see if we can adapt to what we do and how we do it to those new needs.
A lot of people don't want to do that. They're so vested in the way things work.
And they're terrified. And this is, I'm so curious what you think about this also.
Most people who start businesses, they start them
and they accept that there's a certain amount of uncertainty and risk and fear and anxiety and all
this stuff and failure. And very often it's because part of the dynamic is they don't have
a whole lot to lose in the beginning. Then they build something substantial. Now they do have a
lot to lose. So when I was talking about that business that now has to adapt to a whole different
thing, now that they're in a place where they don't have,
there's a lot to lose if they sort of like guess wrong
or they become incredibly fearful
in a way that they didn't,
or they're not able to move through the fear
and the change and the uncertainty
in a way that they were much more able to
when they started a business,
really ties in, I think,
with a lot of
your exploration of vulnerability. Yeah, you're going to be hard pressed to get me shaking loose
this parallel between business and I'm so obsessed with it now. It's so fascinating because, you know,
the axiom again of trust in the emergence is, I think what I've seen in my experience
talking to businesses and talking to not just entrepreneurs, but big corporations, is they don't trust in the process that brought them success.
They start to trust in the product of the process.
Right.
Right?
Yep.
And they lose their trust for the process, which is trust in emergence, trust the people you're serving. And so the same is true as researchers. Like for me, the minute I say, I don't care what emerges
from this interview with Jonathan, I've already got our theory out there in the academic literature.
This has got to hold up. And the minute I shift, my work is dead. It no longer rings true. It's
not innovative. It's not exciting. But Barney Glazer, one of the founders of grounded theory,
calls it the drugless trip. You have to have a real comfort with uncertainty and vulnerability
to do the kind of research I do. I mentor a lot of doctoral students and sit on a lot of
dissertations for grounded theory folks who get halfway through and think, this is too uncertain.
I want to go back to the take an existing theory, prove or disprove it with data,
write it up, be done.
I don't want to do,
I don't want to trust an emergence
and let something new
that we haven't talked about yet emerge.
I don't have the stomach for it.
No.
And so for me, the vulnerability piece,
and I get that because I was that person.
We're all that person.
We're all that person, We're all that person.
Yeah.
And that's important because-
Right.
It's not like, you know,
I mean, maybe there are these freakish people,
you know, this really thin slice of humanity
that just doesn't feel it
or their brains are softwired
from the beginning to process it differently.
But most of us, it hurts.
It does hurt.
And to say I wasn't one of those people
is exactly against,
like I have the four myths of vulnerability in Daring Greatly. And the first one is that it's weakness. And I define vulnerability as uncertainty, risk, and emotional exposure. we lose tolerance for it or we don't, we can't sit with the process is because we've been raised to believe that being vulnerable and walking into a meeting with, you know, funders or whomever or
whatever your situation is and saying, I don't know. I mean, some of the most incredible examples
that I read and include in the book are about business people who stand up in front of their leadership and say, I don't know what to do next.
And you may know more than I do.
I need your help.
That's powerful.
And that is the single most terrifying thing that I think any leader could do, but also maybe the most powerful thing they could do simultaneously.
It's really interesting, but like you were saying, though,
people think it's all, if I do that, I'm weak.
Right.
The Apple Watch Series 10 is here.
It has the biggest display ever.
It's also the thinnest Apple Watch ever, making it even more comfortable on your wrist, whether you're running, swimming, or sleeping.
And it's the fastest-charging Apple Watch, getting you 8 hours of charge in just 15 minutes.
The Apple Watch Series X, available for the first time in glossy jet black aluminum.
Compared to previous generations, iPhone Xs are later required. Charge time and actual results
will vary.
Mayday, mayday. We've been
compromised. The pilot's a hitman.
I knew you were going to be fun. January 24th.
Tell me how to fly this thing.
Mark Wahlberg. You know what the difference between me and you is?
You're going to die. Don't shoot him, we need him!
Y'all need a pilot?
Flight Risk.
Pete Fuda, whouda, he's a researcher in Australia, in Sydney, and he studies transformative leadership.
And he does long case studies over five and six years studying leadership and how it transforms with an organization.
