HealthyGamerGG - "I Can't Decide On A Career"

Episode Date: January 7, 2025

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Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 My boss is not the best. The hours suck. The commute is too long. Negativity piles up, piles up, piles up. Until I am desperate. As long as you are living a life where desperation is driving you, you'll never break out of the cycle. We break out of the cycle by literally, I get a job, I can't stand this anymore. I quit. I need a job to survive. So this is a cycle that a lot of people go to. And the problem with this cycle is that it's a cycle. The basic problem with cycles is that we go through them over and over and over again. And if we think about why do we go through a cycle over and over and over again, like, fundamental, like, what's going on?
Starting point is 00:00:32 So the reason is because a cycle is driven by particular things. The reason that we end up going through the cycle is because we're actually continuously responding to certain emotional drivers. So for any cycle to continue, it requires an energy input. And the reason that this cycle is so common is because it actually has the same energetic input. Each of these steps actually increases energy in a particular way. And then once that energy reaches a critical threshold, then that energy drives us to action. And breaking this cycle is actually relatively simple, but it can be very difficult. And what we need to understand is not these steps. We need to understand the arrows. Because what actually propagates the cycle? It's not the
Starting point is 00:01:21 steps. It's the arrows. Does that make sense? This is what's moving us from here to here. So think about this for a moment. I get a job. The real money is not that you get a job. It's what happens over here that allows you to not, I can't stand this job anymore. And if you can't stand this job, what results in the quitting? If you quit, what results in the not needing the job? So oftentimes what I find is that when people are in cycles, what they tend to do is they actually miss the important stuff, right? So I keep on like, I can't find someone. I can't find the right person. I keep on dating the wrong people. And it's like, I'm lonely. I need to date, or I date someone. I date this someone. This relationship is unhealthy or doesn't feel right. I break up, right? We can see these cycles.
Starting point is 00:02:15 This happens a lot too. Or I got to get out of the house. I go out of the house. I try to socialize. I feel anxious. So there are a lot of these cycles. And everyone focuses on these steps. But that's not where the money is. The money is right here. And the reason for that is because when human beings correctly diagnose a problem, they fix it. If a problem persists, that usually means there is incorrect diagnosis. Same is true for the medical profession.
Starting point is 00:02:41 That's how we learn this stuff. If I diagnose you with the wrong thing and I keep treating you, you're going to keep having problems. So if we want to understand what drives us in this cycle of getting a job, can't stand this anymore, quitting, and I need a job. What it is is our emotional motivation. We are victims to our emotional motivation, which is why we propagate this cycle. If you all want to dive deep into the most important topics for our community,
Starting point is 00:03:08 check out HG memberships. The first thing to understand is that there needs to be no outcome from small talk. This is a Vassana too. Your mind is Vassanhas all the way down. So the key thing about detachment is not that you don't have wants, it is that your wants do not control you. Membership grants you access to monthly streams, as well as a back catalog of a year's worth of content,
Starting point is 00:03:28 in addition to quests and so much more. If you're interested, you can sign up for $10 a month at Healthygamer.gamer.ggy slash memberships or click the link in the description below. Hope to see you there. So the first thing, let's start with, I need a job. So when you need a job, so like now I'm like, I have some amount of money, the money starts to run out,
Starting point is 00:03:47 the desperation starts to rise. And as the desperation reaches a critical threshold, it triggers a motivational action, which is find a job. The panic signals happen. Find a job. Find a job. So I find a job.
Starting point is 00:04:01 I go walking down the street. Oh, look, it is a job. So if we look at it, what is it that drives me? What is it that results in a job? It is desperation. So the moment that I have a job, the desperation disappears. Right? I no longer need a job.
Starting point is 00:04:17 I have a job. I need a job. I have a job. And then what starts to happen? Well, how did I pick my job? well, I just picked what I needed to because I was desperate. So there's no selection of the job. And then what happens is this job isn't great.
Starting point is 00:04:33 So then what happens is like the emotional negativity starts to build up. My boss is not the best. The hour sucks up. The commute is too long. Negativity piles up, piles up, piles up until I am desperate. I can't stand this anymore. And once again, what is it that motivates us? Desperation.
