Huberman Lab - GUEST SERIES | Dr. Paul Conti: How to Improve Your Mental Health
Episode Date: September 13, 2023This is episode 2 of a 4-part special series on mental health with Dr. Paul Conti, M.D., a Stanford and Harvard-trained psychiatrist currently running a clinical practice, the Pacific Premiere Group. ...Dr. Conti explains specific tools for how to overcome life’s challenges using a framework of self-inquiry that explores all the key elements of self, including defense mechanisms, behaviors, self-awareness and attention. We also discuss our internal driving forces, how to align them and ultimately, how to cultivate a powerful “generative drive” of positive, aspirational pursuits. Dr. Conti also explains how to adjust your internal narratives, reduce self-limiting concepts, overcome intrusive thoughts, and how certain defense mechanisms, such as “acting out” or narcissism, show up in ourselves and others. The next episode in this special series explores how to build healthy relationships with others. For the full show notes, including articles, books, and other resources, visit hubermanlab.com. Thank you to our sponsors AG1: https://drinkag1.com/huberman BetterHelp: https://betterhelp.com/huberman Waking Up: https://wakingup.com/huberman Eight Sleep: https://eightsleep.com/huberman Momentous: https://livemomentous.com/huberman Timestamps (00:00:00) Improve Mental Health (00:02:19) Sponsors: BetterHelp & Waking Up App (00:05:26) Structure & Function of Healthy Self (00:16:25) Agency & Gratitude (00:21:14) Aggressive Drive, Pleasure Drive, Generative Drive (00:30:00) Physical & Mental Health Similarities, Verb States (00:37:05) Sponsor: AG1 (00:38:32) Lack of Motivation, Drives (00:43:06) Video Games/Social Media & Distraction, Generative Drive (00:51:46) Asking Better Questions, Psychiatric Medicine, Physical Health Parallels (00:59:10) Sponsor: Eight Sleep (01:00:30) Self-Reflection & Structure of Self “Cupboards”, Trauma & Agency (01:08:53) Feeling Stuck, Defense Mechanisms & Sublimation, Character (01:13:58) Self-Reflection & Function of Self “Cupboards”, Self-Awareness (01:19:24) Defense Mechanisms & “Acting Out” (01:26:43) Salience, Intrusive Thoughts (01:31:24) Self-Reflection, Behaviors & Strivings; Roadmap Forward (01:38:25) Internal Narratives, Childhood (01:44:44) Internal Narratives: Self-Scrutiny & Overcoming; Trauma (01:55:18) Time Required for Change, Understanding Intrusive Thoughts (02:03:13) Self-Reflection on Internal Drives; Envy (02:09:56) Generative Drive; Strong Aggressive Drive & Envy (02:21:50) High Aggressive Drive & Social Relationships, Narcissism (02:28:43) Narcissism, Destruction, Envy (02:37:18) Narcissism & Childhood, Change (02:41:26) Engaging with Narcissists, Disengagement (02:44:47) Demoralization, Learned Helplessness (02:49:34) Self-Inventory of Drives, Optimization (02:56:09) Social Media & Salience, Generative Drive (03:03:21) Rational Aspiration (03:13:16) Zero-Cost Support, YouTube Feedback, Spotify & Apple Reviews, Sponsors, Social Media, Momentous, Neural Network Newsletter Title Card Photo Credit: Mike Blabac Disclaimer
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Huberman Lab guest series where I and an expert guest discuss science and science-based tools for everyday life.
I'm Andrew Huberman and I'm a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine.
Today's episode marks the second episode in our four episode series with Dr. Paul Conti about mental health.
The first episode in the series dealt with how to understand and assess your level of mental health. Today's episode is about how to improve your mental health. The first episode in the series dealt with how to understand and assess your level of mental health.
Today's episode is about how to improve your mental health. I do want to emphasize that you do not
need to have heard or seen the first episode in order to understand or glean important information
from today's episode about how to improve your mental health. But I do encourage you to go and
listen to the first episode at some point if you have not already. Today's episode deals with several topics important to all of us, as well as protocols to improve
one's mental health.
For instance, you will learn how to guide yourself through a process of self-increase in which
you address certain key questions about your drives, your level of aggressive drive,
pleasure drive, and the so-called generative drive.
These are essential things to understand about oneself.
If you want to guide yourself toward your aspirations,
and if you want to understand how your subconscious processing
is influencing your thoughts and your behaviors
and your feelings in ways that sometimes serve your aspirations
and in other ways that can hinder your aspirations.
Dr. Conti shares with us a way of assessing
our internal narratives, as well as a way
of creating a constructive self-awareness,
and an understanding of where those narratives and that self-awareness stem from in our childhood,
so that we can navigate forward with the greatest sense of agency.
We also talk about how to move past common hindrances to improving once mental health,
such as overcoming intrusive thoughts.
And perhaps most importantly, today's episode provides information and protocols
that anyone can use to cultivate their generative drive,
which is a hallmark of mental health.
Just a reminder that Dr. Paul Conti
has generously provided a few diagrams
that we include as PDFs in the show note captions.
They are completely zero cost to access,
and they can help you understand some of the material
that was discussed in the first episode of this series,
as well as the current episode about how to improve your mental
health.
And while those simple PDF diagrams are certainly not necessary in order to understand the
material in today's discussion or in the other discussions of this series, many people
find them useful.
So I encourage you to check out those links in the show note captions.
Before we begin, I'd like to emphasize that this podcast is separate from my teaching
and research rules at Stanford.
It is, however, part of my desire and effort to bring zero cost to consumer information
about science and science-related tools to the general public.
In keeping with that theme, I'd like to thank the sponsors of today's podcast.
Our first sponsor is BetterHelp.
BetterHelp offers professional therapy with a licensed therapist carried out online.
I personally have been doing weekly therapy for more than 30 years. And while that weekly therapy was initiated, not by my
own request, it was in fact a requirement for me to remain in high school. Over time,
I really came to appreciate just how valuable doing quality therapy is. In fact, I look
at doing quality therapy much in the same way that I look at going to the gym or doing cardiovascular
training such as running as ways to enhance my physical health. I see therapy as a vital way to
enhance one's mental health. The beauty of better help is that they make it very easy to find an
excellent therapist. An excellent therapist can be defined as somebody who is going to be very
supportive of you in an objective way with whom whom you have excellent rapport with, and who can help you arrive at key insights that you wouldn't have otherwise
been able to find.
And because better help therapy is conducted entirely online, it's extremely convenient
and easy to incorporate into the rest of your life.
So if you're interested in better help, go to betterhelp.com slash huberman to get 10%
off your first month.
That's better help spelled H-E-L-P.com slash Huberman.
Today's episode is also brought to us by Waking Up.
Waking Up is a meditation app that
offers dozens of guided meditation sessions,
mindfulness trainings, yoga need your sessions, and more.
By now, there's an abundance of data showing that even short,
daily meditations can greatly improve our mood, reduce anxiety,
improve our ability to focus and can improve our memory.
And while there are many different forms of meditation, most people find it difficult
to find and stick to a meditation practice in a way that is most beneficial for them.
The waking up app makes it extremely easy to learn how to meditate and to carry out your
daily meditation practice in a way that's
going to be most effective and efficient for you.
It includes a variety of different types of meditations of different duration, as well
as things like yoga-needra, which place the brain in body into a sort of pseudo-sleep
that allows you to emerge feeling incredibly mentally refreshed.
In fact, the science around yoga-needra is really impressive showing that after a yoga-needra
session,
levels of dopamine in certain areas of the brain are enhanced by up to 60%, which places
the brain embody into a state of enhanced readiness for mental work and for physical work.
Another thing I really like about the waking up app is that it provides a 30-day introduction
course.
So for those of you that have not meditated before or getting back to a meditation practice,
that's fantastic.
Or if you're somebody who's already a skilled and regular meditator, waking up has more advanced
meditations and yoga need your sessions for you as well.
If you'd like to try the waking up app, you can go to wakingup.com slash huberman and
access a free 30 day trial.
Again, that's wakingup.com slash huberman.
And now for my discussion about mental health with Dr. Paul Conti.
Dr. Conti, welcome back.
Thank you.
In the first episode of this series, you laid out for us in a very structured way,
what true mental health looks like, essentially what we should all be aspiring to.
And you touched on these themes of agency and gratitude as verb states, really ways of being in the world
that allow everybody to have some sense of well-being,
to have some sense of themselves in a way
that is kind to themselves and to others,
and really to feel good and do good in their life.
And without question, this is what people want.
You also spelled out for us
these two pillars, the structure of self and the function of self, that consists of a
number of different things that from which guys are up, or kind of give rise to these feelings
of empowerment, humility, agency, and gratitude, and reminded us several times that when we
are challenged, when we're not doing as well as we would like,
that we need to look back to the structure of self and the function of self and ask specific questions
in order to arrive or re-arrive at the sense of agency and gratitude.
I think it would be wonderful for us if you could just recap the overall model
because it has the components
that I just mentioned, but there's some subtlety and some really key aspects of these pillars,
structure of self and function of self.
I think if people keep in mind for today's episode, which is about challenges that people
commonly face, and even if you will, phenotypes that we see commonly out there, for people
that haven't heard of phenotypes, phenotypes are the typical appearance of something.
So there is the phenotype of the anxious person, the phenotype of the person who just can't
seem to get out of a rut.
There's the phenotype of the traumatized person.
And these things play out differently in different individuals, men and women, boys and girls.
But we're going to visit many of the most common phenotypes out there.
And think about how to do better, be better, feel better
through the lens of the model that we spelled out in episode one.
And of course, if people have not seen or heard episode one,
today's discussion will still be entirely accessible to them.
So in keeping with that, if you could just give us an overview of what this structure of the healthy self looks like as a roadmap for where we're all headed today.
Thank you. Thanks very much.
We're visiting the pillars as I think the best place to start because there really are routes to understanding.
And if we understand, then we can strategize, we can make
change, right?
We can make things better.
So the first pillar of the structure of self
starts with the unconscious mind, right?
This incredibly complicated biological supercomputer
that's firing a mile a minute underneath the surface in us
and is throwing up to the surface all sorts of thoughts
and ideas and states that
then the conscious mind apprehends.
Then our awareness comes into play.
And then we have defense mechanisms that sort of rise up from the unconscious mind and they
circle and sort of gird themselves around the conscious mind, which they can do in an
unhealthy way or in a healthy way or anything in between.
And then the character structure is sort of the nest around all of that.
And it's from the character structure that we are engaging in the world in the ways
that we're engaging.
Right?
It's our active engagement with the world around us.
And the idea is that the self grows out of that.
It grows out of that nest sitting on top of the unconscious mind to the conscious mind rising above the defense mechanisms in the character structure.
And if we go back to that when we're trying to understand ourselves,
you know, we're trying to understand states of health as well as states of unhappiness
or states that aren't healthy, right?
By going back and looking at the structure, we can learn a tremendous amount.
And the other side, the other pillar is the function of self.
And it really starts with the self awareness, right?
The awareness is, hey, there is an eye, right?
I am in the world, right?
There's 24 hours in the day, we're gonna pass today,
and I'm gonna be doing one thing or another.
I'm, so I'm to some very significant extent,
deciding how am I gonna engage in the world
around me during that time, right? So on top of that are the defense mechanisms in action. So defense mechanisms remember
are unconscious. So there's a lot then going on inside of us that's determining sort of the
field set of options, right? There may be a lot of automaticity that narrows down the set of
options of what we may entertain, what we may be aware of, what we may decide,
and that could happen for better or for worse,
depending upon the health of the defense mechanisms.
But on top of that lies salient.
So the idea then we would next visit,
okay, what are we paying attention to?
What's coming from inside?
What's coming from outside?
And we have to not pay attention to many, many, many,
many things in order to pay attention to whatever our attention is
lighted on at the moment. So it's a complex process and it's worth looking at very closely if we want to understand ourselves.
So after thinking about the defense mechanisms in action, the unconscious aspects of how we're engaging with the world,
then next to consider is salience,
which is sort of, where does the mind arrive at at rest?
Where does the mind trend towards?
Is it something internal?
Is it something external?
What are all the things we're not paying attention to
in order to pay attention to something?
And is that thing healthy?
Is it not healthy?
Is it serving us well?
So there's so much to understand about salience.
And then the next step beyond that is it serving us well? So there's so much to understand about salience,
and then the next step beyond that
is understanding behavior, right?
How are we engaging with the world around us?
What are our behavioral choices?
What are our automatic behaviors?
And then sitting on top of all of that are our strivings.
So we have a sense of wanting something
in the world around us, and we're like,
what is that, and how are we trying to get to it?
And how does it make us feel?
So if we look at the 10 elements, the five under the structure of self, and the five under the function of self, then what we're really looking at is,
it's sort of like looking at 10 cabinets, right? And if we're trying to understand ourselves, whether we're trying to just generally understand ourselves, or we're trying to get it a problem, right?
Then looking in all 10 of those cabinets makes sense, right?
Some of them will be bare, meaning that they may seem to have very little to do with
the problem we're bringing.
And we kind of maintain an open mind, right?
We may be led back to that cabinet and there may be something there.
But what usually happens is if we look in all 10 places, we find a couple where there's
some rich material to explore. So the X marks the spot and then we go and we where there's some rich material to explore.
So the X marks the spot and then we go and we dig there to sort of mix metaphors.
We dig in the cabinet where we're going to find something, right?
And then it leads forward a process of understanding.
And if we're bringing those things into line where we have a healthy structure of self
and a healthy function of self and we're aware of all of this and we're working on it,
we're self aware and we're paying attention to everything built on top of that,
then what we end up with is a sense of humility because one cannot be anything but respectful,
compassionate, understanding the complexity of all of this and understanding how does it manifest
itself in us and just the very fact that we can wake our ways in the world, right? It's so, it's so impressive and in a way, I think, it brings to us a
respect, just a respect for being here, navigating the world. And I think of that respect is born
humility, the complexity of us, the fact that millions of things are going on underneath the surface,
millions of, of neurotransmission and, and a chronological function, all of this is going on underneath the surface, millions of neuro transmission and
endocrinological function. All this is going on under the surface. I'm not even
aware of it, and then it kicks up to the surface, generates a tremendous amount
of respect for the complexity, and also the diligence and perseverance it takes
us to navigate through the world. And I think built upon that understanding is a
sense of humility and a sense of empowerment, and the humility and empowerment inaction, so expressed, become agency and gratitude.
And agency and gratitude, as you said at the beginning, we're seeing as verbs,
that's how we're living life. It's through the lens, so to speak, of agency and gratitude
that we're actively living. And again, of agency and gratitude that were actively living.
And again, I would put forth that when we look at measures of human happiness,
across disciplines and across time, this is always what we see,
is some way of describing how agency and gratitude together as verbs manifest
and then create happiness. It's the state that we're seeking to be in,
because from that state of active agency and active gratitude,
we achieve what it is that I think we're really searching for.
And, you know, there are, by infinite words,
throughout human history, to describe what that is,
we might choose to use words like,
peacefulness, right?
A sense of peace, a sense of contentment,
being delighted by things, like just being
amazed and impressed by things in the world around us.
This is a state that we are striving for.
I think when people talk about happiness and what we're really trying to get to, it's
this.
But it's not that these things are passive.
These things are coming from the active agency, the active gratitude, and they're
then interacting with a generative drive within us. We have an aggressive drive, we have a
pleasure drive. Like this has been thought about now for a long, long time within mental
health and validated in a lot of ways, but what hasn't been validated is that they're
the only things, right? We see human beings striving. We see human beings wanting better for themselves
and for the world around them.
We see acts of kindness that seem to be rooted
to nothing other than the act of kindness.
We have within us a drive to know,
to understand, to learn, to make better.
And that has been described as many, many things
across human history, but I think the words we might choose
are a generative drive, a drive to create and to make better.
And it's the generative drive as something active within us, right, that is then allying
with agency and gratitude, right, the active ways in which we express ourselves.
And then that all together brings us the peace, the contentment, the sense of
delight. Sometimes that may exist in us in a state of rest, right? But very often it's
existing in us in a state of activity, right? And that's why people find, you know, the
quote unquote happiness, like what people are seeking, not just in, you know, meditation.
Sometimes we can find it there, but people also find it in action, right?
They find it in doing that thing that they love to do or taking care of someone and learning
something. So when we look at all of this, we can then have a route of understanding what
is going on inside of us and how we can make the changes that let us be in this state,
which is really the state that we are seeking.
I really appreciate that you highlight that agency and gratitude are verb states
from which peace, contentment, and delight emerge.
And also the way that you explain the generative drive,
that is distinct from aggressive drives and pleasure drives that exist in all of us. You know, I'm smiling because a number of examples of peace contentment and delight while in action come to mind.
I mean, for me, podcasting and in particular, preparing for a podcast,
I kind of mind the literature and figure out, you know, where the gems reside and where the confusion could
could emerge and all of that brings about such peace
contentment and delight for me. But it's anything but passive. It's likewise, yesterday
had the experience of running into a puppy. It's been well since I've owned a dog and
dogs are delightful puppies are particularly delightful. I had the experience of seeing you
like that when you ran into the puppy. You know, and you did. And I'm still buzzing from that short interaction
with the puppy downstairs, the Wameran or puppy.
It just that, I don't know why,
but I just delight in animals of most all kinds,
not a fan of reptile, sorry reptile fans, so much.
But I just drive so much energy from it
and it felt like life energy in the way
that animal is sort of
intentionally scattered as amusing to me as compared to the dog that he will eventually be, which is going to be more linear in his thinking.
Like it encapsulates so much of the other things I love like brain development, etc.
Anyway, I highlight those examples because
there's nothing passive about it. It's pure delight and joy for me
and it intersects with other delights and joys.
And I think that as you describe agency and gratitude, peace, contentment, and delight
in these generative forces, as well as other forces that exist in us, I think it's really
critical that people understand that these are not states that you sit down and place yourself into,
although perhaps one could through reflection or meditation
or waking up from a really great night's sleep,
things of that sort, but that these are things
that we can find ourselves awash in
if we are doing the right things.
And those things can oftentimes be very challenging.
So assuming I understand the way the model is spelled out correctly,
I'm more and more delighted at the fact that this is not just accessible in one domain,
but is accessible in many, many different domains for everybody. This is not something unique to my
experience, even though I give examples from my own life, but that we really all do have access to this if we're looking in those
cupboards, those ten cupboards and asking the right questions. And to maybe come and even a little
further on the experience of you and the dog, right? So it was an experience of delight, right?
You enjoyed it and brought a sense of peace and contentment, like all of that happens, right? And you enjoyed it and brought a sense of peace
and contentment, like all of that happens, right?
And think about what that's linked to, like,
I believe there's a strong sense of agency in you
that you are enacting, there's a strong gratitude in you
that you're enacting, you're handling your life in a way
and also for all of us, good things always come
with good fortune, but it comes with our strivings
and our achievements that you're in a place to delight in that.
If you're unhappy, I don't like what I'm doing, I'm angry, I'm frustrated, then there's
no room in you to find the delight.
And the delight that you find is also very much linked to the generative drive.
It makes me think of how you loved and nurtured Cacello.
So you have it in you to love and nurture a dog.
And you have done that in a really wonderful way.