And he has this great article that was in Harvard Business Review where he uses metaphors to talk about what transformative leaders share in common. And one of them is the snowball. And he tells the story of a CEO, a new CEO,
who kind of came on board and was very directive, very instructive, and things really started
unraveling. And he decided to kind of risk vulnerability and stood up in front of all those
leaders together and said, I'm getting feedback that my style, the way I communicate and give
you feedback is pushing innovation down. I need your help. I need to know how to be better at
this. I need to know how to work with you. And what Pete found in his research, not only in this case,
but across the cultures he was studying
is that it created this huge snowball effect.
If those leaders in turn felt permission
to stand with their teams
and say, I can't do this without you
and those people,
and then it created this thing
that took off through the culture
and what it shook loose was,
it got so big and fast, the momentum of of it that it shook loose all the drag that people that were not willing to say i need help i don't
know i'm in over my head couldn't hold on anymore in the culture that's amazing and it also really
speaks to this top down you know like idea that it all comes from the people that are at the very tip top
you know like if that one person you know like if if you know have a ceo and and she or he doesn't
actually say okay i'm owning this myself um nobody else in our organization will own it and
the reverse is true too you know like seems so well-affected that person steps up and says
yeah um i don't
know which way is up right now but we're all really smart let's see if we can figure this
out together i mean and it's so funny too because i've had so many conversations i'm sure you have
also the sort of management teams leadership people and they're like well how do we get the
people under us to buy this or to act in this way or to create in this way and like the first
question is well are you behaving in that way or acting in that way or to create in this way. And the first question is, well, are you behaving in that way
or acting in that way?
Like, no, no, no, this isn't about me.
It's like, no, actually it is.
Right.
Everything that you say, and this is as a parent,
you know this, right?
I mean, that's it.
It's like, hello, you can't say do this
if then you're doing something completely different
because your kids are going to look at you and be like, mm-mm.
Right.
So same thing in organizations.
It's the same dynamic, but people don't see that.
No, I think one of the things that I say that maybe pisses people off more than anything else I say,
whether it's leaders, parents, is that we cannot give people what we don't have.
And we can't ask people to do what we're not doing.
And that makes people crazy.
And I get it as a parent, especially
because when I tell parents, you can't raise a child with a greater sense of resilience than
your own. You can't raise a child with more self-compassion than what you have. They're like,
they get twitchy, they get crunchy and yeah. But when I tell people,
I'm not sure that you can love a child more than you love yourself. People get hostile.
Yeah, I bet.
Because people want to say, you know, that's crazy. I love my kids way more than I love myself.
And it's often the parents of very young children who say that.
What's interesting to me is it's the parents of teens who say, oh God, I get that. Because what
happens is fourth, fifth grade, certainly middle school, beginning of high school, when our kids
start to become us in some ways, or we see our partners, the things that bug the crap out of us
about our partners emerge in our kids are the things that bug us about us. That self-compassion or that compassion turns to judgment.
Like, what do you mean you didn't have anyone to sit with at lunch?
And rather than saying, oh God, I remember that.
Let's talk about that.
You say, well, pull your hair back and wear some of those cute outfits I bought you.
And then maybe your friends will want to sit with you.
And that's your stuff. Yeah. And I think we've all, it's like,
you know, as you're saying this, I'm like scanning right now. I'm like, okay. I like,
consider myself a pretty, you know, like compassionate, you know, like open guy,
but I'm like, I'm sure there've been so many things where I've just reacted without even
realizing that I'm reacting because of a cap on my own capability to deal with
my own stuff. And it's manifesting in my response to other people. I, you know, which is, um,
it's not easy to own that. No, and I've done it. I mean, you know, it's people say, well,
we can't all be, you know, shame free all the time like you. And I'm, I think to myself,
I've never been a parent and not been
a shame researcher. I mean, I started just around the time my daughter was born right before.
And I've done it because we're human. And I think that's why I think, you know,
I talk a lot about the gifts of imperfect parenting. I think it's those moments where,
I mean, I remember telling Ellen one time,
she was doing this whole thing about, she wore a side ponytail. She came home with a different ponytail. I said, hey, what happened to your side ponytail? She said, oh, I took it out because my
friend thought it looked terrible. And I said, but I thought you loved it. And she said, yeah,
but they gave me a hard time. And so I went into the whole, like, you have to do what you love, not what other people think.
And then five minutes later, I'm telling Steve, you've got to pull the Christmas lights out of the yard.
What are my neighbors going to think?
And Ellen's five feet away from me, you know.