Starting point is 00:04:50 So then what do I do? I quit. Once again, desperation. And now that I quit, what happens? I burn through whatever savings I have. I need a job. Desperation increases, increases, increases. So as long as you are living a life where desperation is driving you, you will accept the bare minimum.
Starting point is 00:05:11 It is about getting by today. And if your emotional strategy, if your life strategy is getting by today, you are going to get bodied, right, left, and center. You will never build a life that is worth living. if your goal is getting by. If your motivation is the avoidance of desperation, you will never build a happy life. Because your goal is not joy. Your goal is not success.
Starting point is 00:05:35 It is, I want to get rid of this. And this, by the way, is the way that our whole medical profession has trained us to be. We have a society that focuses on fixing problems, not building things. We need to fix the homelessness problem. We need to fix, oh, you have pain?
Starting point is 00:05:52 let me give you ibuprofen. That'll take the pain away temporarily. Now you're desperate, take this pill. When the pill wears off, take another pill. When the pill wears off, take another pill. Take these six pills every single day. Don't build health, right? You'll never find a gym in a doctor's office. You'll never find a meditation room in a doctor's office. Right. And the most shocking example of this, like I talk about this a lot because it just really seared in my mind. I was on vascular surgery rotation. And the patient was coming in for the third amputation. And the attending surgeon that I walk, I work with comes in. He's like, here we are again. This guy has literally
Starting point is 00:06:28 removed pieces of this patient's feet. And he's like, you know this is going to keep happening while you keep smoking, right? You got to stop smoking. And she's like, yeah, Doc, I know, I'm so sorry. Lops off a piece of her foot. Gives her a pamphlet. Here's how smoking is dangerous for you. I was like, my mind was blown. I was like, is that the extent of this conversation? Hey, you know this is going to keep happening until you stop smoking. smoking, let's activate the saw and remove the foot.
Starting point is 00:06:57 I was like, what the fuck? I was a third year medical student at the time. Couldn't say a damn thing. Burned in my mind. And you can even argue, fairly so, by the way. I'm not blaming the surgeon because it's not the surgeon's job. Right? The surgeon's job is to lop things off.
Starting point is 00:07:14 It's not their job to do smoking cessation counseling. But they put an order for it and a nurse shows up while you're in the hospital and give you some resources, does a decent job. But this is what happens in our system, is we fix problems. We don't create health. We just fix what is broken. And if in your life you are constantly fixing what is broken, you'll never break out of the cycle. Because you're not banking anything.
Starting point is 00:07:39 So the cycle of desperation continues. Your primary motivation is desperation. I need a job. Let me find something. So how do we break out of the cycle? We break out of the cycle by literally breaking out of the cycle. Okay? So we're going to show you all what I mean.
Starting point is 00:07:53 So, okay, I need a job. So I get a job. When the desperation is at a low, you should keep looking for a job. Okay? I can't stand this anymore. I quit. When the desperation is at a high, I'm going to work with a therapist or coach to stay happy. and in the job.
Starting point is 00:08:24 While I find a better job. This is how we break out of cycles, right? We literally find alternatives. But the problem is that this is hard. Why is it hard? Well, first of all, the economy sucks, right? So the deck is stacked against you. Let's remember that people who wind up in the cycle are not here because they're stupid.
Starting point is 00:08:43 They're here because things are genuinely hard. If a bunch of people find themselves with a problem, right? We look at like malaria. Malaria affects a bunch of people in sub-Saharan Africa. Does it mean that they're dumb? No. Does it mean that they're weak? No.
Starting point is 00:08:56 It means that there's a lot of mosquitoes with malaria. If a lot of people are experiencing this in our society today, it means that there's a societal problem. The first of the societal problems is that we are training people to be emotionally responsive, mercurial. We get motivated by our emotions. And this starts very early, right? If you don't study, you're going to fail.