And that generative drive is part and parcel of the delight you feel
when you see a dog because you love dogs and you think about nurturing.
And it all comes together.
The agency and the gratitude expressed as verbs
puts you in a position to have that sense of delight,
which is so intertwined with your generative drive
with the sense of caretaking,
a sense of creating the beyond self,
because although you enjoyed and loved Kasello,
you enjoyed and loved his happiness, right?
So it all comes together and I think it's interesting
because in some ways it's a simple example,
but like that's life.
You know, life has its big example, but like that's life.
Life has its big moments, but so much of our lives are at the smaller moments that link
together.
And I think that smaller moment becomes a big example.
Well, I appreciate that you mentioned Costello for listeners of this podcast that have
tuned into early episodes.
Costello was the source of the background snoring.
For those of you that haven and you can go check, he was a 90 pound English bulldog master who had many skills, the best
of which was snoring. So in addition to the generative drive, which is something that we
certainly want to talk more about today, you mentioned these other drives, aggressive
drives and pleasure drives. And much of what we're talking
about today is going to be where people can go wrong or where people struggle. We are
also, of course, going to go deeply into where people succeed. And in particular, where
people can ask questions of themselves, in particular, what is working for them and why,
as a route to understanding how to sift through those
cupboards and understand what's not working and why,
and come up with real actionable answers
and then the ability to move forward.
So if you would, could you tell us a little bit more
about drives generally?
Like, you know, when I hear drives,
I can't help as a neuroscientist,
but default to, okay, the dopamine circuit or the, the, the, the, the endogenous opioid
circuit or the, uh, serotonergic circuit, but, you know, how do you conceptualize drives within us?
And, and then perhaps you could tell us what the nature of aggressive drives and pleasure drives
what the nature of aggressive drives and pleasure drives and generative drives. So the concept of a drive, the definition of a drive, is something that's intrinsic to humans.
So we could look at it as a motivation.
I mean, we don't just lie on the ground and do nothing until we passively die. So something is going on inside of us,
that is driving us to do something other than that.
And historically, the thinking in the field,
derising from early psychodynamic principles,
the theory in the field that has really dominated the field
either directly or indirectly in so many ways,
has been that there are two drives within us,
that there's aggression and pleasure.
Again, these are just words.
We can apply many, many words,
which is why of course we want to define what that means.
Aggression, even though we're using that word for it,
because the word for it is commonly used.
But it means sort of forward active engagement.
So a good, healthy amount of aggression
using that word for the drive would be a strong sense of agency.
So too little aggression can be a problem.
Then the person isn't bringing themselves to bear.
So there's too little in the way of self-determination, forward movement, empowerment, agency, right?
And in the same way, too much of this drive becomes actual aggression.
So the idea that I want more, and if I can't get it in certain ways, I'll just take it,
right?
So it starts to become what we more map to the word aggression,
which would be something negative in most cases,
like a desire or a tendency to harm.
Is that...
Sure, as aggressive drives get higher,
which you see why they're in us,
because let's say we're defending ourselves,
or you're defending a family member, right,
or like an entire family, right?
Then it makes sense to have high levels of aggression if like your family is threatened,
right?
So those drives are in us with, potentially, those high levels for a reason, but we certainly
access very high levels of aggression without the indication of preservation of life or
preservation of safety. So the thought is that's a drive in us.
And that gets us up and off the ground,
so to speak, right?
And that the other drive then is pleasure,
which again doesn't just mean that we all want to be
hedonist, right?
So pleasure could be even the pleasure of relief and safety,
like we're all back in the cave together,
and we roll the stone in front of the door.
Ah, we're safe, you know?
Throughout human development,
a pleasure comes in a lot of ways.
It can come through the pleasure of food
or other people, you know, friendship, romance, sex.
There are a lot of ways we can achieve pleasure.
It can be relief of things that are unpleasant,
you know, relief of pain,
but that there's a drive towards this in humans which again really does make
sense and and too little of it again can be problematic because the person then isn't
motivated to sort of seek things because they're not anticipating or don't receive gratification and too much of a drive for pleasure can also
create problems. So so we can kind of see how these two drives, like, okay, they get us up and off the ground,
so to speak. But the question is, do they explain everything? And it's a very important question
because if they explain everything, then there's not really, there's not room for
There's not really, there's not room for behaviors and choices that are beyond the self, right? There's not an explanation for the person who, I'll give you an example of a person I've
taken care of who's, this is a very strong swimmer, you know, knows how to swim, swim
throughout his life, who was in a place, I saw video of it where there had been a hurricane and the waves were so frightening.
You know, they were just huge, this huge surf.
And there were people who had gotten dragged out.
And you just see him, he runs into the water, right?
He runs in and he goes and he was really at risk.
He needs to be saved himself, but he saved them.
And I do not believe you can explain that
through these drives.
I don't think you can say, well, that was,
he was aggressive.
He wanted to go and do something that was imposing himself
on the world, or he got pleasure in thinking,
ah, I'm strong enough to go do this.
I mean, I think we're really gyrating.
We're contorting ourselves, right? In order to explain it that way, if we think there's a goodness in that man's heart.
Like, I know there's a goodness in that man's heart. I know him, right? And that goodness
sees him in the moment and, you know, he knows that maybe he can save them, maybe he can,
he's not sure, but maybe he can. So next thing, you know, he's in the water. And I think
things like the love and nurturing of other people,
of children, love and nurturing of animals, of plants.
There are things inside of us that we can't explain
with those two drives.
And I think they have led to a very,
sort of darker way of just conceiving of humans.
I think it's a reason why now, you look at us
in the modern day and age, we
come at humans through the lens of pathology, right?
I mean, there's a very, very thick book that if a person is assessing another person, you
know, is thinking about like, okay, what numbers in that book apply, right?
Which is like, that's not the way to go about understanding humans.
And I think if we just think there are those two drives, we're not doing justice to humans, right? One, I think it's not true. I think it's evident that it's not true.
And then if we're framing it in a way that's not true, we are not appropriately respectful
of humans. And if we come from what I believe to be the truth, that there is a generative
drive in us, a drive for the beyond self, a drive to make things better, whether it has anything really directly to do with me or not.
And as with the other drives, there can be more or less in people, the combination of nature and nurture.
You know what? What genetically is in a predisposition based upon the genetic lineage that comes down to us and the recombination.
And now we're a unique person with a unique set of drives, but they are impacted by the genetics, and then they're impacted by life experience, so more strongly
formative life experience, right? So the younger the person, the deeper the impact of events,
they have nurturing versus abuse, right, on the array, on the relative weighting of drives
array on the relative weighting of drives within people. But ultimately, we get to these three drives and how they're functioning in a person being a way of understanding and
assessing how healthy or not healthy the person is. And then we look back to those 10
cupboards for the answers, for finding things that we don't like, those drives are at a balance,
and here the problems they're causing.
So very, very concrete issues of problems in people's lives.
We can look and see, where is that out of balance?
And if it's out of balance,
there's something in those pillars
that are not in the right place.
We can then go back and look in all those cupboards
for like, oh, where do we dig to find the answer? We learn things. We bring things more into balance. So the
pillars are in a healthier place. And then what sits on top of it, as you use word, geyser,
the geyser that then comes up and floats everything on top of it can do that in a healthy way.
Yeah. During episode one, we touched on some of the similarities between understanding
the self and building towards a healthiest version of self, where agency and gratitude
are the states that are being expressed.
And one of the themes there was this idea, you know, people perhaps want to be healthy
so that they live a long time, but presumably they also want to be healthy
so that they can walk up flights of stairs, pick up their kids, move objects, not get injured,
perhaps even do sport, or, and of course some people want to be healthy for aesthetic reasons as well.
And if we were having a discussion about physical health, we could address the major pillars there,
which were items within the cover.
Like, most people want some ability
to have endurance or stamina to walk some distance,
or maybe even run some distance.
As I mentioned before, walk up a flight of stairs,
have some strength, some degree of flexibility,
certainly some mobility, maybe even dynamic mobility, et cetera.
And in order to address those or improve upon those,
they could look in those covers
and say, well, how much running, swimming, long form cardiovascular exercise am I doing
per week?
How many steps am I taking per day?
How many times a week do I lift objects that are slightly heavier than is comfortable for
me to lift, et cetera?
It's very tangible, very concrete.
Here you're making the psyche and the self and mental health
very much concrete in some of the same way,
saying there are 10 cupboards that one can look in.
And these drives, as you refer to them as
generative drive, aggressive drive, and pleasure drive,
you'll probably tell us in a few minutes,
can be expressed to varying degrees in different people and how that shows up and what that looks like.
And I just want to frame this in people's minds as very similar to addressing whether or not, okay, if somebody can run very long distances, but they're always a, you know,
having aches and pains or they they feel weak or they are weak.
There are good reasons for that. They're overemphasizing one form of
exercise. The expression is more along the lines of endurance and stamina and not strength. Or vice versa, the powerlifter
who can lift 750 pounds from the floor and a deadlift, but walks up two flights of stairs and is
belly breathing and has to stop at the top of the stairs. It's obvious in the physical realm. It's slightly more cryptic or more cryptic in the psychological realm, but here it's becoming
concrete for us.
So I think it's very interesting and very ironic, right?
So the field that I'm in, the field of psychiatry has historically wanted to be sort of part
of the rest of medicine or like the rest of medicine.
And what I believe it's ended up doing
is glorifying a taxonomy, right?
Glorifying a category mechanism
of understanding human beings.
So in the way that, if I'm a practicing general medicine,
and you come in and you're congested,
and I determine like, oh, you have bacterial sinusitis, right?
So now I've made a diagnosis
and now I know what I'm gonna do about that, right?
So okay, I'm gonna prescribe an antibiotic.
Now the thought comes in of like what antibiotic, right?
But the identified sinusitis,
now you need an antibiotic,
is like kind of how medicine works, right?
So the thought was psychiatry
is gonna categorize everything, right?
So we'd say, okay, I've listened to you like,
ah, I know your number or your numbers, right?
And then once I've given you the numbers,
now I know what to do.
I prescribe this medicine, that medicine,
these many sessions of a certain kind of psychotherapy.
And like, that doesn't work, right?
It doesn't work in mental health.
It may, I mean, it's not that it never works.
But if you're going to try and understand people, like, it's different, a problem of self.
Like, if I have a lack of confidence in one area of life and not in others, right, that's
a significant issue.
It is not like bacterial sinusitis where then, you know, okay, arrow goes to prescribe
antibiotic. And I think what is ironic is that
this route of approach, right, actually does bring psychiatry, mental health,
into line with the rest of medicine, right, which is why you can make that parallel. And,
you know, it fits well, right, when you're making the parallel to physical health.
And I want to be healthy.
Okay, what are the components of that?
What am I doing to achieve that?
If something's not the way I want it,
let me go back and look at those components.
I mean, it may be because it's more tangible,
it's sort of essentially easier to comprehend.
It's more concrete.
But in a sense, see, is cryptic, just less obvious,
right? But if we go and we look at it, and we say, oh, like that really makes sense, right? And,
and in a sense, it makes sense that it makes sense, right? If there's a mechanism of understanding
that applies to lots and lots of things that are more concrete, why would a similar kind of mechanism,
like understand what the components are, understand what's built on top of them,
like this, I believe, is how psychiatry
actually fits with the rest of medicine,
not by glorifying a taxonomy,
but by coming through the lens of understanding.
Yeah, I couldn't agree more,
and I think that what's so reassuring is that
both in terms of creating physical health across
the various domains of, you know, heart health, lung health, endurance, strength, etc., cognitive
health, as well as mental health is verbs.
You know, it comes back to action items that we each and all should engage in in order to
arrive at the states and, you know, ways of being that we all want to be in right we want to feel healthy look healthy
you know etc we want to be happy right I know very few people who don't want to be happy I mean
certainly there are people who give up but we'll talk about that today and and routes out of that
but at the end of the day it's all about looking in those bins, asking specific questions, and then moving forward in specific actions
to get to the place of empowerment, humility, agency gratitude,
peace, contentment, delight, et cetera, as opposed to simply using words
and understanding to arrive at insight and then stopping there
and expecting everything to change.
And I think that's where a lot of people are confused
about psychology, therapy, and psychiatry.
And as you mentioned, psychiatry has its own shadows,
if you will, within it, where the use of drugs,
it certainly can be very useful, even life-saving.
Often times is seen as a fix all that somehow could reorder everything
within the cupboards and make the recipe just right when in fact, so we'll talk about
today that is generally not the best route. But again, with the understanding that drugs
can be very powerful tools.
They can say a rule.
Yeah.
Right, but it's important we understand what role is appropriate for them, and that's
where we often go straight.
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what action items to take.
I'd like to ask you about some of the things that I observe in the world and hear a lot
about in particular from the audience of this podcast.
It's obvious to me that people vary in terms of their level of aggressive drive, pleasure
drive, and presumably generative drive as well.
One common question is how do I become more motivated?
And of course that opens up a bunch of other questions like are people afraid of failure?
And that's why they're not motivated or people afraid of success.
So whether or not motivated is there some underlying childhood trauma or unconscious process
that's driving that fear and so on.
But if we were to take the psychiatrist perspective, your perspective, if someone comes to you and
says, you know, I just don't really feel like trying.
It's, you know, school's hard, school loans are, you know,
are excessive, which is true, by the way. You know, it's not even clear that with a degree,
I can do much, you know, or I had a series of failures in the work domain or in the relationship
domain, and they're just feeling way down as if it's not worth trying. You know, what does that tell
you in terms of where to look? And what does that tell you in terms of where to look?
And what does that tell you in terms of their drives?
I mean, do we conclude something
about their innate level of aggressive drive
or their pleasure drive or their generative drive?
I mean, I think there are many such people out there
and then we'll consider some other kind of phenotypic examples.
So it's a great example because
any good clinician could hear that story and have thoughts about it that could and would hopefully be helpful without necessarily referring to drives.
I think you can anchor any set of assessments, any evaluation, any attempted understanding
two drives, but it doesn't have to be that way.
So for example, you might ask that person more questions about what they're doing, how
they spend their time, because you're telling me about someone who's not getting enjoyment
or gratification out of anything.
That then becomes of interest to me, right?
Is there something this person does enjoy, right? Something they'd rather be doing. Like, did they
go to college and take on a bunch of loans because they thought that was better,
because they thought they were going to do something that now they actually don't want to do, right?
Or that opportunity isn't there. Another frustrated. Like, what is inside this person that might seem different than that?
And again, the answers could be complicated.
It could be maybe that person enjoys what they're doing,
but the cost of living where they are is so high
that they still feel miserable.
There's a sense of privation.
And then that gets back mapped to, like,
I don't get any pleasure out of anything, right?
So the answer could be as simple as you strategize with the person of, for example, does a person
like that move, move to a different area.
So there's so many ways of looking at this and so many ways of understanding this, but
you're describing someone to me who is kind of really complaining that nothing is feeling
good, nothing's providing a sense of enjoyment
or of pleasure, right? So I would probably be interested in that first and think maybe the pleasure
drive is higher than what's being fulfilled, right? Maybe the pleasure drive is low and that's an
issue in and of itself, we sort of learn those things, right? Maybe the aggressive drive is low and
you know, if that person just put a little more energy into it,
like they could be in a different place, right?
So you're trying to help the person understand themselves
so that you can make change.
And again, that understanding doesn't have to be anchored
to the drives, but I do believe the drives
are at the root of all understanding.
Because if you sit with that person and you talk to that person,
then you're going to be able to understand what is out of balance, right?
Either in the actual array of the drives or in how they're being experienced.
Because again, if you have a high pleasure drive, for example, and it's not
gratified, right? Like that represents a problem.
What about people who can experience some pleasure or can keep busy, say, for instance,
on social media or playing video games, and I should also say, perhaps it's bringing them to a
place of peace, contentment, and delight. But in some sense, it's not really generative, right?
You know, I'm not going to cast judgment
and say that video games and social media
are all a waste of time.
I mean, I'm on social media trying to provide value
to people and learnings.
And I drive value and learnings from other accounts as well.
But you know, there are these milestones,
if you will, in life.
I mean, not that everyone has to go to college
and get married and have a family,
and there are a lot of different paths through life
that I would consider successful.
But in some sense, there are milestones.
Like we want to move forward.
There's this phenomenon nowadays
of a lot of young people, so-called failure to launch.
Like they're not leaving home,
or they're not finding a vocation.
They're not feeling as if they're good at anything
or they have the sense that unless you're going to be a
top one percent in something it's not worth trying,
but they can still find what most people
describe as pleasures, like they enjoy food,
maybe a little too much.
They enjoy alcohol, maybe a little too much.
They enjoy social media or video games, maybe a little too much.
I say a little too much because it's providing more or less a sink or a reservoir for their
aggressive and pleasure drives that's not moving them forward in the standard milestones
of life.
I hear about that a lot.
I see that a lot. I see that a lot.
So it's a slightly more complex phenotype than described before is just simply the A motivated
or non-motivated person.
But what do you think of that of the phenotype I just described?
Because we're unique, each person is unique, or the we fit categories.
So there are categories, a person there could fit
that could be different for what I'm saying.
But I think most people just say on balance,
what is most prominent?
I mean, what is most prominent in that situation
is there's something out of balance in the generative drive, right?
And what you see a lot of times is the person is a generative drive in them that's higher
than their ability to realize that drive.
The generative drive then is frustrated.
So I'll give an example.
And it's a real true story of a person who had worked very, very hard, gone to school
for a long time, and it achieved a very high-paying job.
And that was the goal, right?
It's a prestigious job, it's a high-paying job,
and the person for a while was doing quite well at it.
And you know, things went relatively rapidly
in a negative direction,
so maybe for a little while the person's doing, okay,
then the person becomes very negligent of themselves and their environment when they're
not at the job.
So the houses of mess, things are dirty, the person is wasting time with things.
So this is a person who enjoys, it wasn't exactly video games.
I was like, let's say it could have been, right?
Well, it enjoys them to a certain degree and can really gain pleasure and feel good about
the time spent, right? But start spending too much time, right? Now, what was pleasurable starts
becoming a distraction mechanism, right? And then what that transition to was overuse of alcohol,
right? So now you have either something that is actually destructive and was negative to job
performance, right, towards the person.
This wasn't a person who was drinking a lot before, and this is a person who was miserable
when they were drinking, or they were sort of wasting their time.
And we're aware of all of this.
Well, there's a very clear problem, which is that that person had no interest in what
they were doing. None whatsoever.
It felt like the majority of waking hours were spent
in an automaton-like way,
but being awake and aware of the tedium
of it, the frustration of it.
The professional side.
So they essentially had very little intrinsic curiosity
or desire to do the job that they were successfully doing.
Right.
Which comes out only after exploration because it seems like what's going on with this person?
The person has a good job and their life was going really, really well and they're doing
well financially and, you know, is this person trying to now, you know, overly indulge themselves,
right?
Because that's why they're drinking what's going on, right?
And what you feel is that this person has a strong, generative drive. And it was it met one little bit by
what he was doing, which was creating such frustration inside that the person was either
taking himself online or doing something that was punitive and self-injurious. And like,
this is a real story. The person exchanged that job for a job that paid a tenth of what the job they had paid.