And she said, I don't understand.
I said, you don't understand what?
She goes, the ponytail, the lights.
Huh.
You know, I'm like.
She's keeping you on it.
I'm like, you're right.
You know, if I tell my daughter, your body's beautiful, you know,
our value would probably be to say something like,
this is the body that God gave you, and it's strong and wonderful.
And, you know, and then she walks in,
and I'm using a lot of hateful self-talk about my jeans not fitting.
Which one do you think matters the most?
But it's the same with leaders.
You know, if leaders say to teams, you know, hey, we want innovation, so we'll expect failure.
Fail often, fail quick, clean it up and move on. But they see a leader scared to death of failing,
scared of trying, scared of being uncertain or vulnerable.
Then the message is, that other stuff is lip service.
This is about perfection.
And even if it stifles creativity, we can't be wrong.
Right.
So one of the big things is that people perceive vulnerability as weakness.
Yeah.
And it seems like the answer is you got to own the change and you basically have to say, okay,
but I mean, how do you do that? I mean, if you're somebody where you're, let's say you're a leader,
you're a parent, you're just a career, You're an artist. And you want to do something and you're terrified of being vulnerable.
You're a human being living in the world who's terrified of opening up and revealing who you are.
Going into the uncertainty, the risk.
How do you make that jump?
Well, I think the first place is, and it may be different whether you're a cognitive person or a feel-your-way-through person, but I think for those of us who think first and feel second, which would be me, I think getting clear on what of courage, of moral courage, spiritual courage,
leadership courage. I cannot find a single example in our data of courage that was not
based on sheer vulnerability. And so I think one of the things we have to do, first of all,
is dispel these myths and get clear in our values. I mean, for me, I don't, it doesn't hurt
less when I get criticized, when I put myself out there, or when you put yourself out there,
people who are trying to, you know, during great leaves from the Roosevelt quote, you know.
One of my favorite quotes, by the way. As soon as I saw the title, I was like, I know where that's
from. You do? Totally. I love that. Yeah. It's not the critic who counts. It's not the man who
points at the strong man as he stumbles or points out how the doer
deeds could have done them better.
The credit goes to those of us who are in the arena, who, I mean, to totally paraphrase,
getting their asses kicked sometimes, falling on our faces, failing, sometimes victorious,
but at least when we're failing, we're daring greatly.
I think when I talk to people who've
made the transition from, I really want to put these homemade journals on Etsy, but I'm really
afraid to do that. I really want to ask my boss for this promotion or this raise. I really want
to share this idea at the PTO meeting next week. When I asked people, where did you muster up the courage?
How did you script the courage to do this? The answer was always I got very clear that being courageous was more important to me as in value than succeeding. And so to me, it comes down to an area of your work
that I think is so important,
really serious intention setting
and very clear values alignment.
And I think it is very necessary
to have people in our lives
who when we dare greatly,
when we're vulnerable,
when we try something new,
and it doesn't work out, and we come up short, who are willing to look at us and say,
but you were brave. Yeah, I think those people, having those people around you, and that's,
I'm sure you've experienced the same thing. I've had so many conversations with people where they
said, I don't have those people. Yeah. What do I do? Because every time I do this, everybody around me lies up and says, told you so, you're an idiot.
I knew you were going to fail.
Which is kind of interesting because to me, one of the potential great equalizers there is the potential to use technology to flatten the world and find people like that.
And it's not the same thing as the people who live in your neighborhood
you can hug and kiss and just have a cup of coffee with.
It's not the same.
I would love to say it is because I live and breathe in that world,
but it's not.
But I think it helps to have access to a small group of people
who may be dotted in five different countries,
but they're deeply committed to each other and share the same values.
To me, I've seen that help people
who live in a small town somewhere
and are in a family where that approach to life
is completely rejected.
But I think it's a very, it's a tough problem.
One of the things that I look at is,
I think a lot of times it's,
part of it is what we tell ourselves,
but I think a lot of it is the questions we ask ourselves also around our ability to sort of unlock action in the face of perceived weakness and vulnerability.
I think so many of us, all we focus on is what if I fail?
Right.
Rather than what if I succeed?
Right.
And what if I do nothing?
Which is very often the most terrifying answer of three.
No, there's no doubt.
And I mean, something you said about people who are surrounded by communities who are
critical.
I told you so.
You were so stupid to do that.