Starting point is 00:09:17 It starts very early, where we try to incentive. people from fear and desperation. If you don't do this, you're going to get bullied. Or we bully you because you're not wearing the right clothes. So now you're motivated to dress based on the avoidance of negative emotion. This is how we live our lives through the avoidance of negative emotion. And people who are very manipulative love this because they realize if I can create negative emotion in you, I can control your behavior.
Starting point is 00:09:43 We see this a lot with the men that I work with, or I see this a lot with the men that I work with where we guilt trip men for providing. It's a man's job to provide. Happens with women, too. With cognitive load and groceries, oh my God, don't get me started. Right? So we do this a lot. And so the challenge, though, is that when we talk about finding a better job, it's not that easy, because first of all, the economy sucks. It's getting better, at least here in the U.S. But there's a second problem, which is that what is it that motivates me to get a job? This is fueled by desperation. And why don't we find a better job because when we find a job, we're already exhausted. I've applied to 300 jobs. I'm tired. Now the desperation goes away. I can't motivate myself to find a better job. Let's be
Starting point is 00:10:25 honest. It's not that easy. So then this cycle continues. I quit. And then what happens is I feel desperate. So even this is a problem. Because now what's happening is our desperation creates the sense that I need a job. And since I have a desperation, I find the first thing that'll come. I'm not And if I'm not selective for my job, what am I going to do? I'm not going to be able to stand it. This desperation here and here inevitably creates a situation that you cannot stand. This is how you break out of the cycle. What propagates the cycle needs to change.
Starting point is 00:10:59 If the driving force behind the cycle changes, the cycle will end. Right? So when two people, when there's a blood feud, which we don't have much anymore, right? But I guess take your favorite streamers that beef regularly. Right? So we still have something like blood feuds. The streamers that beef regularly. What's driving the cycle of blood feuds? It's vengeance, right?
Starting point is 00:11:21 There's no forgiveness. There's no compassion. There's no admitting what I did wrong. Everyone, both sides did something wrong, but what do they focus on? They focus on what the other side did wrong. They never own up to their mistakes. I've been in beef with people before. Generally speaking, it goes a long way to say, hey, buddy, I screwed up in these ways.
Starting point is 00:11:41 I'm sorry. And then they, something cool happens, right? When you apologize to someone, if you're lucky, they apologize back. Yeah, I know, man. I wasn't the best either. It's like, what the fuck did we just do here? You did this wrong. You did this wrong.
Starting point is 00:11:58 I'm sorry. I'm sorry. Like, what the? It's that easy. But some of y'all will say, but it's not that easy. Because I apologize and they say, yeah, screw you and they don't accept responsibility. Fair enough. Those people exist too.
Starting point is 00:12:10 And then what you do is distance yourself. even when you apologize to someone who does not apologize back, you've taken some energy out of that cycle because you're not aggravating them. And then they'll get less aggressive. And over time, what you want to do is just don't feed the cycle. Let this plant wither and die. But don't give it fertilizer. And then what you're going to do is find other relationships where people are apologetic
Starting point is 00:12:35 when they do something wrong. They accept their mistakes. And then your energy is going to go over there. You will literally spend less time thinking about that. this person. This person may try to aggravate you, right? Because they're trying to put energy into the cycle, but now your energy is somewhere else. You just let them, leave them behind. They can have their life. You're going to have yours. This is how you escape toxicity through forgiveness and distance. Still not as easy as I'm describing. I recognize that, right? This is the sketch of the strategy that
Starting point is 00:13:04 works. Going back to the job thing, we have to escape this energy of desperation. See, even if I need a job, if I'm able to be patient and wait for the right job, can I manage that desperation a little bit better? When this job sucks, can I build my resilience a little bit? Can I try to improve the job a little bit? Can I seek some degree of help? Can I get some kind of support? We have to change whatever fuels the cycle.
Starting point is 00:13:31 And then you all may say, okay, so like we can reduce the desperation. This is where we're working with a therapist or coach or someone like that, right? We have career coaching where they're pretty good at this kind of stuff, right? helping you understand where your motivation comes from. Sometimes it's just, it's more efficient to work with someone. I don't need to ever work with a plumber. I can do everything by myself, but it's just easier to use a plumber sometimes because it'll get done within 24 hours.