And the change in the person's life was amazing.
Like I didn't know this guy could smile, right?
He became happy.
He loved what he was doing.
He sold the larger house, bought a smaller house, kept it beautifully.
Like he was happy, right?
That's what he needed to be happy because then the generative drive in him, he loved what he was doing, gets enacted, it gets
expressed, and then other things can come then into line. He's not being over aggressive
towards himself and drinking too much because he's saying, oh, to help with you, to the world
around him and to himself. He's not taking something that serves a purpose in his life.
Again, if the example had been video games
it would be like, yeah, great, you enjoy doing that X amount of time and like go do that and get gratification
from it as opposed to then over relying on it and then it's not providing gratification, it becomes a distraction.
So those things came back into balance in his life, but there had to be the understanding.
And I think there's a lot of that in people who have a generative drive in them
that they feel is frustrated by a world around them
that isn't cooperating.
Now, do I think we can understand that
and change that in the vast majority of people
who are in that place?
Yes, but it has to be looked at first, right?
Because when it's not always that,
it's just that a lot of the time, right?
So it has to be understood,
what is it in that person?
And then how do you go back to those pillars
and look at what's going on that the person is in that place?
Because the world can bring us a lot of difficulties, right?
And that person who now is saddled with a lot more loans
than they expect.
I have tremendous compassion for that and sympathy for that.
That's real, right?
So people can be up against a lot of things
and that's just one of them, right?
But it doesn't mean that life can't be okay, right?
It doesn't mean that.
But the person has to feel that there's some way,
they have to understand enough about themselves.
It's okay, this is what this is.
And I kind of see what this is and why and how I'm here.
And from there, I can start to plot a route to something that is better because yes, we have our difficulties and we
can have a lot of them, right?
But it's for the vast majority of us, it's not like they're not surmountable.
We have to just understand them.
And let's say if that person goes and so I'm going to get some help and they go and someone
says, okay, you get 10 sessions of cognitive behavioral therapy.
And you're trying to, like, how can that person think differently
then they'll feel differently?
And look, cognitive behavioral therapy has its place.
But it's not going to solve that.
Like that person needs to understand something about themselves,
not redirect their thoughts to better places.
So if the person gets a reflex, because that reflex works well
for the system, it reflux works well for the system, right?
It reflux works well for the system that's treating that person, for the medical system,
the insurance system, that person isn't helped one bit, right?
And maybe a medicine can help, right?
Maybe a medicine helps to just take down the anxiety and the tension in the person.
Then the person can sort of think more about it.
And truly, medicine did help this person because the idea of leaving the job, I'm leaving the prestige, I'm leaving the money, is that okay to do? Like, it generated a
lot of anxiety, and it helped to kind of bring the temperature down a little bit of that
so that he could think about it and engage in therapy, ultimately navigate to where he
wanted to be, then we could back away from the medicine. So, like, medicine has a role.
But if he just got medicine, I mean, what are the possibilities? What are the odds of that helping?
Like zero, right?
Because it's not going to make the answers.
Unless somehow the person feels a little bit better and figures it out on their own, it's
not how it works, right?
So medicine has its place, but a kind of therapy that recognizes the limitations of medicine
in most situations and is designed to really help the person understand.
Like, that's what we need.
Well, the example you gave is a spectacular one because as you mentioned, medication had its place,
perhaps even redirection of thought in some sense had its place because as I recall,
under the pillar of function of self, one of the key items is salience,
you know, what we pay attention to internally
or externally, what our internal narratives are.
But in staying with the example of this individual, again, as a phenotypic example for everybody
to learn something from, the asking of better questions about oneself is really what leads
to the understanding.
So, like, better forms of inquiry.
To me, these are the better forms of inquiry.
Better questions are really the cardiovascular exercise, the strength training,
the flexibility training, the mobility training, coordination, training of physical health just translate
to mental health.
It's so interesting, right?
Because think about it, in the example I gave, both the therapy part, through the system,
the CBT, had a place, right?
And the medicine part also had a place.
So both of those things have their role, but if we build the whole story of like this is what this is and this is how you're going to be helped around those things.
We don't help that person at all. In fact, we ultimately, if you take on balance, you take all comers, we end up doing harm.
Well, in some ways, if we stay with the analogy of physical health, it would be like the person who wants to get in shape and then they get a, I'm not picking on Peloton as a brand,
but it's just a stationary bike.
And they pedal every morning and they lose weight,
their blood pressure goes down, they're doing better.
But then at some point, if we know with certainty
that if you just do the same form of exercise over and over again,
like sooner or later you're gonna get overuse injuries.
So then there's like the lower back piece
and another piece and you become out of balance.
So there's just, but I guess this is stealing from the Lance Armstrong book, but it's not about the bike, right?
I mean, it's not about the bike, it's about the elevation of heart rate, it's about the,
whatever other healthy activities go along with exercising first thing in the morning,
and all the things that you're not doing as a consequence of exercising in the morning.
So, it seems to me that these better lines of inquiry as the path to
better mental health, a better life
that sit under these pillars of structure or cell function or cell are really the key.
In this example, the parallel that you made is even more dramatic.
It wouldn't be the stationary bike, because the stationary bike is achieving
a lot of ends. It would be more like telling the person, you should walk more briskly when
you're going upstairs. That's a good idea, but that's not going to make the change. The
idea that some CBT, some medicine, makes sense, it's more like that. It's not that walking
more briskly up the stairs isn't a good thing.
It's that we can't build a story around your whole health is going to change based upon
that.
And then that's a problem, then.
If the person thinks, just walk more briskly up the stairs and you'll be healthier, because
when it doesn't work, now they've failed, right?
And this gets used a lot in mental health.
That person failed this therapy, failed that medicine, right? And this gets used a lot in mental. That person failed this therapy, failed that medicine, right? And I think it's so also ironic because that's often what the person
internalizes. Well, they failed because we set them up 100% for failure, right? Because
we took things that have their role, at least potentially have their role, and we built the whole story around them
because that story is convenient for the systems
that are providing the care.
It's convenient for the healthcare systems,
it's convenient for the insurers.
CBT package is very nicely,
and you could see how, you know, if you start changing thoughts
and how they make you feel like, you know,
you can get some movement on the surface, even if there's no movement underneath, right?
And again, I'm not saying CBT is bad, but to see it as the whole answer guarantees failure
in so many situations.
Same thing with the medicine.
If you build the whole story just because it's convenient and by and large, medicines
are cheaper than people, right?
So you can prescribe
medicines very reflexively psychiatrists with 15 minutes with a patient that they can't then see
back for a couple of months like how does that go well the answer is it only goes well the way a
broken clock is right a couple of times you know twice a twice a day right I mean sometimes it goes
well or just somehow it works out and that that person can do a little bit of therapy
in 15 minutes and choose the right medicines.
But by and large, we do those things
because they're convenient for the systems,
even though that's why people don't get better.
Like, we think they would.
That's why they stay in systems.
That's why they come in and out of emergency rooms.
That's why they're not able to stop the drugs
that end up only being stopped when the person dies. Like, this happens all the time and we don't stop it
because we're coming from a perspective that is so limited. That's not saying, let's take a step
back and look, can we really like help someone? Can we really help that person understand? Can we help
that person make change? Which ultimately would be, of course,
so much better for the person
and so much better for society.
But it's also better if we just look
at bottom line dollars and cents, right?
Because the short-term view of
it is cheaper today to have a psychiatrist
at a 15-minute appointment,
reflexively prescribe a medicine,
that is cheaper today.
Is that cheaper across time? When that person is utilizing more resources,
or they're in and out of emergency rooms, it's so short-sighted
with which fits with many ways in how our society works, right?
That we want gratification, and we want gratification rapidly.
That's why a person would accept that their problems could be changed by a medicine, right?
We're kind of conditioned that way.
Well, and then of course there's the cost we don't see,
which is that person doesn't get the opportunity
to express their generative drive.
And so the consequence of that is incalculable.
Right.
Yes.
And if we take a step back and we look at that,
I think that what we will see is that we have...
It's not quite painted ourselves into a corner,
but it's like, you
know, the idea that if there's a beautiful tapestry that's the size of the wall, right,
that you can see that only standing back from it, right?
I mean, this goes back, you know, I think a couple thousand years, right?
This sort of thought and idea, but if you come up too close to it, then you can't see
what it means anymore.
And we're up so close to it that we're thinking, well, okay, how could one parameter change
and, you know, can this person get a 15 minute visit sooner rather than later, or how about
this medicine instead of that?
And then it's like our noses are right up against the tapestry and we don't see that we're
not doing right by individual people a lot of the time.
And we're not doing right by society, which then if you stop and think
about it, we're not doing right by us.
Is any one of us could be in that position and many of us have been in that position, being
on the other side of things and really needing help and needing to understand.
So any of us can be there.
So if we're failing a lot of individual people and we're failing the society, it doesn't
matter who we are listening to this, like ultimately we're failing ourselves.
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Let's therefore talk about what does work.
And again, placing on the shelf,
the fact that medications can help
and CBT, cognitive behavioral therapy can't help,
but they are just, but two components
of a much larger picture.
The map that we describe briefly at the beginning of today's episode and that is,
by the way, available as a downloadable PDF in the show note captions. I have people
want to look at it visually, and that was described in a lot of detail in episode one, which I hope
people will take the time to listen to, because it's so rich with depth of understanding, and I'm certain everyone will learn a ton about themselves and others,
simply by listening to your words, absolutely certain of that.
That map provides essentially a description of the bins, the cupboards to look in, to
arrive at better answers, and even the sorts of questions that one might ask.
If we could just talk about that in the context of the example that you gave of this person
who made this really incredible choice to move away from this higher-paying job,
you know, they were overindulging in certain maladaptive behaviors.
And again, we will use this example, but this example is about one of
infinite number of examples that we could use of a person who's in a struggle.
They're doing something that's not working for them, and they're also not doing things that
they know they ought to be doing. This is important for people to understand, because
they're going to be people out there that are thinking, oh, like this poor guy,
he's making tons of money, poor him, you know,
but, you know, he was experiencing deep,
he was a lack of satisfaction.
So it could have been the reverse example,
like the person isn't in a job that brings about enough wealth
for them to thrive, right?
Cause there are financial realities to life.
So it's just one example, right?
But it's a good one, I think because the person left the money, right? So it's like, what would make you leave that, right? And it's like, well, right? Right. But it's a good one, I think, because the person left the money, right?
So it's like, what would make you leave that, right?
And it's, what would make you leave that is if you're miserable in the situation with
that and you're happy in the situation without it.
Right.
So it's about leaving misery and finding happiness.
So if you'd be willing to share with us a little bit of your mindset during those sessions,
meaning the sorts of questions you asked
him about the structure of his self or to reveal the structure of his self and the function
of his self that allowed the both of you to eventually set him down this far better
course.
You know, what's better than moving away from frustration and overindulgence and maladaptive
behavior to deep satisfaction, peace, contentment, and delight and to become a generative human
being.
So we can look in each of those 10 cabinets. So let's say we look in the unconscious mind cabinet.
There's not much there. When the person was growing up, it was very clear that having more money and
having a job that impressed people was an important thing. He internalizes some of it. So some of
it's unconscious, but by and large, he's aware of it. And that was real to you how he, you know, you
would ask him a question about, you know, like tell me about your upbringing.
And he would say, yeah, like, you know, money was important in my family, but
we always felt like we had, you know, enough that he wasn't super wealthy,
but it had enough. And so when you say there wasn't a lot there, do you mean that
there was no kind of like X marks the spot or like like blinking red light like whoa there's something really in his unconscious mind that's in his way?
Is it do I have that right? Well more because it was conscious right so so he was aware that it was
very much like beat into him right like this is the only way to be okay right is to have a prestigious
job that makes a lot of money right but he's aware's aware of it. If he weren't aware of it,
we have to bring that to light, right?
But he was a whizel,
look, it has a big impact on me.
It makes it hard to step away.
Like, I know I don't really care that much about the money,
but I also kind of do, you know?
So he's a money...
I would say, money can't buy happiness,
but it certainly can buffer certain stressors in life.
I mean, nobody,
you know, sometimes you hear people
who have a lot of money saying,
like, money can't buy happiness, because you know, there's a lot of money saying, like, money can't buy happiness because, you know,
there's a lot of miserable rich people, but it's like, you know,
it's very different to have a two-night nurses to take care of a baby
than to be the person who has to stay up all night taking care of her kid.
Especially, or a single mother versus a mother that has a partner
who's willing to pitch in.
You know, you just can't compare.
And while that's absolutely true, in this case, we're just looking at money as money,
as an endpoint, the idea that no matter what,
how secure and safe is more money better.
And he had an intrinsic overvalue of that.
So it made it harder to step away from it
because he was overvaluing it.
He knew he was overvaluing it just in and of itself,
not even for what it gets you, but for the psychologicalvaluing it. He knew he was overvaluing it just in and of itself, not even for what it gets you, right?
But for the psychological meaning of it, right?
Then we look at his defensive structures.
If we look in that cupboard,
you see that they've really shifted, right?
They shifted from healthy places.
Now they're sort of twisted and distorted,
and he's doing a lot of denial,
a lot of avoidance, a lot of rationalization, right?
There's, he's enacting a lot of aggression, a lot of avoidance, a lot of rationalization, right?
There's, he's enacting a lot of aggression towards himself.
And he's, he's, he's doing a lot of projecting, right?
He's, he's harming himself with the alcohol.
He's punishing himself like, so his defensive structure, it can be healthy.
We know that because it was healthier, right?
But then we see that it is twisted.
So we learn a lot from that, right?
A lot is conscious in this person. The defensive structure can be healthy that it is twisted. So we learn a lot from that, right? A lot is conscious in this person.
The defensive structure can be healthy because it was healthy.
But eventually it was healthy.
Well, it was healthy before.
I see.
It was healthy before.
So you know that it can be healthy again, right?
He has it in him to have healthy defenses.
They just started getting away from him as he felt less and less satisfied with his job
and more and more angry with himself and more and more miserable.
This is a really key point for me
and everyone else to understand.
Throughout the years of high school
and college and friends and things of that sort,
I would hear this, like, I used to be really good at fitness.
Or I used to, you know, if I had a dollar for every time
someone said, you know, you should have seen me in high school,
the person who lets themself go,
and arguably is very busy with professional duties
and family duties, and you can understand
why their time is more compressed than it was
when they were in high school.
But nonetheless, you hear these sorts of things all the time.
I used to have this sense of I could do things
or that things could the time. Like, I used to have this sense of like, I could do things
or that like things could work out or that.
And then it's as if there was a previous version
of themselves that is completely atrophied.
And the new version of themselves,
or the later version of themselves rather,
it just simply like doesn't have access to that anymore.
But the impact of trauma, right?
Okay, whether it's big trauma or it's, you it's a big event or it's multiple things like, oh, the world
is isn't rewarding me.
I'm trying the world's not rewarding me.
I'm trying the world's not rewarding me.
Then people become disperited, demoralized.
So it's the trauma of that that takes away the sense of self, the sense of agency.
Like I thought I could do things before.
Now I don't think I can do things, right?
But nothing has really changed in me.
I mean, that's a problem, right?
And it's a problem, the vast majority of times,
it's born of trauma.
It does that necessarily mean early childhood trauma
or supposed to be later life trauma.
I mean, one of the things that I like about what you're saying
so much is that, you know,
you, the psychiatrist, is, here's, I used to be able to do something well or feel well.
And that's like, it sounds like it's a signal, it's really a beacon of health that still
exists in the person, but that they're out of touch with.
I think for most people, when they think about themselves or people who talk about how they
used to be functional in some domain, and they're no longer functional in that domain any
longer, it sounds as if things are fundamentally broken.
Like it's as if a piece of them that was functioning drifted out of their body and left.
But I love the optimism, because I think so much of what we're interested in covering
today is not just what's not working
and why, but also what's working and why, and what used to work and why, and the idea that,
you know, within these cupboards, there can be the discovery of problems.
Clearly, that's why one goes to the cupboards, as we're defining it, but that there are a
lot of answers.
There are the ingredients for success already exist within us.
Right. Especially if we know we've had that ability before.
Because we know that we had it before.
So think about in this man, he felt that he couldn't make change.
Like now he's stuck.
Right? I got a lot of things done.
I was able to get myself into this school and achieve this,
and then get this job.
Like he could do all of those things,
but now he feels like he can't do anything
to make himself happy.
So we know he could do that.
He had a strong sense of agency.
He doesn't now, right?
And people often do, they feel a sense of loss.
Like, naturally, I've had this happen in myself.
Like it feels like something's cut out of you
and there's something hollow. I had that thing and now I don't. Right? Hence, I'm broken, I'm hopeless.
The things that we hear over and over and over again. So think about the shift in this person
to like what's actually going on, which isn't that hard to discern, we just pay attention to it.
So then if we run up the structure of self, we say, okay, not a lot of it is rooted in the unconscious mind, right?
There are problems of overvaluing certain things,
but they're in the conscious mind.
He knows, like in his household, over dinner, it was,
you know, dad or mom, you know, being proud of some dollar amount
that they had achieved.
So that narrative exists, and he's like,
yeah, money was a big deal in my family kind of thing.
By the way, I'm not speaking about my family, but rarely were there discussions about money was a big deal in my family kind of thing.
By the way, I'm not speaking about my family,
but rarely were there discussions about money.
There were discussions about other things, of course,
but in this hypothetical.
And he knows he's a real patient, sorry.
He knows he overvalues it, right?
He knows the independent of what money buys
and what he needs and all that.
He just puts too much importance in money
and he knows that, right?
So okay, there are conscious mind issues. He's
pretty aware of them and they're pretty kind of set in him, like those are the issues
and they're there. Okay, we learned that. Then we go look at his defensive structure. Boy,
that's very, very helpful to talk about. Wow, like you had a very healthy defensive structure.
What were you doing before? A lot of sublimation, right? Could you explain sublimation?
Yeah, take anxiety, attention, or attention, something negative in the self,
or there could be negative, any channel
towards something positive.
He channeled that energy towards learning.
He channeled some of the aggressive drive
into a sense of agency that got achievement.
So he looked and said, right, that network
of defense mechanisms that comes up
out of the unconscious mind was like,
looking pretty good, right?
It was pretty clear.
Light was coming through it in a way that wasn't distorted.
And now we can look at, wow, things are pretty different now, right?
As he's saying, no, it's okay.
What do you mean?
I spent 10 hours of my weekend utterly wasting time.
What's wrong with that?
Or he's rationalizing even
that he likes to drink when he doesn't
because he so mattered himself.
Like the defensive structure now is twisted, right?
So we can say, okay, that's a big observation, right?
And then the character structure, when we look at that,
we find a person who's pretty good at figuring out
and understanding things and coming right up to the
precipice of change, but is a long history of then difficulty making the change, right? I know
it and I'm on the verge of it, but I don't, I can't bring myself to do it. Like that's in his
character structure. By the way, it's such a common thing. I mean, people that know better, know they
know better. Sometimes you almost have to wonder whether or not it's like
it's like a medication in the pocket like they could take it if they wanted to that that might even give them some comfort
But they just don't do it. They just don't engage in the proper actions to move their life from one place to the next
Right, and if we look then at the level of strivings like he does know what he wants
Like he wants a feeling of contentment's really what. He wants a feeling of contentment, it's really what he wanted, it was a feeling of contentment,
a feeling of like, I'm taking good care of myself. I'm doing something that's a value.