One thing that I think it's really important and I feel ethically bound to say to people
a lot of times about the work is be clear that when you start to dare greatly, when
you start to be vulnerable and take chances, you are going to be holding
a very uncomfortable mirror up for people.
And a lot of times if you're surrounded by people who say, I told you so, or who are
critical, it's because daring greatly to watch someone be vulnerable and risk, to watch someone
walk headlong into uncertainty is so uncomfortable for people who
are not willing to do that, that they're dying to see failure. And to point it out as confirmation
that my way of living is okay. And the whole dotted around, like, I think there was a group of women,
we call ourselves the love bombers. There's a group of women and they are artists photographers
writers i got a call one day from them probably five six years ago they said you don't know us
we know you from online i think you read our blogs we read yours we're going to gather together on
the oregon coast would you like to join us and i was was like, oh, hell no. I was voted least likely to show up
with a group of hippie girls that's smoking cloves and doing art. I was like, no. And my husband was
like, I think you might meet this. I was like, are you kidding me? And he said, I think you should
go. And it really changed my life because, again, it was technology. And I totally agree with what you said.
What I'm throwing up and sick, these are not the people who hold my hair back. They're not the
people who bring the casseroles over during hard times. But they are a group of people who, where
we made agreement that we would be vulnerable and brave together. And that we would create a space
for each other where we never had to shrink. And we were really proud of what we were doing,
our successes. And we never had to puff up when were really proud of what we were doing and our successes and we never had to puff up
when we were feeling
small and ashamed.
That we were all going
to be brave together
and take our looks
and, you know,
and so I think
that's really important.
It was life-changing for me
and so I think
if you are in a small town,
I think World Domination Summit.
Yeah, great example.
I think a lot of people go to that
just because they fly from all over the world
because they can't find those people.
And it's like their one time every year
where they can like be on the ground
with like-minded people.
And then they take that with them.
I think a lot of things can start out digitally.
Yeah.
And then it stays in sort of this ethereal
kind of supportive level
yeah but then you can meet somebody and spend three days with them and then when you leave
it's a very different dynamic it's a totally different yeah i mean and i think yeah like i
would have never i don't think i've ever done i know before or since anything like i might talk
at pearl domination like i would never have tried something so crazy and out there had I not been,
you know, around people who are there to explore how brave am I willing to be,
you know? And so I do The pilot's a hitman. I knew you were going to be fun. On January 24th.
Tell me how to fly this thing.
Mark Wahlberg.
You know what the difference between me and you is?
You're going to die.
Don't shoot him, we need him.
Y'all need a pilot.
Flight Risk.
The Apple Watch Series 10 is here.
It has the biggest display ever.
It's also the thinnest Apple Watch ever,
making it even more comfortable on your wrist,
whether you're running, swimming, or sleeping.
And it's the fastest charging Apple Watch, getting you eight hours of charge in just
15 minutes.
The Apple Watch Series X, available for the first time in glossy jet black aluminum.
Compared to previous generations, iPhone Xs are later required.
Charge time and actual results will vary. One of the other myths about vulnerability that you touched on was the idea that we can go it alone.
You know, that's still, even in a world where people are pretty awake and conscious about connection it's still a very highly regarded
ideal you know this is where i quote white snake in the book you know like right here i go again
on my end like we all want anyway i love your tasting music as like an old brush and you're
like yeah an addict yeah i'm a rush fanatic too, yeah, that's one thing that's so fun about the book. People are like, most of the guys are like, dude, you quoted Rush.
The ultimate philosophers.
Neil Peart.
I know.
World peace. I think he can bring world peace.
I think we need people not only to support us, but I think we need people like to try on vulnerability with, to try it on and say, hey, Jonathan, it's Prenet.
And I think I want to do this.
I did that with Chris going back to WDS, World Dynastation Summit, like the night of rehearsal.
I was there.
I said, I'm seriously thinking about closing by doing a duet with you from the Glee version of a journey song.
And he was like,
I know. And his wife was like, yeah, there's no way he said we're going to do that. And I'm like,
okay. Then I thought, okay, good. I was like, okay. So I just kind of moved away from it.
And then I hear him like from the backstage go, but you are writing a book called Daring Greatly.