Starting point is 00:13:52 And if I tried to do it myself, who knows how long it'll take if you DIY it. And we're a society that has still underappreciated the value of working with someone else who specializes in human behavior. Right. So you'll see this a lot, for example, like, you know, I gave a talk it indeed. a couple years ago, and they have like a on-staff coach. And Google has a whole coaching program, I think. Right?
Starting point is 00:14:17 So they have like these internal coaching programs because they figured out, like, holy crap, like this actually helps. When I went through my executive coaching certification, like half the people in the room were like HR professionals. So people have figured out this stuff helps. But the main thing to understand is if you're stuck in the cycle, it's usually driven by desperation and you need to break out of that desperation. Reduce the desperation as much as possible.
Starting point is 00:14:39 Now, a lot of people may get confused by that because they're saying, if I reduce the desperation, then I won't act. You won't act in the same way. So once you remove the desperation, it makes space for another kind of motivation. So this is where once you have a job, what do you like about it? What do you dislike about it? Can you start to be a little bit more proactive and take on projects that may be more engaging? To be more involved at your work. Paradoxically, to work harder.
Starting point is 00:15:06 So this is something that a lot of people miss is that, like, when you're desperation, sprint and you take a job and you're like, ugh, your mental lack of engagement is what makes it untenable. So if you look at studies on health of a relationship, especially within the first six months, what you find is that someone's attitude towards the relationship heavily influences the health of the relationship. The attitude that someone has, if someone thinks, oh, this is a crappy relationship, I settled for this person, the relationship is going to be unhealthy. faith in the relationship literally determines the quality of the relationship. It's not the other way around.
Starting point is 00:15:43 This is what a lot of people get confused. They think, oh, yeah, I have faith in the relationship because it's good. It's actually scientifically the reverse. I have faith in the relationship that makes it good. I have faith in a job that makes it better. I believe in this that makes it better. And we know this. This is placebo.
Starting point is 00:15:59 I believe this medicine work. It makes it work. Fucking weird. Right? So notice the cycle of desperation, reduce your desperation as much as possible, create space for another kind of motivation to arise, experiment a little bit, and don't get complacent. Do you guys understand that desperation and complacency are part of a cycle? They're the same thing. They're two sides of the same coin.
Starting point is 00:16:25 Once the desperation goes away, what am I left with? Am I left with joy, drive, motivation? No, I'm left with complacency. And when the complacency goes away, I'm left with desperation. This is not just a problem of desperation. This is a problem of complacency. So pay attention to this cycle. Work on the desperation.
Starting point is 00:16:46 Make space and actually put forth more effort. Don't let your effort be tied to your emotional desperation. Separate these two variables. The more you do that, the better things will become. Questions? So Rockwell is asking, do you think coaching is a hidden gem in a world where people don't appreciate such ones that work with human behavior.
Starting point is 00:17:04 So people who do work with coaches may have an advantage in the society. I think that's true, absolutely. Right. So the coaching outcomes research is not great as a field. But I think that there's a reason why you see a lot of these companies investing in coaching because they have internal metrics, which are not published. But even at like, so I, you know, I did a little bit of work at like Harvard Business School. And they have like an internal coaching staff at fucking Harvard Business School.
Starting point is 00:17:28 Like it's crazy. So I think that there is an. advantage, but we have to be a little bit careful because we don't have large-scale studies showing exactly what the impact of coaching is. So we have like our own internal data that we presented in American Psychiatric Association about our core coaching program and specifically around technology addiction. But a lot of this stuff, we don't really have good science. Right? We have the start of good science, but it's nowhere near as robust is what we have in the medical field. Okay, so should I quit my job if I am too kind of person? After I work harder, I get new tasks while other people are slacking since I do it.