I'm enjoying doing it. He wanted those things. And even when we talked more, he had ideas
of what jobs would do that. In the beginning, he said, he had no ideas. What he really meant,
that he said to me, but was also saying to himself, is I have no ideas of jobs that would meet these
requirements for me that pay as much as the one I have. But within him, which we got to,
he knew that there were jobs that would make him happy. He just had to get over that they were
lower paying. So think of what we learn about that. There's nothing lost in this man. There's nothing cut out of him, but he's not damaged. He's not hopeless.
And now he can understand that he understands himself actually pretty well, right? And his conscious
mind is apprehending pretty well what's going on and where he wants to go. But boy, as he hasn't
taken good care of himself, the defensive structure gets sort of warped, and then it makes it a lot harder to take care of yourself.
It starts making other problems in life,
and he starts feeling lousy about himself.
Like, maybe I can't do much of anything, right?
Why? Because work isn't going as well,
because he's drinking too much,
and the role performance goes down, right?
So we can see that, and then, you know,
what's of most interest there,
is that there's a character structure that can come right up to the precipice, but not pull the trigger
so to speak on what the thing the person wants to do, because now we start getting, okay,
an understanding of what's actually going on, right?
And then if we look at function of self, let's look in those cabinets too, right, to help
him be more aware of, there's an eye here,
which he was pretty well aware of, but not enough.
Like there's a person here
I'm shepherding through 24 hours in the day, right?
Like I am an eye and I'm aware of what's going on inside of me
and it can make me happy or it can make me miserable.
Like let's be more aware of that.
How did he go about doing that?
Because I find this first step within addressing the function
of self,
self-awareness and really understanding that there's an eye,
there's an me and I'm moving myself through life.
I find this to be so interesting
and on the one hand kind of obvious,
like, okay, there's a me like tangible thing,
you look in the mirror, you see yourself,
but at the same time, it's a bit abstract,
I think to me and to many people out there.
Like, how does one go about building up a sense of self in a way that provides positive agency in the world?
Is it to tell, you know, we gear all the time at these like affirmations, and I'm sure there are people
who look at themselves in the mirror and say, you are enough, and these, and I'm not making fun of these people.
Right? I actually have my own internal list that I tell myself on waking
every morning, which has nothing to do with positive affirmation. It's just actually defining the
different roles that I play. I don't know why this is useful to me, but I find it incredibly useful
to me. It reminds me who I am. It also reminds me or reassures me that I don't have any dementia yet.
So, you know, we'll see going forward, but hopefully not. But, yeah,
let's talk about this line of inquiry within the category of self-awareness that people can do,
regardless of whatever challenges they might be having or not having. What does that look like?
And what do you think that accomplishes at the level of self-understanding and agency in the world?
What do you think that accomplishes at the level of self-understanding and agency in the world?
So one way of looking at that is, in this not the words I would use, but like what's
pervading a person and sort of set in the stage, right?
Which you can discern by inquiry.
So for example, in this case, the person, so there's a person who would really not think
this is okay, right?
This person taking a job at 10% of the previous pay
and the job has less prestige.
Who's a person who would be very unhappy about that?
I'm very faultying of that.
And talk to this person, my patient through the lens
of that he should feel shame for that.
That person's not alive.
The person is not alive.
So one way of looking at what master are you serving, right?
And a lot of the like the givens, right? The automaticity in him was as if like that person
was a live inside of him really telling him like how this wasn't okay. Like he was fighting
that. He wasn't aware that, hey, that's some other person's voice. They was like, he's
like, no, I'm very, very conflicted about this.
Actually, he wasn't very conflicted about this way.
When he starts focusing on the eye,
like, what do I actually think?
What do I actually think?
I don't care if I make 90% less.
Like, I don't care.
My knee germet, I put some money away.
I want to be happy.
I'm not conflicted.
So, but in order to get there, we have to look at the eye.
How much is the eye at center stage, right?
And all that I don't mean in some way
of like paying too much attention to the self,
but like we're all acting through the lens of the eye
no matter what we're choosing, right?
So to be aware of that,
and do I wanna be impacted by the opinions
of this other person?
Cause I can let someone else's opinions very much.
I mean, we all do, right?
Very much impact my thoughts, but I want to kind of decide that.
Do I really value that person's opinions?
I don't want them automatically inside my head,
telling me how I feel about myself.
I can't tell you how many people I know come to me
in a place of struggle, even though I'm not a clinician.
And as I listen to what they're struggling with,
it's so clear that they know the best answer
and route forward, but that they're dealing
with some internal oppressive voice
about whether or not they are a good person
or a bad person, whether or not the choice they want to make
is really a good choice at all.
Sometimes those voices are the voices of parents,
you know, in these particular examples, or the voices of peers. And so I think, if I understand correctly, what you're talking about
is getting really firmly rooted in who a person is for themselves and what they really value,
and what they really know to be true for themselves, and really
trying to, necessarily quiet those voices, but see those voices truly as other, even though
they come from within their head.
Is that right?
Yes.
Yes, to stop and think, what voices do I want inside?
So maybe I want the voice of a kind mentor who still held me to account for you know, for a very high standard, right?
It's a good voice to have inside of me.
I have a few of those in there.
Right, right.
But what might not be a good voice is, like, say, a not-so-kind mentor for whom you could
never do anything good enough.
That's not so good.
Or maybe you take part of that and you leave part of that.
But the earlier and more formative the voices are, the more they're in our head automatically.
I think that that man thought that he was deeply conflicted.
Absolutely, 100% like you tell me.
And he was, his experience was to be deeply conflicted.
But when you go in and dig,
there's actually, if you just dig and you get to,
okay, the eye is gonna assess this.
He's not conflicted at all.
Which is why, then then if you're coming
up the function of self-later, and you look at defense mechanisms in action, right? And
what's on top of that salience, right? Now is when it creates an immediacy, right? So defense
mechanisms in action sort of inform the process and say, hey, the defenses are shifting to
denial, acting out, right? And that's what sort of gives us a time horizon, like this thing, this is not gonna be okay, right?
That if we kept down this path,
what was very clearly gonna happen,
you don't have to roll to tape forward that much,
to see that he's gonna lose his job, right?
He's gonna feel very ashamed of that,
like a bunch of negative things are gonna happen.
So it helps the person at the end
that like there's something going on here,
like I'm changing, right?
Because like in some way, I'm thinking now that it's okay that I'm wasting 10 hours on something that I
could really enjoy if I spent 90 minutes on it.
Well, I'm kind of losing a little bit of perspective there, right?
So it adds a sense of frames of situation, right?
And the salience of it.
Could you elaborate a little bit on this defense mechanism in action of acting out?
I think we covered in episode one, and I'm sure it will come up several times more during
today's discussion about things like denial, projection, displacement, etc. Those defense
mechanisms seem to have their own intrinsic definition, but acting out is something that
we hear more and more about these days like they're acting out
What is acting out?
Is it is it acting out of some conflict? Is it trying to
you know demolish a
Struggle by by going and doing something else
Yeah
We can think of it as by and large an unhealthy
manifestation of a lot of aggression
Which could be a very high aggressive drive or an aggressive drive that's not too high, but is then furthered,
its power is furthered by a negative situation. Say, like this one, because the acting out,
what was going on here inside of this person is he was very, very mad. And this isn't a
person who expressed a lot of anger, or had outlets for it.
He wasn't going and running 10 miles.
This was all inside of him.
He wasn't getting it out in one way or another.
So what he starts doing is he starts acting out the anger.
Now he's angry at the world around him because he's unhappy in it and it's not giving him
more choices.
Now, of course, this is about him and not the world around him, right? But he's feeling an anger towards the
world that won't cooperate, right? And he's angry towards himself, right? Because like,
he can't make himself happy. Like, look at all of this. Look at all that he did and look
how miserable he is, right? So a way of acting out, then, was the drinking, right? Because
the drinking is the hell with the world, right? You think I shouldn't be drinking at night
and come in the work, I'll do it anyway, right?
To hell with the world.
So we have snubbing his nose at the world, right?
He's also snubbing his nose at him, right?
To hell with me, right?
The guy who now doesn't come across the way he did before
because I'm showing up at work,
not in the responsible way I showed up before,
but in a way it's a little disheveled function
is lower, to help with me.
It's a form of self-dintegration, like let people think worse of me, right?
Because, why?
Because I'm so mad at myself that I think it's justified, right?
And then there's also the inviting of, hey, if I really have an addiction problem here,
I lose my job, it's like, fine, I deserve that too, right?
Like, you know, there's an acting out against the self that if the person doesn't stop and
look at that, that can become true, right?
Because that person didn't really,
was built to say the hell with the world and with me.
Or to not even understand
that what's the hell with the world, me.
And it also means to hell with me.
And it's not good for the world or me, right?
But he was able to understand that
because we would look at, like, wow, what shifted in?
You, this is a person who did a lot of sublimation before,
who now all of that's going into acting out.
So they're not taking negative energy and doing something good with it.
They're taking negative energy and doing things that are bad with it.
Why? Because there's too much. There's a lot of negative energy.
It's overwhelming everything else.
And then it's going down these pathways where the unhealthy defenses are always beckoning us.
Send the energy down here.
It's easier to avoid than it is
to face something and figure it out. It's easier to just act out than it is to hold what's inside of
us and then think about why it's there. So the unhealthy defenses are beckoning us. And for him to see,
you have had a healthy defensive structure like you can be healthy again. You're not broken,
right? But to also see the way these defenses are going,
this bringing real risk to your ability to even be happier.
You get further down the shame and loss path.
It can be hard, sometimes impossible for the person
to get back.
So it sets the stage.
Like, this is very, very important.
What these defenses are, how they're being enacted,
and for him to be able to see it, like, oh, this could be healthy, but it's not now.
Yeah, these slow, degrading forms of acting out and self-sabotage and sabotage of others,
I think are the particularly dangerous ones because they're slow and sometimes the
change is imperceptibly slow.
And then one day somebody arrives at a place where as you said, you know, the force you
can't get back or it requires going into residential treatment or things that really
really big departures.
Yes.
Big departures in order to get back into life.
And I would never wish for somebody to choose to act out by driving off a cliff instead.
But there are other forms of acting out that immediately wake people up.
But it seems like people don't often select those.
They select these more subtle forms of acting out where they don't get caught.
And they, or they, or no one's calling them out on it because, you know, you know, plenty
of people have five or six drinks at happy hour, right?
As opposed to 50, right?
You know, so it's, it's self-slow self-sabotage as opposed to
immediate self-destruction.
And again, we're talking about alcohol, but we're talking about food,
video games, social media, arguing with spouse.
I mean, all of these kinds of things that build up over time to
eventually deliver people to a place of real, real problems. arguing with spouse, I mean all of these kinds of things that build up over time to eventually
deliver people to a place of real problems.
I'm curious for this particular individual you worked with, sounds like that's not what
happened.
They started this process of self-inquiry around self-awareness and did you see that the
salience, that is what they paid attention to internally and externally
immediately shifted in the defense mechanism of acting out immediately dissolved?
I mean, what was the kind of contour and time course?
There was less so, sorry, if we're looking in the cabinets, there's a lot in the defense
mechanisms in action, cabinet.
There's not as much in the salience cabinet because this is the major thing on his mind,
above all else.
He was having intrusive thoughts about it and his self-talk was about it, but we kind
of already knew that.
Just like we knew it was in the conscious mind.
So if you think where's the money at, it's not as much in that realm because he's aware
of it.
If he thought, oh, this isn't bothering me very much.
And he said, well, all his internal dialogue is about it, right?
Then like, okay, there's a lot to achieve there,
but just as he brought a lot that was unconscious
into the conscious mind, was aware of it,
it was sailing it, there's less to do there, right?
Because the things to understand and change
are not residing so much there.
For people that are no doubt, everyone is thinking about their own internal processes
and where they could ask better questions and arrive at better answers to help themselves along.
Perhaps you could elaborate a little bit more on this
salience covered under function of self.
To me, salience is what's most apparent.
And as you talked about yesterday, and again today,
you know, there's this internal narrative.
Like what's on my mind often?
Or what kind of jumps to mind?
I've started doing this recently,
based on our discussions here.
And I've noticed that under different states of arousal,
and here I'm talking specifically about sleepiness
versus alertness type arousal, like when I wake up in the morning or when I'm tired in
the evening, you know, where my mind is at, where it defaults to, and what I'm paying attention
to throughout the day, is that, you know, just asking myself to notice, and I've certainly
noticed some, some noticed some patterns. For instance, I've noticed
that any time my overall state is elevated, more alertness, or in the middle of exercise,
my mind goes to some not-so-pleasant thoughts. And it's interesting to me. It's like, wow,
this is strongly correlated with states of internal arousal that are healthy exercise within a
limited frame, is, or exercises
in general have done in a healthy way is healthy. And when I'm sleepy, those thoughts never come about.
When I wake up in the morning, certain thoughts tend to leap to mind other thoughts. So,
so sort of categorization of different types of thoughts depending on my internal state.
Is that the sort of line of inquiry that you're suggesting or
describing here?
Yeah, I think it's quite a half the picture, because half the picture would be what's going
on in your mind when your mind is sort of at rest, right? What is then starts playing
itself right in your mind, right? The other side of it is what comes to the fore when there's
a lot of competition for attention, right? So I'm just making this up, but the idea that like,
if he stubbed his toe really badly,
he'd still be thinking about this, right?
Because there's so much power.
And again, maybe if God forbid he has a badly broken bone,
there's a lot of pain, like he's gonna think of that first,
but it takes a lot of other stimulus
to be more salient than this, right?
So you can look at what's coming in your mind
when your mind is sort of free and open.
That's very, very important and relevant.
And then what's winning out when there's maybe a high arousal state
and a lot of competition for attention?
That's very helpful.
Again, I think, along with this self-awareness piece,
the asking of oneself, you know, what is happening in my mind when
I'm in different states or throughout the day. And as you're describing now, also including when
there are other things available to think about. Like, does that include how often I'm distracted
by a particular
thought? Like how many times throughout the day, my mind goes from the conversation I might
be into something else. Yes. Yes. Does it hijack your attention? You know, there's one way
of putting that. A lot of people mention to me challenges with
intrusive thoughts. What can be done about those intrusive thoughts, or is it simply a matter of paying attention
to the fact that they're there and then thinking about the origins of those thoughts?
Absolutely.
I mean, one example you could have intrusive thoughts because there's trauma in your
background, maybe very clear trauma that you're not facing and addressing, and then you have
intrusive thoughts to say, I'm not safe.
OK, go look for what's still in the unconscious mind
or when it comes out a little bit,
you put back into the unconscious mind.
That would be a very different scenario than, like,
in this case, this man was having intrusive thoughts
about his job situation, his overall situation,
and it made sense that he was having those intrusive.
They were markers of the acuity of it.
Right?
You have to do something about this, or something very bad is going to happen.
So the intrusive thoughts there, and it's made sense.
Like this is not going well, and your mind is forcing you to pay attention to this, because
time really can be, is of the essence, you're real risk now.
So intrusive thoughts can be anything from, as they often, or they can be markers of
something that is traumatic, something that's underneath the surface, something that is
really bothering us that we shove down that's making guilt, shame, distress, vulnerability.
That's a very often the case, but sometimes intrusive thoughts are a marker of like,
oh right, that's a thing to pay attention to. And once we identify the intrusive thought,
I mean, how do we eradicate it?
I mean, how do we work with it?
I mean, talking about trauma now, you know,
of course, you might map back to a childhood experience,
some internal narrative, but is there some road map
from moving intrusive thoughts from a place
of intrusive and disturbing to simply there
and kind of meh?
I mean, to be wonderful to hit a delete switch,
but obviously we don't work like that.
Well, let's take a look if we could at this example, right?
Which is a little bit different.
If we run through this example of the person in the job,
because then we should talk about trauma-driven intrusive thoughts, which is a little bit different. If we run through this example of the person in the job, because then we should talk about trauma-driven
and trusive thoughts, which is, I think,
in many ways the biggest topic about intrusive thoughts.
But think of this person here,
if we go up from salience, we look at behaviors, right?
And behavior actually now is very, very important, right?
This person is drinking.
They're still going to that job they don't want.
They haven't gone and interviewed for the jobs they want.
So we start looking at the behaviors that are making problems. The changes in behaviors that could make things better.
And then on top of that, we arrive at strivings. And I think when I was talking about structure of self, I think at least one time I misspoke and said striving instead of self. At the top of these pyramids, self and striving have a lot of overlap.
Because if you're growing a healthy self,
out of the top of the structure of self pyramid,
then that self is going to be aware of strivings
and it's going to be better able to enact them.
His sense of self was shaken here,
but he was aware of the strivings for a better life.
So now, let's see, the roadmap, it's interesting, because the roadmap is his roadmap.
If we look in those 10 cupboards, we come up with a roadmap, and a roadmap doesn't have a
spending very much time in unconscious land, because he doesn't really need that.
If we look at what makes the difference for him, what did we do, right?
We really cultivated the self-awareness, the eye
that is making decisions for him.
We looked at how his defensive structure had changed
and the things he didn't want to be there now
and the good things that were there before
and how could he get back some of that?
How could he trend back towards what was working before?
So we start to really look at that.
And then we go from there really to changing behaviors.
It requires a behavioral change, which
is not to walk up to the precipice of doing this each day,
but to actually do it, right?
Because it was very clear, all the vectors,
so to speak inside, even we're pointing towards doing it,
and that that was consistent with the self being healthier, that garden growing on top of the structure, and the strivings
then being realized.
So for him, that was the roadmap, and the salience.
It wasn't really part of it because the intrusiveness, the salience bias inside of him made sense,
and then of course it went away once he made the decisions, right?
Because the intrusive thoughts of like, you have to figure this out, you have to figure
this out, weren't there anymore, along with the intrusive thoughts of, you'll never figure
this out, or like, it goes away because he made the change, but he made the change because
we looked at self-awareness, we strengthened self-awareness, we looked at defense mechanisms,
how they could be versus how they are.
We looked at the behavioral change, which was really necessary.
And then also referencing a character structure that has difficulty, coming across the precipice.
So we say, okay, that's a baseline characteristic of him.
We kind of understand that.
But how do we help him change the behaviors anyway?
When he does that, the self is in a better, happier, healthier place,
the strivings are realized.
This person that stops drinking in the way they were.
They start doing the enjoyment aspects of their life.
They start doing them within reasonable bounds again.
They're taking care of themselves, person smiling, and now think the generative drive is
much more fulfilled.
So what comes on top of those pillars, right,
is that person has a sense of humility, right?
Enough humility to say, I'm gonna walk away from this job.
I don't, it's okay that people in the job will think,
I'm crazy, how could you leave that
and like a trigger something in me in some way,
but like, it's okay, right?
Like, I don't have to, you know,
I'm not out there for that.
I'm not out there for the big thing that everybody is guiding.
I can have the humility to go to the job that I know makes a difference and feels good
to me, right?
He's empowered to make change.