So I was like, are you going to do it or not? And he's like, I'll do it if you do it. And,
but that's what I mean by trying it on. there was no doubt I was seriously afraid I thought it would I put it at best 50 50 that anyone else would sing along and I thought are you gonna be okay if it's just you and me the whole time
and Chris goes it's gonna be a long song if that happens and I I'm like, well, I'll tell the guys, the 80 guys, to fade out.
But it was a thousand people
doing all their cheers,
you know, in the aisles, playing air guitar.
It was fun. And so... And it turned into
an extraordinary moment.
It was one of the best
moments of my life.
I mean, it was...
And I think, I mean, that's part of the message, right?
Is that, that's what you miss out on when you're not willing to go to that place.
It is.
And I read it, everyone, you know, because I still get, you know, comments from people that were like, don't stop believing or suck it.
You know, like I still get those.
But every now and then there'll be a comment like, that's the cheesiest thing I've ever heard of. And it doesn't,
I feel total neutrality about that.
Not even the need to defend it or anything.
Because my thought was,
you weren't there
because it was from people who weren't there.
You didn't share that with us.
And that's okay.
Right.
Because if you were there,
it was fun.
And we sang together like we were 13 in the
back of a car sneaking out on a friday night so um so but i think you have to have a tribe
to try on that stuff with yeah i totally agree it's it makes it's it's i it's almost impossible
for a lot of not everybody i think some people some people are kind of wired. I think so too, yeah.
But I don't think that's most people.
I don't.
And I, you know, I think the other thing that's important about that tribe that has really shifted in for me in the last year is I no longer really even, I have no intake at all of any feedback or criticism from anyone who's not in the arena.
So unless you are in your own capacity, in your own world, in your own life, getting your ass kicked on occasion, I'm not interested in what you have to share with me about my work.
What flipped that switch? A profound respect for myself and other people who are out there trying to do work
and trying to walk into uncertainty and vulnerability and are really risking.
Because it is so easy to make a life and a career out of sitting in the bleachers and making fun of people and putting
them down. And so I think a profound respect for those of us who are out there. And what I realized
too in my own life is the people who are doing that, who are in their own arena, I don't care
what it is. You don't have to be a writer or speaking in public. I don't care if you're a teacher, you know, like my sisters are teachers.
You know, in my opinion, they walk in the arena every morning at 730.
Right.
And so what I have found, not only as my personal life, but professionally, is the people who
are in the arena and who are showing up and letting themselves be seen
give feedback that is far more constructive and far more helpful and mindful about what people
can hear and not hear. And I mean, and I love, I mean, I'm an academic at heart, so I love debate
and discourse. I love it when people email me and say, saw your talk, parts of it I liked,
but you were completely remiss
in not mentioning these three areas of the literature. How can you talk about vulnerability
without quoting so-and-so about closeness or something? I love that. That makes me better.
It makes my work better. People who make fun of me, I make fun of other people or say hateful
things. People who say, I feel sorry for your kids. You know, people who say,
if I looked like you, I'd embrace imperfection too. Those kind of comments that you get,
you know, I just, I hate to get binary because it's not, it's who I'm trying not to be.
But I'm still that person in some ways. And I really do believe
you're either making the world a better place, or you're making it a worse place.
I don't feel like there's a lot of neutrality. And that's probably a little hard ass line to take.
I don't want to sound like you're either with us or against us. Not my favorite quote or, you know, perspective.
But I do feel like every day our choices have a huge impact on people.
And someone told me, this could be urban legend, I don't know, maybe you know.
But I heard that Oprah Winfrey has this quote on her door.
But it's a quote that I love. And it says, you're responsible for the energy you bring into this room.
And I think people are responsible for the energy they put in the world.
And a fake avatar and a fake name and leaving a comment somewhere is not benign.
Because I'll keep putting my work out there. And you will probably keep putting your work out there. And several people we know will probably keep. But there are people who have
amazing gifts, who can make the world an incredibly better place, who won't put their work out there
for that reason. And that's a loss. And whether we know what that work was or not
we miss it and grieve it every day
there are songs that we need to hear
there's stories that need to be heard
there's work that needs to be seen
there's ideas that need to be implemented
that we'll never see or know
because there's so many people out there
who are so reflexively cynical
and critical and mean-spirited.