Starting point is 00:17:59 So this is a really common problem where here I am advocating that you all work harder. And what a lot of people will say is that I work at a job where there are slackers and I work hard and this work doesn't get recognized. I've certainly worked in places like that before. And this is where there's kind of like a dual approach to this. So on the one hand, if you work extra hard consistently over time, and I'm talking about six months a year or two years. Because oftentimes what happens is our ego gets in the way. Right? So, for example, like, when you're a medical student and you're rotating somewhere, you think that the residents and interns are like, oh, they don't appreciate my hard work.
Starting point is 00:18:38 And like, this other person got honors and I only got a high pass. This is unfair. So then being an intern or a resident, you begin to realize that, oh, like, one medical student is not really aware of what the other medical student is doing. So they think that they're working hard, but they're actually slacking off based on my view. So one of the biggest challenges is that this idea that I'm working harder than my colleagues gets really tricky with ego. Because the ego will see how hard you work, but it won't see how hard other people work. A really good example of this is you look at any relationship. And you ask the person, which one of you works harder to maintain the relationship? Which one of you apologizes more?
Starting point is 00:19:19 Which one of you apologizes first on average? Which one of you does more of the chores? Most relationships, everyone will say, I do more, my partner does less. This is ego. So there's a big bias that I see a lot where someone will be like, they'll complain and they'll be like, but I did all this stuff. And this person got a better grade. That's not fair. It's like, you don't actually know what the other person did, right?
Starting point is 00:19:41 And you may not be quite as great as you think you are. So there's ego that you have to be careful about when you think I work harder than everyone else. It doesn't mean that you don't. I'm just saying that's something you need to consider before you, you know, judge someone. Second thing is when you work hard, there are two ways to work hard. So one is if you're working hard and consistently, then you need to assess whether the people that are around you appreciate that effort in some way. And hopefully they appreciate it. There are certain skills about highlighting that appreciation, making sure people recognize the work that you're putting in.
Starting point is 00:20:16 There's also a very common problem that we see a lot, which is, so, you know, we have a career coaching program where, you know, like this is a really common problem. hard work doesn't necessarily correlate with value. Just because you're working hard doesn't mean that it is useful to people. This is a big cognitive bias that people have. The harder I work, the more valuable it should be, that's not always the case. So we worked with Ethan Evans, who was like a senior VP at Amazon, ran a team of like 800 people, launched Amazon Prime Video. And Ethan was like, you know, the hard work should be in the direction of what your direct report
Starting point is 00:20:54 wants. Having a pet project that they don't care about that you work really hard on isn't necessarily great. The third thing about working hard is that I tend to work hard in ways that benefit me. So this is a pet project. So in 2015, when I was a second year resident, I started asking people about video game addiction. And I started to work on video game addiction. No one really cared. I applied for a chief resident position, didn't get it. Best thing that ever happened to me. Right? People didn't appreciate the work that I do, but I didn't care. Because this is something that I am building for its own benefit. I wrote a book in 2018 on video game addiction. A whole book. It's never seen the light of day because it's a piece of shit. Work that I did
Starting point is 00:21:35 that was extra has no external value except I learn, except I gain a competence, which has a ton of value. So it's okay to work hard. I'm a big fan of working hard. I think most people should probably be working harder. I think they should also be working smarter. The two aren't mutually exclusive. You know, people say work smarter, not harder. I don't think it's work smarter and harder. So I think when it comes to working hard, like, it can be good, but it needs to be done in the right way. So the one thing to avoid is if someone asks you to work extra hard in an area that you're not interested in, that doesn't benefit you in any way, and they don't appreciate the work that you do.
Starting point is 00:22:11 I think occasionally it's okay, right? If someone asks you for a favor, I think you can do someone a solid, help out a little bit, that's fine. And the way that I think about that, people ask me for help all the time. I'll do it. It doesn't help me, but it's fine. I'm going to make the world a better place. I don't have to get compensated for every minute of work I do. But at the same time, if they're asking a lot and then they're like, oh, yeah, like, we need you to fulfill, do these two jobs.
Starting point is 00:22:36 And over time, that doesn't change or they don't acknowledge that, then that's a problem. So I don't think it's about kindness. I think it's about really thinking about, okay, are you working hard? Is that being recognized? And are you growing in some way because of it? because it can have an additional value. Okay.

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