He's moving away from the disempowerment of the alcohol and the avoidance, right?
So there's empowerment and humility.
And absolutely, if you talk to that person on the other side of it, like shortly, as
he was enacting it, right, getting just to the other side of it, like shortly, as it was enacting it, right,
getting just to the other side of it
who is so much empowerment and so much humility,
which were then brought to bear
through a sense of agency that made the changes, right?
That changed the job, that stopped drinking,
that dealt with the people who thought negatively of it,
right, through a sense of gratitude of,
it's not awful that I'm gonna go make less money.
A lot of people said that to him,
like how could you do it? It was so terrible. It's like, it's not terrible, right? I'm grateful, like, you awful that I'm going to go make less money. A lot of people said that to him, like, how could you do?
It was so terrible.
It's not terrible, right?
I'm grateful, like, you know what I'm going to do?
I'm going to go make an amount of money that's all that I need, right?
So it was like, that's what helps a person do that thing.
And that's actually true, right?
That's what mattered to him.
So an activated, an active, a verb sense of agency and gratitude,
then leads him to the place where there was a peace,
contentment, delight, he was delighting in the job
that he chose, and his generative drive was in accord with it.
Then, we stopped at some point working together.
He didn't need me anymore.
He could always come back, but he didn't need me anymore.
Then you look at how are those last sessions? A lot of the last sessions were him, like in an excited way, telling me
what he was doing. Right? Like, oh, and then we did this. And like, I did this. I figured
this out. Like, he was so happy about it. And you can see that man's generative drive,
which naturally, naturally is quite high in him, but was being squelched. Right? That
brings him out of balance. Now the generative drive was in quite a good place, and he had enough aggression or
assertion, right, to go and do that job and to do that well, and even enough to
counter anybody who would still kind of rise up and say that wasn't a good idea.
He could counter all that. He was getting pleasure from it. He didn't need to
seek pleasure by what? Not even pleasure because alcohol was pleasurable. No,
pleasure because harming himself and
Saying to help with you to the world and to him was pleasurable, right?
They're getting pleasure that way. He's getting pleasure in healthier ways taking care of himself doing the job
He loves doing his leisure activities like the man comes into balance and then like life is good and we say, yeah
Okay, come back in a couple months like it comes back in a couple months
Maybe in six months comes back one more time,
I don't see him again.
That's great.
He totally doesn't need me again, and I atrophied, right?
From his life, great.
That's the success state of it.
He eventually arrived at being truly wealthy, right?
With all the components of mental health
and peace, contentment, delight.
As you describe his story, which is a remarkable one, it occurs to me that the narratives that
we hear as children end up being so powerful.
Yes.
And I'm sure there are people out there that receive such direct messages from their
mother and or father.
Like you have to do this, you cannot do that.
But often we get messages through observing
and overhearing, right?
The way that our mother talks about our father
when he's out of the room.
The way that our father talks about our mother
when she's out of the room.
And some of this could be nonverbal,
like a rolling of the eyes or somebody saying, yes,
yes, agreeing.
And then they walk out and they just, you know, and blowing them off.
Right?
I mean, kids are, we are all so aware and integrating all of that all the time.
And I do think those messages get woven into us at a very deep level.
Absolutely.
And then, of course, there are the conscious narratives
that we build up as we go through,
in particular, I think elementary and middle school
in high school.
I mean, I can still remember a negative comment.
Somebody made about a jacket that I was wearing
in like the third or the fourth grade.
I forget everything else that happened that year.
Remember that?
Remember that.
Yeah, and I'm not, you know,
I'm not insecure about the clothing that I pick, you know,
I mean, obviously it's a black button down shirt.
I've had similar shirts since the first grade just kidding.
But, you know, the fact that that's embedded
in my memory systems is like, just speaks to the salience
of negative, of insults, basically.
It was an insult.
And I'm sure I've insulted plenty of kids
and coming up, you know, as a teenager
and back and forth.
And so, but these narratives get so deeply embedded.
And the idea that one could pick a different path
of vocation or like you're miss the opportunity
to be truly happy at a deep level
based on these narratives.
I mean, on the one hand, it's obvious.
On the other hand, you just go like, whoa, this is not good.
This is a flaw in the design.
Right?
And yet, you're giving us a roadmap to understanding
and to overcoming it.
Right.
Let's say we take your examples and we look, the great examples
and we look at that. The person making fun of the code in third grade, right? We're assuming it hasn't harmed you,
it hasn't changed your course of your life, right? What does it tell us? It shows that negative
stimuli are very salient, right? I'm sure you got a lot of compliments in third grade two,
right? But it's a negative that stands out, which just shows that there's a salience bias in us
towards the negative.
And that's probably about survival and threat sensing.
In some ways, it makes sense around human survival, but it doesn't make sense around human
trauma.
So then you'd give in the example of what gets communicated to the child when, say, mother
says something negative about father, when father's out of the room, father says something negative about mother, when father's out of the room, father says something
negative about mother, when mother's out of the room,
just to give an example, right?
So children, because the complex cognitive mechanisms
haven't been formed yet, right?
The natural way that the brain functions
is in a self-referential way, right?
So the child generally doesn't have the capacity
to say like, oh, mom and dad
aren't really getting along well in this certain way.
So when dad's not here, mom vents a little bit
about something about him by saying,
child isn't thinking about that, right?
Then what the child will often internalize is,
okay, there's me and there's mom and dad,
and mom says dad is bad, and dad says mom is bad, and I must be bad too,
right?
Because in general, if your parents are bad, then the child takes that on themselves.
Now again, I'm giving a simple example, but I'm very much extrapolating it.
I mean, imagine if that were very, very aggressive, where the mother, when this happens, right,
just tells the child how awful the father is, and the father does the same.
You're not going to, someone's not going to come out the other side of that being like,
you know what, maybe they're both awful, but I'm not.
That's not how that goes, right?
So the lessons, the traumatic lessons of childhood get internalized, right?
And they don't even always have a solution state.
So you think about the man who knew like, okay, you have to go get this job and like all
those things he internalized, you might say, well, I mean, he got to a good place for him, right?
So for better or for worse,
at least it was a place to go, right?
To go work hard, go succeed, go check this box,
you've been told you're supposed to check.
But oftentimes there is no solution state.
So how many children, I mean, it's terrible
that this is such a high percentage
of the work adult practitioners do,
is helping people who as children were told one way or another that they were worthless,
incapable, bad, right?
That gets put into the child, unfortunately far, far, far, I mean, one time on the planet
is too frequent, let alone how often this happens.
That example makes really good sense.
Could we, and this is a question,
could we add to that the example whereby the child
overhears examples of what say men should be like
or women should be like.
Like the, these things, it's not so much like you did wrong,
Andrew, or you know, you did wrong Paul,
like, or telling the, Dar like you did wrong Andrew or you did wrong Paul or telling the, like you screwed
up, but it's more, again, narratives that we over here, or even a parent showing delight
or excitement about a certain phenotype in the world, like, oh wow, look at that person
or look at them, like, isn't she beautiful, right?
The young child thinks like, okay, well, then that's the epitome of beauty
through the lens of the parent,
or gosh, like this person, like, ugh, you know,
like, then that child internalizes
that this is the epitome of disgust
with another human being,
and I think children are so savvy without realizing it.
It's like, okay, well, then I guess you move toward that,
and you aspire to that, and you deflect from that.
And you can see how these trajectories can be set very early on.
I mean, these are the four-lane highways that we were talking about in episode one, where
just routes of neural processing that can bring us to choices in life and places in life
that oftentimes you're like, I don't want to go down this path anymore.
And so the exploration of early narratives, both direct and indirect, first person and
third person, seems so critical.
How does one go about that?
I mean, clearly with a train clinician like you, you would guide somebody through the process.
But if somebody were to try and do this in some sort of structured way for themselves,
what are those lines of inquiry look like?
Because we have vast number of experiences from childhood,
but some messages are going to be more salient than others.
Sure.
Yeah, the reflective self scrutiny can help us, I think,
is a great idea.
It's a great concept, and we do a lot of different things,
sort of inside, and we're guided to do a lot of things inside.
But this, I think, should overshadow many, if not most of all those other things, what's
really going on inside of me?
Because if you think about it, a lot of people will come through that and they'll learn,
right?
So the person is told, like, this is what beautiful is.
This is what successful is.
This is what good enough looks like, right?
And that person may, through all sorts of experiences,
know maybe other people in their lives
who are more balanced, be able to arrive
on the other side of that, even still,
sometimes going through the midst of it,
depending upon age and situation.
And I know like, okay, that's what my father and mother
thinks like, this is what beauty is,
this is what success is, but it's one set of opinions,
and it's not a set of opinions that are gonna define me.
Like sometimes people get to that place,
but a lot of times they don't,
and they carry that lesson forward,
and they're not aware of it, right?
So they think that they're very unattractive,
even though other people are giving them different signals.
They think that they're very dumb,
even though other people are giving them different signals
and their own grades and their own success, maybe giving them different signals, right?
But they're not putting the two things together, and that's going to generate tension, right?
That might be why that person doesn't follow up on potential relationships, right?
They just don't think they're good enough, and the person's eventually going to reject
them because of what they look like, right?
They're taking that with them in this example from childhood, right?
Or they're not satisfied with the job that in other ways is like really great, right?
They enjoy the work, they enjoy everything, but it doesn't pay enough, right?
Why?
Because they have some false idea inside of what it's supposed to pay, right?
Because it's what the parent said.
So by self-screw it and you're like, what are the givens?
And I always think it goes back to the math minor, right?
If you can't solve the problem, go back and look are the givens? And I always think it goes back to the math minor, right? If you can't solve the problem,
go back and look at the givens, right?
What are you taking for granted?
Like, oh, I know that every time I see an x,
that x equals four, right?
Really, maybe you wrote down four somehow
because you were thinking of four at the time
and x actually is a three, right?
So just go back and look at what you're taking for granted, right? And
a lot of times this is what we're doing in the therapy process. And then that's when
the person can realize, so I'm simplifying. But for the person to realize, like, oh, there's
a voice in my head. So to speak is a natural voice that is the voice of this person, right,
who may not even be around anymore, who's opinion doesn't mean to me what it did before. But
that voice is saying, you're unattractive, you're not making enough money, you're not good enough, right?
And you know what, I don't believe that.
Right?
I don't, they can identify that and then you can, it doesn't happen all at once, but you
can get it out of you.
But generally, you don't get it out of you unless you realize that it's there.
What is the process of getting it out. Because I think that we all have the capacity to remember certain things
and to arrive at a place where we can understand, okay, I'm taking for granted the fact that
there's a voice in my head that says blank. Actually, I have a brief anecdote to say about
this, and this isn't the quote unquote, I have a friend thing. I literally have a female friend who the other day called me
laughing and crying because she was being evicted
from her apartment, and she told her mother
about this over the phone, and her mother's response was,
well, at least you're thin.
Wow.
Like, and she was laughing and crying about it
because it reflected so much of her childhood.
Right.
No other accomplishment of having a job,
having an apartment, et cetera.
Like, you know, mattered.
It was about one thing.
It was about a certain form of aesthetic beauty
that I'm not even sure she subscribes to,
even though she happens to be thin, right?
So the fact that her mother would lift that
from the conversation, there's such a deprivation
of so many things in that interaction.
But it really wasn't about that interaction.
She was calling me because it was really about her entire childhood, right?
And obviously, I'm not equipped to solve the problem, and it wasn't a request for money
or anything in that sort.
It was almost like the hilarity and the sadness of the whole picture.
But again, it speaks to these narratives that we internalize and that sometimes show up
in very glaring ways in the real world. It's like to hear that, I think, was shocking to her.
I think she needed to tell me to like, is this real? But then it was clear that that message
had existed in her head for a long time anyway.
That can be very pivotal if she realizes that, right?
And even the power of the humor of it,
is this is absurd, right?
That can be very powerful in creating change
because if there's some vestiges of that inside of her,
where like she still believes,
like, oh, I'm not good enough because I achieved A, B, and C,
but I don't look like X.
So whatever, it can very much help because there's a lot of power behind realizing that absurdity of like, oh, I'm not good enough because I achieved AB and C, but I don't look like X. So whatever, it can very much help because there's a lot of power behind realizing that
absurdity.
If I go, my God, that's bizarre.
But wait, is any of that inside of me?
Am I carrying some of that with me?
I mean, there's an incentive for self-scrutiny through what you're describing.
Because what's the ideal amount of that to still be in her?
Zero. So as one comes to realize the messages they've heard
or perhaps, like in this case that they're still hearing,
is the process of overcoming those messages
and really arriving at the self,
it sounds to me like it's a two-part process,
at least two-part process.
It's to look in the bin of what are the givens?
What are, what am I taking for granted about the internal narratives and think about their origins in childhood
or elsewhere. But then also cultivating the self-awareness piece that's under the function
of self. Like wait, what's really true for me at the level of me that has that that isn't
the vote. And this is really I think about separating out the voices in one's head, these
internalized narratives from the person that we really truly are.
Because the idea is that those two pillars encompass everything we need to look at,
right? Those ten cupboards encompass everything.
So it's all that, right? The person who's going and looking at the givens,
they're trying to understand what might be in my unconscious mind that I'm not aware of,
right? And, huh, wow, the last time I got this big award at work, I had this reflexive thought
of like, but you're not thin enough.
Wow, whoa, right?
Like there could be a process like that's going on inside of me.
I don't want that going on inside of me, right?
So the process of trying what is unconscious in us that may be causing us harm, which
is often where that's where the trauma goes, right?
It's where the childhood trauma seats itself, which brings us back around to the intrusive
thoughts, right?
Intrusive negative thoughts, a negative self-diolog usually does not mean what it meant
to the man who need to change jobs, right?
Because they were there for a good reason, right?
Then he needed to make change. More often, the vestiges, the hangover,
the lingering badness of some prior trauma.
So oftentimes, when you think,
we talked a little bit yesterday about the person
who was driving in the car and just telling themselves
over and over that they were, that they're a loser, right?
And then they can't achieve the things
that they achieved when they stopped doing that.
I'm simplifying a little, but that's the basics of it, right?
Because the intrusive thoughts, the self-narrative,
all the negativity, and this is often coming from places
that are in the unconscious mind, right?
Not always, but this idea that I don't think I'm good enough.
I'm saying to myself over and over again, like,
wow, let's go back and look at why?
Because the answer to that again again lies in a different place.
It was just a different road map, right?
The man who needed to change jobs had a road map that like spent a little bit of time
in the eye, self-awareness, and then it kind of then it went through self-defense mechanisms
in action land, and it spent a lot of time with behavior, and then it got up to the strivings.
That's his road map, whereas for someone who's laboring
under the intrusive thoughts, the negative self-talk,
the automaticity, the givens of childhood trauma,
then needs to go to a different place.
We're now we're spending time
with the unconscious mind, thinking about what's there,
figuring out what's there, bringing things to consciousness,
right?
That person say realizing, maybe your friend
you had this realization of like, oh my goodness, we say realizing maybe, you know, your friend, you had this realization
of like, oh my goodness, we say, wow, do that bring something to the conscious mind in her?
If so great, let's look at that and let's look a lot at it and let's look, are there other things
there too, right? Are there other givens, right? Let's bring them to consciousness so that we can
talk about them, we can identify them and then look at how does that relate to defense mechanism, the character structure, and like now what are
we doing?
A process of interested inquiry, like this is really interesting.
I mean, it should be interesting to the person doing it, it's them, right?
And it should be interesting to the person doing it with them, right?
Because if you're a therapist, it is not interesting to you, you need another job, right?
So you're talking to a friend,
like if a friend is gonna be interested.
So there's an interested, honest, open inquiry
with the idea of,
like, we're gonna let's learn things
so that we can make change for the better.
And even though as we talked about yesterday,
the intrusive thoughts and the self-dialogue
that's gone on over and over and over again,
it doesn't go away easily.
But that doesn't mean it doesn't on over and over and over again, it doesn't go away easily.
But that doesn't mean it doesn't atrophy over time and go away, or that the person can
have that reflexive thought like, oh, there's the thought again that I'm a loser or that
I should cut myself or I should drink or whatever it is like, I know that thought appears
in me automatically at times because it was in my head for so long, but it does not telling
me anything.
It's just an automatic thought.
It's something I should drink. It's something I mean anything, right? Other than the fact that like, oh, that it does not telling me anything. It's just an automatic thought. It's telling me I should drink.
It's telling me anything, right?
Other than the fact that like, oh, that's what happens in human beings.
That's how the self-understanding brings change in us and gets us over the barriers.
If I've been trying this for what modern mental health would often have, I was thinking,
I took the selects and I did the 10 sessions of CVT.
I'm a failure.
Nothing will ever get better.
Different framing that says, hey, this can get I'm a failure. Nothing will ever get better. You know, a different framing that says,
hey, like this can get better over time
in my understanding and my efforts
and my thought redirection, my behavioral changes,
all makes it better.
And then those things I don't want in my head,
they're going away.
It's taking time, but they're going away.
I'm relieved to hear you say that one can have
intrusive thoughts and that one approach
to dealing with those is to acknowledge
them and look at them and not try and push them back deeper, not try and eradicate them.
I'm familiar with having intrusive thoughts, not all the time, but it varies
throughout my life. And the idea that one can just like distinguish them is a great idea, but that's
simply not the way it's worked, at least not for me.
But I have found that if I, you know, just say, okay, this is spontaneously coming up through
the neural circuits of my subconscious and they're intrusive and I don't like them.
But I eventually arrive at exactly the place that you describe, which is that it's like,
there's nothing actionable here.
They go from being intrusive and troubling, to intrusive and mildly irritating, to intrusive and like,
okay, you know, I just, you know, and yes, I go through some redirect, like trying to redirect my attention from time to time when they're happening,
but I eventually just get to a place where,
okay, it's just a boring story,
or boring imagery, there's nothing there.
Like there's nothing there,
and then they eventually break up like clouds.
And then the process could take a while, but.
Right, because you took the energy out of them.
Right, you made them go away, which happened over time,
and then the energy that was so powerful,
it was less and less and less, and what happens, they dissipate, they atrophy. That You made them go away, which happened over time. And then the energy that was so powerful, with them's less and less and less and less and what happens? They
dissipate, they atrophy, right? That's how they go away because there's no more power.
There's no more power in them. And that really is the way that we make change. And I think,
you know, your emphasis upon the fact that it takes time, the fact that it takes effort,
the fact that it only goes away slowly.
Over 20 years of, at times being a therapist,
what I've seen, the most daunting,
the thing that makes people just give up and go away
and go back to the things that are bad,
give up on themselves, are that it takes time.
And if you think it's supposed to take two weeks,
and the world around, you're kind of leading you
to think that, and then you go for help, around you's kind of leading you to think that. And then you go for help.
And the help kind of leads you to think that,
whether it's two weeks or it's 10 weeks,
if it's gonna take two years,
you're gonna go away disheartened, right?
Or maybe more angry at yourself, or maybe demoralized.
So we have to look at the truth of all of this.
Like a parallel to your story in my own life,
for years and years and years I carried a negative
voice inside.
There's always waiting for me to do something wrong.
So if I say something that's a little bit off or not exactly what I want to say, now
it would say like, that wasn't good.