I don't like it. Do you like it? You know, it's something that I deal with every single day in
my life. First thing I do when I wake up in the morning is I roll out of bed and I sit and I
meditate for 25 minutes. And part of that is because it helps me enter every day with that
sense of equanimity and the ability to, when needed, zoom the lens
out more and look down at myself and get a better sense for when I'm reacting or responding
with deliberation and intelligence. It's still a brutally hard thing for me to do because I'm
an emotional person. And because I operate so much of the time as a writer and
behind the veil of anonymity that a lot of people had that you were describing, the online world,
I get attacked. And I just say to them, I'm always saying to myself, would this person stand in front
of me in a room with my kid next to me and say the same thing? And I've got to believe that the
answer would be no. I want to believe the answer would be no, because I want to have that level of there who will attack them in very, very mean,
vindictive, spiteful ways. And part of, I guess, my exploration has been to the point that you
were making before. I've always been fascinated with the phenomenon of people who are even within your close inner circle,
your family, your closest friends,
either publicly or secretly rallying to see you fail.
Yeah.
And I think a lot of what,
so I try and reframe, I try and understand, you know.
I once heard, you know,
maybe it was something that I read
or an interview that I saw with the Dalai Lama,
where they asked him what his greatest fear was.
And his greatest fear was losing compassion for the Chinese.
Blew my mind.
And I'm just thinking to myself,
if I can try and practice compassion,
meditate on compassion on a daily level,
in a way that tries to allow me to step in the shoes of that person
who is being this way towards me or for someone I love.
Maybe that's the beginning for me.
But it doesn't make me okay with it.
I would love to say it does.
I would love to say I just, I'm good.
I meditate, I do my mindfulness, and I experience it,
and then I let it go.
But I don't.
I'm human.
And it go. But I don't. I'm human. And it hurts.
But far better than living in the great twilight that knows neither victory nor success.
So I think that's the thing. I think I've seen the pain and talked to people about the pain of having the anonymous critic, but also having the family
who's rallying for failure, to have the partner who's just chomping on the bit to say, I told you
so, to have the children who are looking at you with disappointment. You know, the greatest pain
I've ever seen in my work is from people who have spent their lives on the outside of the arena wondering what would have happened
had I shown up. That's a pain that to me, maybe it's because I'm 46, has become a far greater
fear of mine than having to dodge some hurt you know some hurt feelings sometimes and um
yeah the what what if i would have shown up and been seen yeah and i'm in the same place and
same age by the way i love it yeah me too um i would do it back for love or money for one final
question yeah wrap this up so the name of this project is called The Good Life Project.
And so when you hear that phrase,
or if I ask you the question,
to you,
what does it mean
to live a good life?
What comes up?
Gratitude.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think for me,
a good life happens
when you stop
and are grateful
for the ordinary moments that so many of us just steamroll over to try to find those extraordinary moments.
So to me, my good life is soccer practice and carpool line and tuck-ins and date night.
And that's a good life for me. I mean, and knowing that it's
good and acknowledging and stopping that it's good and saying, this is good. I love that.
Yeah. Thanks for hanging out.
Hey, before you leave, if you love this episode, I bet you'll also love the conversation we had
with Elizabeth Gilbert about bringing your whole self to your life. You'll find a link to Liz's episode in the
show notes. And of course, if you haven't already done so, please go ahead and follow Good Life
Project in your favorite listening app. And if you found this conversation interesting or inspiring
or valuable, and chances are you did since you're still listening here, would you do me a personal Thank you. so we can all do it better together with more ease and more joy. Tell them to listen. Then even invite them to talk about what you've both discovered.
Because when podcasts become conversations and conversations become action,
that's how we all come alive together.
Until next time, I'm Jonathan Fields, signing off for Good Life Project. Apple Watch Series 10 The Apple Watch Series X is here.
It has the biggest display ever.
It's also the thinnest Apple Watch ever,
making it even more comfortable on your wrist,
whether you're running, swimming, or sleeping.
And it's the fastest-charging Apple Watch,
getting you 8 hours of charge in just 15 minutes.
The Apple Watch Series X.
Available for the first time in glossy jet black
aluminum. Compared to previous
generations, iPhone XS or later required.
Charge time and actual results will vary.
Mayday, mayday. We've been compromised.
The pilot's a hitman.
I knew you were gonna be fun. On January 24th.
Tell me how to fly this thing.
Mark Wahlberg. You know what the difference between me and you is?
You're gonna die.
Don't shoot him, we need him!
Y'all need a pilot?
Flight Risk.