It says something negative inside to me.
Or it's waiting for me to drop something and say that I'm stupid and clumsy, right?
With me all the time.
But over time, you saw a reflection through clumsy, right? With me all the time, but over time, through self-reflection, through therapy, through a lot
of hard work, but a desire for things to be better and a desire to understand it, right?
Like it's not there anymore.
I mean, every now and then it'll raise its head, right?
I'll do something really.
I dropped a cup of coffee.
I haven't done it in 10 years and it made a mess and now people are coming to clean it
up and man, the voice came back, right?
But I could recognize it, right? Like like I really feel bad about this and now it
gives that voice a chance to come out but it doesn't come out much anymore whereas what
it I lived with it for years it doesn't come out much anymore and when it came out not that
long ago like I could recognize like I'm not happy I did this and let me help clean it up
but it doesn't mean I'm an idiot right? So the voice in my head can just go away
as I've been helping it to do for a bunch of years now.
Yeah, I think also important for people to understand
is that it takes time, but that we can all
potentially engage in right actions,
moving towards strivings and hopefulness
as we cope with those and try to diminish those internal
narratives, those intrusive thoughts.
It's not as if during the entire process, you know, you can't function.
I mean, I think that it's cognitively and sometimes even physically demanding to do, but we
can still engage in healthy ways in the world and we can still try and avoid acting out
and avoid acting out
and avoid forms of denial.
And as I say this, I'm realizing that, you know,
that the wish for or the impulse
to really just suppress intrusive thought,
born of trauma or whatever else is really futile.
Like that's not gonna work.
It's not gonna work.
We have to embrace these narratives
and not expect them to disappear in a finger snap,
but embrace them and like see them and look at them and be unafraid to look at them and
discount where they are absolutely not true.
I would say unafraid to understand, right?
Because we must understand.
Means we must look at what's going on inside of us.
When I didn't like that voice, but was afraid of it, like what is going on inside me?
What does this say about me? And I'm directing away from it. Well, that's why it was with me for
like several decades, right? But when I start to go look at it, I can find an answer to it.
And again, you have to look at what's going on in that person,
because one might presume, and maybe people listening
are presuming this or maybe not, but a reasonable presumption
that might just reflexively happen in a person
would be to think that, oh, when I was younger,
the messaging I was getting was that you're not good enough,
right, you're not good enough, right?
That's why I carry with me that you're not good enough, right?
But it's not that. Sometimes it's the opposite. That I was rewarded a lot when I was younger for doing things in a way everyone thought was great, right? Like getting great grades and being
well-behaved, doing all sorts of things that brought a lot of positive reinforcement to me.
But I never handled well things that fell even a little bit short of that.
And then it would have woke a lot of shame.
So the oppression inside is not coming from denigration, it's coming from something different,
right?
Which is also why this is not a search to blame someone, right?
Because sometimes the people who are giving the message, like they're doing the best they
can.
I mean, someone who's saying to a child,
you're a loser, like that's not okay, right?
No matter what, that's not okay.
But that's often not how it happens.
Like, you know, the parent like he says communicating,
they don't realize that every time they're admiring
a certain level of wealth or a certain kind of beauty,
they're giving that message that the child,
that doesn't meet that or is it,
ends up not meeting that isn't good enough.
But they don't know that.
Or, you know, I had, my parents tried to nurture me and they did a good job of it in many
ways and teachers did a good job.
But so they are realizing, hey, this person is going to end up, you know, a bunch of years
from now not thinking anything's good enough.
I mean, they don't know that.
So it's not a search for blame.
And I think that's very, very important, very important because often people don't want
to look inside because they think either I'm going to find something dramatically wrong
with me.
And the answer I would give is there's almost surely not something dramatically wrong with
you if you're having that thought.
And if somehow there is, you're better off looking at it now than later, right?
And so that's part of it.
The other part is that people become worried
that they're going to ruin something.
You know, I'm gonna, I like my parents,
and if I go look at this, I'm gonna,
I'm gonna hate them.
Or like people say, say things,
or think things like that.
And the idea that we may get down to something
that really involves someone being responsible
for something bad.
Now, if that's the truth, the person already knows that inside the vast majority of times.
They know that.
They're just not facing that.
But most of the time also, it's not that.
It's just like, okay, that's how life evolved.
And what's the predisposition?
Like, you know, I was smart enough to get good grades.
And I have a low threshold for shame.
And people reinforced me.
And like, oh, like I can kind of understand that.
So then I can get control over it.
It's not a search for anger, frustration, blame,
of self or others.
Yeah, oftentimes I hear that people are afraid of
dealing with these deeper issues or addressing
these deeper issues for fear that they'll lose,
say they're drive, right?
That the thing that makes them successful in the first place and that allows them, perhaps
even to afford therapy or afford the time to think about these sorts of questions.
So it seems to me that the drives that you referred to earlier, the generative drive,
the aggressive drive, and the pleasure drive, are such critical nodes or areas to look for all of us in terms of figuring out whether or
not we're doing well or less well according to some features that are pretty much universal
in people.
Essentially, what I'm saying is, at least by my understanding, we all have drives to some
extent or another and to the extent that our aggressive drive is very high and
pleasure drive is very high and whether or not it's pointed in the right direction, it can be
generative. If it's not perhaps it can undermine our generative drive. I'm very curious to know
how you've observed the different ranges of these drives in people and how that predicts whether
or not people will do more or less well in different areas of life.
Essentially, how the different drives play out.
I think the first thing to say is where the drives are at, so to speak, and any of us
is a combination of nature and nurture.
So the nature part tells us the range, sort of that the drive is going to be, but because
nurture means so much to humans,
as as we understand it, from epigenetics, from the advance of science, we see more and
more and more how much nurture matters.
So the range that's denoted by nature is probably pretty broad.
We see the manifestation of that, and then the nurture lets us then move that drive.
Now sometimes, nurture that's not gone in the right place
can move the drive in the wrong direction.
But as adults, as people who can take care of ourselves,
who can learn about ourselves, we can change
where the drives are seated.
It's not an easy thing to do, because it
requires a lot of changes of self, self-knowledge,
and hard work.
But we can do it.
We can change the array of how those drives are manifesting themselves within us.
We see that.
That's part of the hopefulness of mental health treatment that we see not just surface
changes, but we can see changes on a deeper level.
It's important that these things are not fixed, although there are some natural elements. Someone who, someone who may have a natural sort of low aggression or low self-assertion,
okay, it's going to be in the lower range, but it doesn't mean that it's locked in at
any one particular point.
And that the place that we want to be, what is the place that's consistent with the
things that we want, the agency and gratitude as verbs and the sense of well-being and all
of that.
So the idea is the state of health has the generative drive as prominent, right?
It's the dominant drive and then aggression and pleasure which are still active in us,
but they're subserving the generative drive.
And that's the state that we wish to be in.
So when we're assessing, okay, why is there something that doesn't feel okay or something that's
not going okay?
Then one way to start is to look at what's going on in the person, what may be off in
the drives, that gives us a very strong idea of what's going on, a way of understanding
what's going on as we then go and look in the 10 cupboards to figure out the specifics.
Okay, what is actually going on here that we can then change,
but the framing of what's going on can come through the lens
of looking at the drives and how they're manifest in us.
What does it look like when the aggressive drive is very high?
And the pleasure drive is also very high.
So if these drives are running too high, where we end up at is in a place of envy, right?
And envy, I'm always sort of on the soapbox about envy because I think envy is just so wildly
destructive. And if the aggressive drive is very high, so the person say in one way of,
one way this can manifest itself, just wants more and more
and more. They're not getting satisfaction from anything, but they want more. That may
be because of a strong vulnerability inside of them. So something that might map to narcissism,
for example, there could be a strong aggressive drive to get more and that leads to something
that's very unhealthy.
So the idea that I want more, I need more, I don't have enough, I can't get enough,
then fosters envy, right, which is not the desire to be better or to have more, but it's
just the desire to feel better about the self, whether that involves raising the self up
or bringing someone else down.
That's why envy is destructive.
So very high levels of aggression that are not tempered, for example, by a generative
drive that would also be high, then create a circumstance of envy and the envy is destructive.
And the same happens if the pleasure drive is very, very strong.
So if one continues to want more pleasure, so I can't find any satisfaction, I don't feel
good about myself, I feel berift inside, and I see that a pleasure can make me feel better,
but just for a little bit, right?
Then it fades away and I want more of it, and I want more of it.
That also can lead to the place of envy, like that's the outcome.
So if the aggressive drive is running very high, or the aggressive drive is running very high, or the
pleasure drive is running very high, or both are running very high, but it only takes one
in order to end up in a place of envy. If the generative drive is not high enough to overcome
how high the aggressive drive is, which would mean then the aggressive drive will be sublimated
towards good productive things. Take the energy and put it towards something that is goodness. But if the aggressive drive is,
was way out there ahead of the generative drive, that ends up in a place of envy as does the
pleasure drive. If I want more and more and more, but I never get satisfaction from anything.
It never brings me any sense of goodness that where it ends is in a place of vulnerability and resentment, right?
Because envy involves wanting more, right? And envy, if we look at what's really going on, envy under the surface involves wanting everything, right?
If a person is at the outer limits of envy, right, which is why envy is so destructive. Because if I can't
get enough pleasure and there's so much aggression in me, then I'm not going to make myself feel
better. But what I can do is make other people feel worse.
I want to ask you more about envy, but for someone to ask is one way to characterize the
generative drive and to distinguish it from the other drives is
to say that generative drives are pro-social, meaning they tend to bring about benevolent
interactions between people.
In the sense that so, pro-social as constructive, right, as an essence of building goodness,
then yes, because it's the drive in us that makes us want to love and nurture things, right?
It makes us want to learn and sometimes learn
to make better in the world or learn for learning's sake.
That the drive is a drive of goodness.
So if the drive is then going to enact itself
in the world around us, it's going to be pro-social
because we exist as social units, right?
I mean, if we decide, oh, I want to be an island off somewhere, that's not healthy.
We exist in social units from small nuclear families, to a neighborhood, all the way up
to nations and to the planet.
If we perceive the truth of that, that, hey, there's an interdependence between me and others.
I see that, then the drive will leave to choices and behaviors
that are socially constructive.
Earlier you talked about aggression,
and you were clear to make sure that we all understood
that aggression does not necessarily mean violent aggression.
That there are different forms of aggression.
I'm curious if you could give us some examples
of how you've observed people with high levels of aggression. I'm curious if you could give us some examples of how you've observed people
with high levels of aggression and high levels of pleasure drive as well, both male and female.
And, you know, here without defaulting to stereotypes, I think a lot of people just
despite the fact that you've clarified what aggression is and isn't in the context of this
conversation, we hear the word aggression and we think verbal attack, physical attack.
However, the way you're describing aggression and the aggressive drive, I have a feeling
that you're referring to other expressions of aggression as well.
So if the aggressive drive is running too high, and that could have factors of nature,
factors of nurture, factors of the situation the person is in, factors of their whole life.
But it ends up at the moment in a place that is too high,
then what that person is doing in one way or another
is to try and exert an unhealthy level of control.
And that can be done in so many different ways.
It can be done in that overt way of just intimidating people,
right, of using harsh language towards people. It can be done by manipulating people. It can be done in that overt way of just intimidating people, of using harsh language towards people.
It can be done by manipulating people.
It can be done through passive aggression.
There are all sorts of ways that the person can try
and exert unhealthy control, but that's where we end up
if there's too much expression of the aggressive drive in us.
That makes sense, and it reminds me of an example
from my own life where, for some I should
say, I've had almost exclusively positive collaborations among my colleagues at Stanford
and elsewhere.
Every one of those collaborations has ended in a paper that we were all happy with, but
more importantly, the relationships grew and we're not diminished, right?
But I had one collaboration with someone not to be named
where it was going very well,
but I had the need to reschedule an appointment.
So I sent a note about the fact that my carny
a dealing with, I had some other things I explained why
I need to reschedule the appointment
and didn't receive a reply, which was a little unusual,
but then eventually received a reply that said, well, it's clear that you don't want to pursue this collaboration, which is
like the furthest thing from the truth, right?
And so I expressed that and then the collaboration was reinstated.
But it brought to mind some concern for me, because there's sort of an extreme reaction
to something that happens
in academics or anyone, we get busy with things come up. It was important to tend to the car,
that is. And then at some point later, they were late to a number of meetings, okay, no big deal,
or academics, we tend to run late. That's typical of many academics, but then I was late once to a meeting and they essentially left and
Wrote an email that said something of the sort like I've got my own great ideas
So I'm no longer interested in pursuing the collaborate and I was like pretty shocked, right because
There was nothing really outside the ordinary in terms of
Business and
Prefisorial schedules and and there were other people involved
postdocs and things like that.
And there was a great project to be worked out.
So I remember being disappointed but also really kind of
surprised but then when I mapped it back to the
earlier example of the car incident I thought, well like
there's a real sort of lack of ability that's person to
handle disappointment,
and yet they're demonstrating rather
some of the same behavior of occasionally running tardy
and these kinds of things.
And I remember feeling like, it was pretty aggressive.
Like it's a pretty aggressive reaction
to something that could have been handled
with a conversation.
Now, I must say I'm very grateful
that the collaboration didn't proceed
and it went elsewhere and worked out great
and they're doing great and we're doing great
and so no hard feelings,
but it stands out to me as a pretty salient example
of aggression but not played out at the level of yelling
or anything, there's a passivity in there
but then there's also kind of entitlement.
And here, of course, I'm only looking at the other person's behavior.
And I should acknowledge, I realize, canceling not good, being late, not good, but listen,
I'm a human being and I'm...
You canceling ones, you were late ones.
This isn't...
Yeah, this isn't habitual.
This is human stuff, right?
Right.
And a lot of good work had gone into the project.
And there was a cost where, you know,
most importantly, the postdoc suffered,
because they weren't involved in these interactions at all,
and yet the project halted at that point.
So to me, that seems like an example of somebody
who has a, well, strong, aggressive drive,
and that's clear from the,
they are incredibly successful in, in, in the academic domain.
Um, and when disappointed, you know, lashes back or is passive, one or, one or the other,
is that, is that, is that what we're getting at here?
Right.
Um, not surprisingly, perhaps the person rarely publishes with other people.
Right.
Right.
Probably that doesn't make a very good collaborative partner.
Right.
And it totally makes sense.
I mean, if you think about what you're describing here,
which is some vulnerability in the person.
There's some way in which the person
doesn't feel good enough.
No matter what, this person has achieved.
So then there's a sense of the need
and the right to over-control.
So when you agree to work together,
you didn't agree that I'll never have to cancel anything, right?
But the thought was different, the framing is different on the other end, that now we're going to work together, right?
So I'm exerting significant control over you, right? And again, you're not aware of it, right? And maybe that he's not aware of it.
In this case, it was a she. Oh, okay. Okay. So, I was thinking of someone different, but she has to have some deficit
of self that results in the reflexive need to over control. And think about the first
response is a non-response, right? Which is, that's aggression, but it's just passive
aggression. Right? The thought would be, well, you're worried. Something doesn't feel good
in you because I didn't respond. Which was true, right? You're expecting a response. Maybe you don't know. Did you get the email?
You know, what's happening? Is she mad?
So it's sort of effective. It creates some consternation and some dissonance in you, right?
Then on top of that, the person is willing to potentially at that point sacrifice the relationship, right?
So you think about aggression now is not good.
This access aggression is not good for you.
It also is clearly eclipsing the generative drive,
because it's not good for this person and their research.
It's not good for this person and the postdocs in their lab.
But the person is willing to accept that
in the service of gratifying the access
in aggression.
Now, so then you said something that then sort of made it okay, right, for the
short term.
Okay, then the person feels gratified.
Like, whether you apologize or not, they took it as, you know, you've to some
degree bow down before me now, like it'll be okay, at least for the short
term, right?
But then the next thing that happens actually does end the collaboration, right?
So that's not good, right?
And even from a self-serving perspective, that person was collaborating with you for a reason,
right?
She saw a benefit to the science that she's very, very interested in through the collaboration
with you, but then let that all go, right?
In the service of what?
In the service of the ego, right?
I don't feel good enough about myself, right?
The response to that then is a response of envy.
That I don't like that you have the freedom
to behave differently than I want you to, right?
I don't like any of it.
I don't like that I don't control you as much as I would like to.
And ultimately, it's that envy that becomes destructive.
So, it's a setback for that person.
It's destructive of the science that person was doing.
It's destructive of the science that you were doing.
So, envy is destructive.
And here, the high level of aggression, the aggressive drives at a very high place.
It's exceeding the generative drive.
The pleasure drive isn't high enough
either because there's not enough pleasure coming from the great science that's being done, right?
So then the person is approaching the world through the lens of envy, right? They don't feel good
enough. They want to exert that aggression through over control and what they end up doing is
destructive, right? And it's very clearly destructive. It's a great example because it's destructive of the science,
which is ostensibly the reason that you're there, right?
It's the reason you were there,
but someone who needs to exert over control
is there not just for that reason,
and then the other reasons can trump the generative reason
that they're there.
And that's how envy,
when it is the product of aggression
or pleasure seeking being too high always, unfailingly,
creates destruction.
And how different is that from agency and gratitude
as active verbs, right?
There's a sense of agency,
but the agency isn't being exactly enacted
because if the agency's being enacted
in the service of science or career or whatever it may be,
that's not going so well, right?
And the gratitude part isn't active, like my goodness,
I'm here, I have this great career,
I'm discovering things, I get to spend my life in science,
I get to collaborate with you,
like there's so many things to feel good about, I have post-docs in my lab, right?
I get to nurture them because I know more and I can guide. That's not leading. Envy is not those things,
which is why people who are doing that, at least in this realm of life, although this often,
no, this bleeds into other realms of life. What you, the vast majority of times,
you see as someone who does not have happiness.
In the way that we're, you know,
the happiness with the quotes, right?
That happiness is, you know, the sense of peace, right?
The sense of well-being, right?
This being able to delight in things, contentment, right?
The person doesn't have that, right?
And here it's interesting, right?
This person gets to the highest levels of academia
and they're very successful and they have a lab
of their own and they're collaborating.
You think that's all great, right?
But not inside of them.
It's not bringing them those things
is evidenced by how this person is behaving
and I would bet almost 100%.
If you say, what's that person like in other aspects of life,
at least in the professional world,
probably in others too,
no one's gonna describe a happy person.
So much of what you just said captures
this individual extremely well.
And it also reminds me that so much of the way
that you're describing this aggressive drive
can also be observed perhaps in the way
that people show up to social interactions.
Not necessarily big interactions, maybe even just interactions between two people.
What I'm thinking of here is the person, male or female, who shows up and just kind of takes over,
like talks the whole time and tells stories.
I went to a meal when I graduated university and someone showed up for the first time,
this meal, meaning we had never met them before,
and just like sat down and just started telling stories
for like an hour.
And it was the interesting portions of it were captivating,
and then at some point I realized like this is either
total pathology, like this person is crazy,
but they weren't crazy, or they have no recognition that they're absorbing
all the oxygen in the room, as it's sometimes described.
But it seemed like they had this need
to just control the whole environment by way of speech,
just like, you know, fire hose stories.
And I've seen this, definitely in the academic realm.
I've seen this in the non-academic realm
and social settings.
And what's interesting is perhaps why this person
does this or these people do this,
but what's also interesting is how people react to it.
On the one hand, I think most people find
that kind of obnoxious, but there also seem to be people
who see this as like, oh, that person has a lot of agency.
Like, they're a leader.
Like, they actually grab a lot of the attention
that they're seeking, and we tend to view those people
as kind of empowered.
I don't actually think that they're necessarily empowered,
but perhaps systems from the feeling that the rest of us,
I like to think have, which is some sense of social etiquette
where there's some give and take. You walk into a room, you kind of us, I like to think have, which is some sense of social etiquette, where there's some give and take.
You walk into a room, you kind of assess,
what's the context here?
There's some listening as well as some speaking,
and so on.
And so when someone shows up and kind of violates
all those rules, on the one hand,
it can be obnoxious and overtake everything,
but as I said before, there's also this sense of like,
oh, that must be nice to just be able to like,
be as one one feels.
And so I think I'm describing this not because I think
people should mimic this type of behavior either way.
You know, be really me cannot say anything that's on their mind
or just overtake, but because I feel like it might be
an exploration of this aggressive drive. And if someone's doing that, are they I feel like it might be an exploration of this aggressive drive.
And if someone's doing that, are they trying to like mask something else?
And why do people react to these seemingly powerful people in this way?
These things happen in the world around us, right?
They're independent of the spectrum of gender, the spectrum of intelligence achievement, right?
They're human problems. So a person you're describing,
whether that person has character structure problems that are present with them across time,
or whether they're in a certain place, you know, whether it's in life or today, like we don't
know for sure what the underpinnings, but what you're describing is it's a presentation of narcissism.
But what you're describing is it's a presentation of narcissism, right? And our narcissism is rooted not in confidence, not in arrogance, right?
It's rooted in vulnerability. It's rooted in I don't feel good enough.
And narcissism then then engages with the world through the lens of envy.
So no one else gets to have any time.
No one else gets to have any time. No one else gets
to say anything funny. No one else maybe gets to say anything at all, right? There's a dominance
of the room, right? There's a dominance of the room that comes through an inability to tolerate the
back and forth of human interactions, right? Human engagement, engagement. So then that person becomes very dominant.
And why is that?
Because when they tell a story and they get a laugh,
or even if it's not that funny,
and it's a 15th story,
but somebody smiles a little bit, or nobody smiles,
they can perceive inside that like,
I just did that, I said that.
And maybe somebody responded positively,
I feel good about that,
for a split second now that's gone.
And then the next thing comes, then the next thing comes and the next thing comes because people who
are coming at the world through the lens of narcissism, whether it's just in that particular
event, right, or it's a cross life, right, are never satisfied.
Nothing ever brings enough goodness.
Nothing ever brings enough feeling of pleasure. So the person
then wants more. And that's how the person dominates the room. Now that can be very seductive.
Narcissistic people, not always, but are often very seductive because of that appearance of mastery,
of control. So that person did have, we could look at it in the short term and say, that person had mastery over the room.
No one said anything for an hour but them.
So they had mastery over the room.
They had control over the room.
But what they're doing is exerting over control.
It's like Pennywise and Poundfulish.
That Barwa Dollar today to pay back 100 tomorrow.
Because they got to control that room,
but a lot of people, not everyone,
right? Some people are seduced by it, right? But a lot of people will take away from that,
something that's not a good feeling, something that wasn't mutual, that doesn't make a person
want to collaborate with that person, even being the same space as that person, right? So it's
counterproductive, right? Because the people who might come under the spell, so to speak, right?
They're the people who were brought under the spell, so to speak, right? They're the people who
are brought under the spell, right? They're less observing, dynamic, you know, intuitive,
introspective. They're not the people that you want in a sense on your side, right? The people that
would be most valuable to collaborate with, even as thought partners have conversations with,
right, those people are going to be put off because even if they don't know exactly what's wrong, they know like that didn't feel good.
And they mapped, do I want that feeling more in my life?
No.
Right?
So that's the counterproductive aspects.
That's why narcissism is destructive because you might say, well, there's nothing destructive
in that interaction.
But again, you have to be standing so up close to it that you don't see the bigger picture.
Because when you stand back from that, that's not a person who's by and large. You see, that's not
a person who's interconnected in the world around them. Has a group of good supportive friends,
has a bunch of colleagues where they can have exchange information. Because all that social
dynamic has to happen in the rest of life. So you're seeing a situation that is counterproductive, that is destructive
and you always see that when people are enacting narcissism, whether it's okay, but much about
things have happened. And for whatever reason, like, I'm in an unhealthy place and I'm enacting
it right now. Who are if I'm enacting it every day of my life? Because it's in my character
structure and I have it recognized and change it, it's always destructive. The narcissists that I've known and observed
almost always seem to have a partner
who clearly supports their narcissism
or at least doesn't speak up very much against it,
at least not publicly, and not much else,
except a professional role.
In fact, there's one scientist who I did not work with
who comes to mind and the joke about him was always that
This person would talk about themselves endlessly for the first half hour that you run into them and say, okay
Well enough about me. Why don't you tell me about me?
This person moved to a different country with their partner comes back every once in a while has essentially done nothing over the last
Decatur so kind of left the field.
And it's kind of the secretly the laughing stock
of the field.
There was one other anecdote about this person.
I'm just, I'm not picking on them.
I'm just trying to explore these dimensions of aggression
and low pleasure drive and envy.
At lab meetings, it was well known that they would host a basketball game, but it was well known that you did not want to score like, you know, on this person,
because you would be asked to leave the lab. And indeed several people were asked to leave
the laboratory for having embarrassed the lab head at one of these lab events.
By participating in exactly the event that was described in the way it was
described and doing something competent.
Right, so the game was essentially a way for the person to build themselves up
and they were a mediocre at best basketball player. So like here's this game
where everyone's expected to pretend,
right?
And I have to imagine, pretend that the person is actually
better at what they do than they are.
And in some ways, it feels like a replica of how
narcissism shows up in so many other areas of life.
Like you said, you know, these people are rarely
surrounded by people who are actually very bright,
self-effacing, etc., they tend to gather people that
just support them or no one at all, because no reasonably healthy person would choose to be
around that. Because that game is a metaphor for all of life for that person. It's sending that
message, like see this message
and extrapolate it out to everything else, right?
And what is, so what's the matter for?
What's it communicating?
It's communicating that you don't do anything better
than I do.
You don't rise above me.
Interestingly, right?
You don't arise above me in any way.
You don't get to know things I don't know.
You don't get to do anything better than I do.
Or I will be destructive towards you.
It's fascinating.
It's not about the game.
The game is a way of communicating that message.
Interesting.
The person like even that good at the game,
why not choose something you're really good at?
Because then the message is not communicated
as clearly, right?
And a lot of this is coming as unconscious.
Let's choose something I'm kind of
fair to middling at, right?
And then make it very clear that no one
gets to be better, or I do something
destructive to them.
I mean, that's exactly what that is.
And imagine, like, someone is thrown out
of the lab, right?
I mean, like, this is in many ways,
like, like, the biggest thing in their life, or one of the biggest things, that's anti, this is in many ways, like the biggest thing in their life,
or one of the biggest things that I've been told.
Yeah, it's anti-generative.
I mean, the cost of that in the larger world
is one less potentially fantastic scientist.
Right, and that's the broader,
that's always the broader picture
because the narcissist is standing
very, very close to the tapestry, right?
And so the interaction there is,
you have squirted a basket when I have not, so you don't understand the message that you're not supposed to exceed me. And now
I will get rid of you because you're dangerous to have around, because you don't get the
message and you may exceed me in other ways. And also, I'm going to feel better because
I have the power to be punitive, even though Even though it's wantonly punitive, right?
It's completely unjustified, but I have the power to do that and it'll make me feel good
then to push you away.
And I know this is not going to be good for you and I'll feel good about that, right?
But that doesn't last, of course, that's why the person continues to do it.
And it also doesn't understand at all that, like, that's not good for science, right? Or most importantly like that's not good for science, right?
Or most importantly, that's not good for me, right?
There's a graduate student in that lab because you didn't say fire the graduates,
vaguely graduates didn't leave.
If the person wasn't good, no, it's make the graduates didn't leave no matter what.
So the person is doing things that are
injurious to the society around us, obviously to the specific person,
they're targeting and also to themselves.
And that's where if you follow,
if you follow envy and you see high levels of it
in situations that are unbounded.
So like this situation is unbounded
in the sense that the person can do that.
There's no higher authority.
Right. Well, labs, this is changing.
And by the way, I should back up a
second and say that I do believe in it's been my experience that most scientists and lab heads
are not narcissists are quite kind, are benevolent. I mean, they'll be a little quirky,
or scientists after all, but not narcissists. At the same time, it is true that for a long time,
less so now, laboratories were sort of like little fiefdoms.
There was very little oversight from the universities, and so the lab you joined became your entire world
and landscape. And there was some exploitation by narcissistic lab heads for sure.
Yeah, as you said, it was unbounded, right? Like there was no oversight. Whereas this would be much
harder to recreate today if someone we wanted to.
And I think that's why by almost everyone listening to this, it will resonate with them.
They'll find some familiarity because you see this, you can see this in situations where
there's a bounded group of people.
There's just a certain group of people in a certain situation and that's who they are.
But the authority of the person leading the group is unbounded.
So there's a situation where if that person has narcissistic tendencies, aggressive drive
is too high, pleasure drive is high, but not being met, if all those things are happening,
that's when you see this come to light, which is why the destruction varies based upon
the destruction that's permissible
within the framework, right?
So here, this person wasn't gonna fire everyone
in their lab, right?
So in a sense, they could only damage their lab so much,
although maybe if you damage your lab so much,
you don't get funding, you inadvertently sink yourself,
right?
So even there, that person could bring about
their own destruction.
But when you see the other end, where it's really unbounded,
like in the sense of war, right?
And someone who can control a machine of war,
who then has everything, right?
Like, what do they need, right?
Well, they need something they don't have and never will get.
So now they start enacting war and war is destructive.
And you think, oh, that person wants something.
I mean, how many times does this someone start a war?
Right?
That's clearly an unjustified war.
It's a war because they want something.
Then they get something and they're satisfied.
That's not how it goes.
Then they get something and they're not satisfied.
And they want more.
So in discussions at times about narcissism and envy and how that can play out on the
world stage. So sometimes, you know, huge events in human history will come up and people,
for example, will bring up Adolf Hitler and they did it. Hitler wanted things, wanted things.
No, the unbound narcissism, the unbound envy wanted destruction. This is
a person who, if things had continued to go, as this person intended, there would have
been no one left on earth but him, because the process is nothing but destructive, which
is why, after the fact, there's incalculable human carnage,
and he himself was among the incalculable human carnage. Because that's the endpoint of
narcissism, that's the, of narcissism on a broad stage. That's the endpoint of envy at its highest
magnitude. And we see that as examples, whether we see on the smaller stage of the lab,
right, head that you're describing,
or on the larger stage of unbounded war,
we end up with destruction, like 100% time.
That's the final common pathway for all of that.
Are there some consistent themes of childhood
that lead somebody to become a narcissist?
And in addition to that, I'm curious whether or not
narcissists ever have insight, whether or not
if offered the opportunity to explore the 10 cupboards
under the structure of self and function of self,
whether or not they eventually see inside those cupboards
and go, oh my goodness, I've got this self
that's clearly overinflated and
I've got these defense mechanisms and I'm so envious and modify their behavior or whether
not the narcissists are immune from constructive self-reflection.
The answer that the first part is the vast majority of narcissism.
It may be all of it we don't know for sure, is rooted in the
childhood trauma of not feeling good enough, right? Which is not an excuse for people doing
awful things. It's not what we're saying. We're trying to have an explanatory mechanism,
which goes back to formative life experiences and not feeling good enough, whether it was because
that person was directly denigrated or that person wasn't denigrated, but could never work hard enough, never could be enough
to get approval.
Again, it's not 100% of human beings are complicated, but if you go and look, you see that.
That there was never a state of like, oh, I feel good enough about myself.
And if there's never a state of, I feel good enough about myself because someone has told me
that and given me the pad on the head
or given me the positive comment,
you can see how in a certain sort of natural layer
the land genetically and in concert with other experiences,
that person can get to adulthood with a lot of aggression
in them and never having experienced, I'm good enough,
it's still running along inside of them
and then they're enacting that aggression in the world around them.
That's most commonly what we see.
And because there's such deep vulnerability and such deep insecurity, then people who
suffer from full-blown narcissism, narcissistic personality disorder, so inaction of envy
on the highest levels, that
is they're so defended.
They're so strongly defended in an unhealthy manner from seeing their own vulnerability
that it is extremely difficult to get that person to come around and say, okay, let's
look in those 10 cupboards.
Within the field, people often talk about treating narcissistic people,
they talk about it in a nihilistic way.
And sometimes you'll see very experienced people say,
oh, that's impossible, right?
That never gets better.
Now, I'm not a believer in therapeutic nihilism.
I think that, yes, it is the norm that that person just can't get it together to go look
at that thing.
They're so defended against it.
They're so afraid of it.
They won't look anywhere near it.
So they're looking in the other direction and they're furthering all that on health.
It's not the case that it's always that way.
And on a couple of occasions, I have worked with seeing, you know, witness narcissistic people
who can make changes.
Now it's usually in the context of something very extreme that causes them to do that.
So someone who will no longer have access to family members they want to see or to financial
resources that they, you know, need to keep themselves afloat, it's things that often
are that dramatic.
It's not always that, but we can see though,
in those kind of extenuating situations
where the problem is so big, the envy is so high,
but the motivation for change is very, very high
because since on the carrot and stick model,
the stick here is very, very strong,
that if a person then goes and does that,
you can see change inside of them.
So we're never in a place of therapeutic nihilism, but the barriers to that are very, very high
because the self is so wounded that the person is protecting that self so strongly.
That's why the narcissism and envy are so full-blown and it's hard to get that person
to go back and look, but not impossible.
Based on what you're telling me, it seems that it's a very low probability that a non-clinician
could change a narcissist.
In other words, if one is engaging in the world with a narcissist because they have to,
presumably, or they just find themselves in that place,
would you say to that person,
there's very little, if anything,
that you can do to change the narcissist behavior
or psychological framework.
If they, because, of course, if the narcissist
can't often do it for themselves with the help
of a skilled clinician, why would anyone else
be able to achieve that?
We're coming at what we're doing here from a perspective of truth about human beings,
and that truth brings with it hopefulness.
It brings with it hopefulness that people can change and how people can change.
I am 100% all for that.
It's the way to look at ourselves, right?
But it is also true that there are aspects of pathology
that require clinical treatment in order to improve.
So now we're looking from the other side and saying,
hey, there's a problem here.
And there's a deep problem here.
And that we have to come out from a different perspective
of how can you help that problem.
And there's a science behind this too of what level of clinical care, for example, is
most likely to be helpful to someone like this.
And it's not an individual clinician, even, right?
It's a team of people who work through different modalities who can sort of wrap around that
person.
So it's not just a level of clinical care is needed,
but it's a relatively high level of clinical care.
And that in general is the only way that we get at narcissism.
That's not 100%.
But that's the vast majority of time.
So what can then the person do?
A person cannot be a team of clinicians.
What that person can do, one choice is to disengage.
But disengagement can come with the promise of reengagement, right?
Many, many times I've worked with people
and practiced and rehearsed with them like,
okay, what might you say to someone along the lines of,
you know, I've known you for a long time
or I care about you or I love you, right?
Whatever they may say to lead in,
but I can't be with you or I can't be around you, right?
There's something going on that makes it not okay for me.
It doesn't feel okay.
And person may be saying things like,
you know, aggressive or demeaning or whatever it is
or maybe they just say it just doesn't feel okay.
I can't have it.
And then the need to step away from the person
but look, if you got some help, right?
If you took better care of yourself in ways that would be better for you and for the people around you, then of course I'd
want to be in your life.
Something like that, so disengagement can come with that encouragement, right, to the person,
but one way or another, you have to set boundaries, which is, okay, I have to deal with this person,
so I'll deal with them a little bit, or I don't have to deal with this person, so I won't.
Or I can't get away from this person, so I have to take with a grain of salt what they're
saying to me.
But ultimately, some form of strong boundaries or disengagement is, that's the response
that's the self-care response for the person who's with a narcissist.
What are some other ways that the aggressive drive and pleasure drive and generative drive
for that matter play out?
For instance, we talked about the former patient of yours who eventually switched jobs, clearly
had a generative drive within him, but it was being blocked by a number of choices rooted
in narratives that originated in childhood, et cetera. We talked about individuals with high aggressive drive,
high degree of pleasure drive, but a very diminished capacity to experience pleasure, and therefore
a lot of envy and the destruction that comes with envy. What are some of the other variations on
these drives as you observe them in your clinical practice. Our overall framing is we want the generative drive to be the one that's deterministic,
right?
It's the one with the strongest influence.
So we want to nurture the generative drive in us and in others, and it makes sense for
us to talk about that.
But we've looked at how do things get out of balance, right? And from
the perspective of, well, what if the aggressive drive or the pleasure drive, what if they're
too high, right? And then it makes sense that often not always what can be driving them
to be so high are things that aren't healthy in us. Then the higher they get, the harder
it is to gratify them. So we end up with that problem of envy,
but we can be out of balance in the other direction too, where the person does not experience
an ability to engage with the world around them. They don't think they can do anything to change
anything for the better, insider outside of themselves, and if they're not doing much, they don't think they can do anything to change anything for the better or inside or outside of themselves
and if they're not doing much, they don't feel that they can do much
and also not receiving pleasure from things.
There's no gratification from the things a person is doing.
We see situations like this too with the aggressive drive, the pleasure drive, or both.
And then we end up not at envy because envy is the side of excess, but we end up
at demoralization on the lower side.
Now, demoralization is not a specific psychiatric diagnosis.
It can predispose to psychiatric problems like the biochemical abnormality of depression,
right?
But what we're talking about here is not a psychiatric diagnosis.
Like, envy is not a psychiatric diagnosis.
It's a thing that can be experienced, that can lead to diagnoses.
The same thing with demoralization.
If you don't feel that you can make a difference to anything,
and you're not enjoying anything or feeling gratification from anything,
then that pool is going to win out.
That's going to be a demoralized person.
The same way, of course, we know and experiments when you have a rat going for food, if you
do it enough, when the rat goes for the food and you take the food away, the rat stops
trying.
They learned helplessness for a number one.
That exists in us too, and it comes along with all sorts of other things. Because being not rats, we have a whole bunch of thoughts
about that of, oh my god, I'm not good enough.
And nothing will ever be okay.
And so demoralization, then,
can be very, very strong in taking a person away
from the other things we're trying to seek, right?
Either because that person has the, essentially the learned helplessness, right? And all the things, the complicated things we're trying to seek, right? Either because that person has the essentially,
the learned helplessness, right?
And all the things, the complicated things inside of us
that can come along with that,
or the person isn't gaining pleasure from anything.
So when we're considering the ways
in which we can be out of balance, right?
We think, okay, aggression and pleasure drive,
if one or the other or both is too high we end up at envy and
If one or the other or both are too low we end up with demoralization and you can take almost any
scenario it could be a scenario of something that's just not really not going well for a person not a clinical scenario
It's a thing in a person's life,
or we can take clinical scenarios and the vast majority, you know, outside of outliers,
like a head injury, for example, we can take those scenarios and we can look at it in
that way and we can understand what's going on. At least we can understand enough that
when we go back and look in the ten cupboards of the two pillars,
we can then have some understanding of, okay, what is going on?
We know the basic picture and how things are not in the balance we want them in.
Now we can understand that enough to go back and then look in those ten cupboards.
And I believe that just about everything except those biological outliers,
like a head injury, fits into that heuristic,
which is why we can use it to understand,
we can use it to help, we can use it to make change.
What a powerful lens to think about
and explore the self and where things are working for us
and where things are possibly not working for us.
If I or anyone else out there wanted to get some read on it, assess their level of aggressive
drive and their level of pleasure drive and their ability to experience pleasure, what
sorts of questions would one ask?
For instance, is it a question of how driven am I? How much get up and go do I have?
How much pleasure do I experience from an interaction
with a puppy and interaction with food?
Is it too much?
Does it draw me off course?
Are those the sorts of very simple,
but I'm perhaps also very informative questions
that we could start to use to probe our psyche?
Yeah, I think yes, but I would come top down.
Right. So if the goal of health is that aggression and pleasure,
those drives are subserving, the generative driving, start to look there.
Right. If a person can take an honest inventory of self,
like what kind of force am I being in the world around me?
And that could mean, for example,
what kind of force am I being in my family?
Am I denigrating to the people around me
or the other people in the home afraid of me?
Like what kind of force am I being a force for good?
Am I bolstering?
Like people can't always see that in themselves
and take stock of themselves.
But what we're talking about is situation
where we think a person can.
Like they can bring to bear who am I being in the world?
In other ways, if you think of the example
of the person who needed to leave the job,
who could look at that and say,
no, I'm not being generative in the world in the way I want to.
I'm certainly not doing my job as well as I would want to.
I'm making my own life worse.
So that person could then see that's out of balance.
Or in another way, a person might see a lot of what I'm doing
is self-serving or maybe destructive.
People can realize that.
So you can realize by taking an inventory of self
is the generative drive
what's deterministic in me. And again, not always, but we're talking about a process of
exploration. If the answer to that is yes, if you say, I'm trying to be the best person
that I can. And I think about the people over whom I have any authority, right? And like
I try to be reasonable and I try to be fair and I try to be circumspect. And you know,
I try and think in someone else's shoes. I mean, you know, sometimes I have to be reasonable and I try to be fair and I try to be circumspect. And I try and think in someone else's shoes.
I mean, sometimes I have to set boundaries, expectations, even punishment, right?
But I'm like careful about how I'm doing that.
And I'm certainly not perfect.
And I get things wrong at times.
But I do think I'm contributing to the world.
I'm doing whatever I take on, as well as I can do it.
I'm productive at work.
My kids are doing okay
or my friends are doing all right.
Whatever it is that if we can come up with that, then we can say, okay, exhale a little
bit, like you're in a good place, right?
It doesn't mean everything is optimal, of course.
So then go look at the level of the aggressive drive, which might mean, you know, how assertive
am I, right?
Am I the kind of person who comes up to the precipice, but does it make the decision?
Am I the kind of person who's a little too assertive?
And sometimes I'm sort of walking on people a little bit, like a person can go look at
the aggressive drive within them, or pleasure seeking.
Am I doing things that bring me gratification, right?
Am I engaging with the people around me in a way that brings the gratification that one
might wish for, right? So if it's in a romantic
relationship, is there romance? Like, are we being nice to one another, right? So you can go and look at
that and say, am I getting gratification from the things I'm doing? Am I taking this, wherever this
drive is within me and trying to satisfy it in reasonable, healthy ways that are also good for
others, and we're back to the generative drive.
So that's one way of coming at it.
And it's the way that we would like to
because now what do we try to do next
and what can we make things better?
Can we optimize things?
Okay, things are okay, right?
But can we make them better?
But let's say we see that the generative drive
is not winning the day, right?
And people can see that, like, look, I'm seeking pleasure, right?
It's why I got, for example, here over and over,
that's why I got addicted to this substance
and now it's not providing any pleasure to me,
it's not making me miserable, right?
But I wanted what it was giving me.
Again, this doesn't mean that the person
it just wants to have the world's best time, right?
It may mean that they're really suffering a lot, right?
And the pleasure that that drug gave them was some relief from pain.
And this is how many, many people tragically ended up becoming addicted to and dying from
opiates, right?
Because they say the opiate after the surgery or the opiate after the injury then is soothing
something, right? And it's soothing something because the injury, then is soothing something.
And it's soothing something because the person feels less bad about something inside of them.
Hear this all the time.
That then fosters addiction.
So that person looking for pleasure.
This isn't something where we would say in some lighthearted manner, that person took
chances with their life.
I mean, sometimes we'll see that.
But more and more what people are looking for then is relief from suffering, right? But we can get to that point where we can ascertain for whatever
reason that the pleasure seeking is too much. And if pleasure seeking an aggression or too much,
we become aware of dissatisfaction, right? If you're relying too much on aggression, I always want
my way. It's not always going to happen, right? Or I always want that pleasurable thing.
I always want to feel better.
That also doesn't happen, right?
So then that can guide us towards being aware
of where those drives.
And if the drives are high, how much dissonance
is created by what's actually coming of the drive, right,
versus the level the drive is at.
So I guess it's a long way of saying yes to your question,
but I would sort of come top down
because the generative drive is so important
and it does gate forward,
like kind of where are we at, you know,
in the spectrum of like how healthy am I
or are there elements of unhealthy
if I want to kind of go after,
or you know, my seeing things in myself that really say,
things that are unhealthy are really dominating my life,
are deterministic, like addiction, you know.
Just just one example, you know,
addiction, things that are self-destructive, right?
Because then that's a place to then look at it more
through the clinical lens.
Maybe I won't just talk to a trusted other, you know,
or get a book, but maybe I should, and maybe I won't just talk to a trusted other, and go get a book, but maybe I should,
and maybe I should have a clinical care.
Yeah, the example of addiction is very potent,
and it also brings to mind the,
perhaps,
less apparently dangerous situation,
but one that I think is really common,
where people have a certain amount of aggressive drive,
they have a certain amount of aggressive drive, they have a certain amount of pleasure drive, but there's a kind of passivity and draining out
of the generative drive, or competing out of the generative drive because of social media.
And the reason I bring this up is, again, not because I dislike social media, I rely on and
use social media for teaching and learning extensively, really.
But in going back to the pillars that underlie whether or not we achieve an experienced
agency gratitude, peace, contentment, and delight, within the pillar of function of self,
there's this thing, salience, you know, and what we're paying attention to, internal and
external. And social media does seem to me a unique circumstance never before observed in human evolution,
where you have a near infinite number of environments available to you.
And we know that a picture is worth a thousand words, and a movie is worth a billion pictures
when it comes to drawing or attention.
I mean, you just look at, you a young child even an infant an iPad.
I mean, that kid is in the tunnel.
I don't necessarily think that's a bad thing and their computers and computer screens are
going to be a part of their lives now and forever presumably.
But it is the case that there are a lot of people who perhaps have the propensity for a strong generative drive,
but because they also have a propensity for a pleasure drive, they wake up, they pick up
the phone, they look at the phone, you know, something captivates their attention, then
they're thinking about that.
It might be something that brings them delight, but more often than not, it's something that
brings them either mild irritation or mild entertainment, maybe even intense entertainment for a short while, but very quickly
minutes and hours go by in which we are not engaging in the world unless we are posting valuable content.
And so social media is a bit of a drain on these drives. I mean, it taps into these drives in very strong ways.
And all one has to do is observe the behavior of people
in public spaces now, in airports, on trains,
even in their cars.
And I mean, people are essentially watching TV all day long.
And it does concern me.
And I raise it because I feel like it can distract
from our generative drive in a way that
doesn't necessarily speak to any kind of like deep character flaw
or any kind of subconscious narrative,
but just that that salience covered
is clearly something within that salience covered
is happening that's unprecedented
and very, very powerful and potentially quite destructive.
Yeah.
I think to understand this, I would cite this belief, I believe this to be true, that human
beings have a long history of under appreciating the power of the discoveries that are then
in their own hands.
So we discover gunpowder, how long into we're shooting each other.
We discover nuclear fission.
Right now, are we going to destroy the planet?
So social media, in a sense, it's a discovery,
it's a thing that comes from what we figured out as humans,
that now is there in front of us,
and big, powerful discoveries deserve to be treated with respect.
Gunpowder is very powerful and if people need to hunt
in order to survive, a gunpowder can help them hunt
without getting hurt and it would be more successful.
Nuclear vision has provided some good things to humanity
but it can also destroy humanity.
So I think the same is true here that what you're talking about
is something of immense power. And you can see how if it gets out of balance. So to let's use the
salient. So let's say the social media is too salient, right? That's going to make a
problem, right? If it's too salient in the sense that the person is always looking at things
that don't make them feel good enough, right? Well, that's not going to go well. And
that's going to affect what's in those other 10 cupboards,
and what is built on top of it.
So then it gets into the unconscious mind.
Like, oh, I thought I was good enough
until like now I'm looking at all the social media,
and I realize I'm not.
I mean, this is people who treat teens, you know,
often talk about this, that you see something
that you didn't often see before,
where a person who might have gotten through a lot of formative years thinking like, like, oh, how I look
is okay, for example, then is bombarding themselves with social media that tells them how they
look is not okay, and then that changes.
Absolutely. Or perhaps social media is just simply absorbing a ton of time and energy,
but mostly time that could be devoted to a
generative force. That's the other side of it. So think about the example of the person who,
I know, wasn't social media, but we were saying, what if it were social media that instead of 90
minutes a day, you know, it's eight hours because there's an analog there. And we see a lot of this.
And it's taking something that can be good, right? And can, and instead you could even,
should be good, like there's enough out there,
right, in terms of learning and bolstering
that like why should it not be good, right?
But it's not good because the defense is then shift.
Like if you're relying on it 10 hours a day,
there has to be some denial, right?
Because there are other things to do in the world.
There has to be some avoidance,
there has to be some rationalization.
Like, something is going on there that's not healthy.
So if you tell me this person is utilizing
social media 10 hours a day, they're not looking at things
that make them feel bad about themselves.
They're just doing it.
Then I think, look, something is out of balance.
Now, it may be that that person's defenses are out of balance.
So think about the example of the person with the job they didn't like.
Then their defensive structure changes.
Then the thing that was good for them, they rely on too much.
And now it becomes something that's not good for them.
So then you go and look at what else is out of balance here.
What else is driving this?
Now, maybe it's being driven by the change in defense mechanisms, et cetera.
Maybe it's the other way around that this person just kind of habituated
to doing more and more and more and more of it.
And then you would come out in a different way of, okay,
can you slowly but surely do less?
Replace the time with things that were good before
because you could then back that person out to where they were before.
But you're not going to back the person out to where they were before if it's being driven by something else.
So we again come to the curiosity.
You tell me that person is on social media 14 hours a day.
I'm curious, right?
I wanna understand what is the balance of those drives?
Right, you've just told me a very powerful point
about salience that doesn't sound like a good one.
So already, you're giving me clues about where the drives are, which means where's that
person at?
What's going on in all those cabinets?
Then you give more information.
Now, sit and talk with the person.
Now, you're going to understand, like, what is the lay of the land here and how do we
go about making it better?
I love the concept of the generative drive.
First of all, because it's pro-social.
It brings about great things for us and for the world.
I mean, what is better than peace, contentment, and delight, especially when we remind ourselves
that those are active phrases, or those can be achieved in experience inside of action.
It's not just sitting, levitating, naval gazing, that sort of things.
It's not enlightenment, right? Itating, naval gazing, that sort of things. It's not
enlightenment, right? It's peace, contentment, and delight.
Very big difference.
Very, very big difference. Yes. One of the other reasons I love
this concept of the generative drive so much is also because
it is a verb state. It has to do with creating things in us
and in the world, in cultivating our experience of things
and what we do and what we say
and how we respond to what others do and say.
And I also like it because it's distinct from the way
that we're normally taught to think about psychological
well-being or being a healthy individual,
which usually centers around a discussion of goals
and values.
And what am I trying to focus on?
And what sorts of people do I want to engage with in the world?
And certainly all of that is really important goals and who you engage with.
But I think for many people out there, much of their time is spent thinking about other
people.
Like how healthier or unhealthy are the people they're dating or their friends or what's going
on between two family members, you know, which of course is fine to think about, but a lot
of emphasis is placed on like our assessments of others and how those are impacting us.
And in some cases, people default to just thinking about others and their problems and seeing
their problems.
And what we're really talking about here
is a process of introspection and inquiry
that's very structured.
And as it's been laid out by you,
these two pillars, structure of self, function of self
with these 10 cupboards,
that might sound like a lot of cupboards,
but as we talked about in the first episode,
all of that flows up to these very simple ideals
and concepts and action states and ways of being.
And to me, there's nothing more powerful than the statement that what we are all seeking
are states of agency and gratitude.
Because again, to go back to the analogy of physical fitness, there are not an infinite number of different
physical states or states of fitness that one can seek. There's endurance, there's strength,
there's flexibility, there's dynamic movement, there's explosiveness, there's speed,
there's a bunch of subtleties to it. But here, it really seems that the psyche ourselves and our mental health is really tractable
if we turn the lens and we look inward.
Yes, yes.
I think that hits upon a very, very important point
as we talk about understanding oneself
in the process of change, right?
And I would describe that as rational aspiration, right?
So let's use the physical health example, right? If I think,
okay, I want to be healthier, you know, I want to have more strength, I want to have more endurance,
and I might even have ideas of what that would be. I want to be able to run a certain distance
in a certain time, lift a certain amount of weight, I have an idea of what that is, but rational
aspiration is rooted in our present. I'm aware that there's a me now that isn't in that state.
And I'm aware that there's the things that I'm going to do
to get to that state. And I'm not that dreading them.
I'm like, okay, there'll be difficult. But that's okay.
I can do difficult things. I can take pride in doing difficult things.
And that's how we all achieve things.
So I see myself in the present. because of course goals are good, and that's true, as
long as we're still living our lives in the present, because otherwise goals just become
fantasies, or things we want to possess.
So if I'm aware of the state of physical health I'm in right now, and I'm aware of the state
of physical health I want to be in, and I know there's a bunch of pathways I could take to get there,
but I have to think about that,
about it, figure it out, do those things,
and then I'm gonna navigate myself there.
That's how the whole process is good, right?
I don't feel bad about myself now.
I recognize something I would like to change.
I'm not saying, oh, you were a loser
because you don't have those things, right?
I feel good about myself now.
I recognize there's something I want,
and there's going to be a process,
a process across time, across effort
that's going to navigate me there.
Then when I get there, I feel good about being there, right?
It's very, very different if I think I want that.
I want to possess, in a sense, right?
I want to possess the ability to run a certain distance
in a certain time.
I just want the thing.
I'm covetous of the thing.
That is not good.
Because the person then often is denigrating to the self, not always,
but that's a motivation to go out and get that thing that's better
and they're really lamenting the process of getting the,
they just want something as an endpoint.
And that doesn't make for happiness.
It doesn't make for even the humility and humility
and action, the gratitude of, like, the humility
is I can't just do that overnight.
I'm going to have to work hard.
People have to work hard.
I'm no different than anybody else.
I'm not special.
I got to get in there and work and use the elbow grease
and then I'll get healthier.
Like, all of that is good.
I just want to possess something is not good.
And that's why people in scenarios like this,
they might like go through maybe in an unthinking way
or they're gutting it out where they go
and they get that thing, right?
But then that thing is not enough, right?
And they want more.
Now there's nothing wrong with wanting more
if it's the healthy an action of self, right?
I'm gonna now map my way.
This feels better.
I wanna map myself from here to the next level
of better physical fitness.
That's different than I just want that thing because then if I get it, it won't be good
enough, right?
It doesn't make me happy.
It doesn't satisfy me.
And that's the unhealthy state of just wanting things to possess them.
And then we don't feel good about them, which is the thought of if you give people, if
you give a person something they'll resent you for.
Right? Again, that we're painting it a certain way, the context of that statement, which I used to hear,
you know, a lot, even when I was younger, like people would say that, right? And what were they trying to get at?
What they were getting at is, it doesn't feel good if you didn't work for something, right?
Like, if you didn't work very hard and you got to see, but I give you an A or somebody gives me an A.
I know that that's not good.
I know that I got the thing.
I got the A and I might feel happy in the moment because I wanted that thing.
But there's no real pleasure in it.
There's no satisfaction.
There's no contentment.
There's no sense of self.
There's nothing generative.
I didn't work hard enough to go from a C to an A. So it's that, and that
really brings us back to the self that we're growing on top of the structure.
And how that self is functioning, how it's striving, because now we're really talking
about strivings, and if I'm going to strive for something and work hard to get it, well,
I get the good feeling on the other side of it, and now we're living in the generative
space.
Well, I love the structure of what you've laid out again.
Thank you.
The pillars of structure of self and function of self with 10 covers between the two of them
that when explored can seem a little bit complex, but there are really some very straightforward types of inquiry that anyone can go about about self-awareness and address potential defense mechanisms.
What we're conscious of, maybe what we're not conscious of, look at our behaviors and
our strivings, and how that flows up to these simple ideals, again, of empowerment, humility,
agency, and gratitude as verbs. And then from that peace, contentment, and delight,
and the generative drive, which, gosh, if there ever was
a more powerful concept and something to strive for,
I don't think it exists because the generative drive
is extraordinary in the number of different ways
it plays out and it seems always positively.
And of course, the aggressive drive, the pleasure drive exists to varying extents in all of us, but cannot be allowed to overcome the generative drive if we're going to really thrive.
So thank you again so much for this framework, and again to remind people listening and
watching that this framework is mapped out
in a downloadable PDF if people want to see it visually even though we've touched on it
several times before.
I really appreciate how logical, clear, and actionable this framework is.
And also that in providing a framework for us, it gives us something to hold our mind
to.
I think I and so many people out there are familiar with being in a struggle and not being
able to orient.
Where am I in the struggle, not knowing what to do?
You've provided some incredible points of reference for us to really focus on, start
asking questions about I and how I see myself.
What am I paying attention to and so on and so forth to really first anchor and orient and then be able to move forward in this process as many times as it's required to get where we each and all want to go.
So thank you so much for this. I know in our next discussion we're going to touch on the relational aspects of human existence, you know, not just selves, but interactions between selves, including some of the darker and unfortunate aspects
of human existence, like narcissists
and some of the challenges of different,
you know, phobal and personality disorders,
but also just in terms of building healthy relationships
between friends, romantic partners, parents and children
and siblings and co-workers and all the rest.
So thank you again for this incredibly rich knowledge
that you provided us and a map forward.
You're very welcome and thank you.
I appreciate the opportunity to talk about it with you.
Great, well, to be continued.
Thank you for joining me for today's discussion
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