Huberman Lab - Morgan Housel: Understand & Apply the Psychology of Money to Gain Greater Happiness
Episode Date: December 2, 2024In this episode, my guest is Morgan Housel, an expert in private wealth generation and management and author of the bestselling book The Psychology of Money. We discuss how desiring, pursuing, saving,... and spending money impact our psychology and perception of wealth. We explore why people tend to either overspend or oversave and examine the most common mistakes made in the pursuit of financial freedom. Additionally, we discuss how to best use money — and one’s relationship with it — as a tool to create psychological security, freedom, and a deeper sense of life purpose. We also delve into the impact of purchases, social media, and wealth signaling on our internal reward circuits, the dangers of using money as a gauge of career progress or self-worth, and the healthiest psychological stances to adopt while building wealth at any level. By the end of the episode, listeners will have gained numerous practical tools for making smarter financial decisions and should have a clearer understanding of the role money plays in their psychology, happiness, and life. Access the full show notes for this episode at hubermanlab.com. Pre-order Andrew's new book, Protocols: protocolsbook.com Thank you to our sponsors AG1: https://drinkag1.com/huberman Wealthfront**: https://wealthfront.com/huberman BetterHelp: https://betterhelp.com/huberman ROKA: https://roka.com/huberman Function: https://functionhealth.com/huberman **This experience may not be representative of the experience of other clients of Wealthfront, and there is no guarantee that all clients will have similar experiences. Cash Account is offered by Wealthfront Brokerage LLC, Member Finra/SIPC. Promo terms and FDIC coverage conditions apply. Same-day withdrawal or instant payment transfers may be limited by destination institutions, daily transaction caps, and by participating entities such as Wells Fargo, the RTP® Network, and FedNow® Service. New Cash Account deposits are subject to a 2-4 day holding period before becoming available for transfer. Timestamps 00:00:00 Morgan Housel 00:02:13 Sponsors: Wealthfront & BetterHelp 00:05:11 Spending Habits & Cynicism 00:08:44 Tool: Money & Future Regrets 00:16:07 Money Management Extremes; Credit & Hope 00:23:17 Money as a Tool, Happiness, Independence & Purpose 00:27:30 Sponsors: AG1 & ROKA 00:30:11 Unstructured Time; Independence, Identify & Money; Addiction 00:39:04 Longevity, Health & Money 00:47:42 Ambition, Social Media, Fame & Social Debt 00:53:37 Sponsor: Function 00:55:24 Resume Virtues vs. Eulogy Virtues 00:57:52 Compound Interest, Math vs. Behavior 01:01:42 Dopamine & Time, Marshmallow Test & Distraction 01:09:58 Motivation, Pleasure; Relationships 01:14:38 Freedom, Tool: Savings & Independence 01:19:06 Peak-End Rule, Autonomy & Independence; Elder vs. Elderly 01:24:07 Familial Wealth & Identity; Entrepreneurs 01:31:53 Life Purpose; Dogs; Social & Historical Comparison 01:39:58 Social Comparison & Geography, Angst 01:46:07 Carrot vs. Stick, Identity, Tool: Verb States & Energy 01:56:43 Envy & Spending Money; Wealth & Birth Rates 02:01:27 Tools: Parent Modeling; Resentment, Individual Goals 02:07:15 Purpose, Happiness & Money 02:13:05 Zero-Cost Support, YouTube, Spotify & Apple Follow & Reviews, Sponsors, YouTube Feedback, Protocols Book, Social Media, Neural Network Newsletter Disclaimer & Disclosures
Transcript
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Welcome to the Huberman Lab Podcast,
where we 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.
My guest today is Morgan Housel.
Morgan Housel is a partner at the Collaborative Fund
and an expert in private wealth generation and management.
He is also the author
of the spectacularly bestselling book,
The Psychology of Money.
And today we talk about the psychology of money.
We talk about how money can change your psychology.
We talk about how most people tend to lie at the extremes
of either saving too much money or spending too much money.
And we talk about how most people get it completely wrong
when it comes to framing in our minds what money is,
what its real value is,
and its ability to generate happiness within us.
And no, I am not going to tell you,
and Morgan is not going to tell you,
that beyond a certain dollar amount,
you don't increase your happiness.
Because as we all know, money cannot buy happiness,
but it can buffer stress.
We acknowledge that from the outset.
And then Morgan goes on to explain
that really what we're seeking
when we talk about seeking wealth or money is freedom.
Freedom is really about independence
and that if we are constantly in pursuit of wealth,
well then we are not truly free or independent.
So today's discussion is as much about being happy,
being free, feeling independent, feeling free of stress
as it is about this thing that we call money.
So in other words, Morgan explains not just how to generate
and manage monetary wealth, he explains that,
but he also explains how to organize your life
in and around this thing that we call career,
the pursuit of wealth and happiness.
And I can think of few topics as important as today's topic.
I read Morgan's book, The Psychology of Money, and I loved it.
I also loved today's discussion because I'm certain that after it's done, you will realize
that you've probably been thinking about wealth and money incorrectly in a number of ways,
and you've probably been pursuing it incorrectly in a number of ways.
But by asking yourself certain probe questions that Morgan raises today and answering those questions,
you can arrive in a place where your relationship to money
and your pursuit of it really clearly matches
your particular goals.
Before we begin, I'd like to emphasize that this podcast
is separate from my teaching and research roles 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
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Today's episode is also brought to us by BetterHelp.
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And now for my discussion with Morgan Housel.
Morgan Housel, welcome.
Thanks so much for having me.
Happy to be here.
I'm excited that you have a new book coming out next year
about the art of spending money.
Is that right?
That's right. You got it.
Today, I want to talk about how to think about money.
What is it?
How do we frame it within our historical context, meaning our personal historical context, because
I think we all in each think about money a little bit differently, and then talk about
what is the best use or in some cases not use of money.
This is a topic that could go in any number of different directions, but my goal here
is that people will get a better understanding of what money is, why they work for it, and
really how to make it a true asset to their lives as opposed to something that is forever out of reach
in terms of amount or what they expected to bring them.
Great, looking forward to it.
Great.
So your book starts off with this notion
that people are not crazy.
It's in fact the title of the chapter.
Does that mean that people are rational about money?
Oh, I think it's very different.
What I meant by no one is crazy is that it is so easy for people to look around at society
and how other people are spending their money and saving their money and investing their
money and say, why the hell would anybody do that?
Why would you waste your money on this?
Why would you hoard your money like that?
And I actually think if you peel back the onion layer of what's going on in those people's
lives, no one is really that crazy with how they spend their money or save their money.
It makes sense to them in that moment.
My brother-in-law is a social worker.
He works with very disadvantaged kids, kids who are abused at home, who don't have homes.
And a lot of those kids, not surprisingly, do very poorly at school.
They misbehave, they get in fights, they don't go to school.
And it is so common for those kids that the teacher will look at those kids and say, why
are you acting like this?
Why don't you do the right thing?
It's so obvious.
And he says, there's a phrase in social work, all behavior makes sense with enough information.
That if you look at what those kids are dealing with in life, it would all make sense to
you, why they are misbehaving at school.
And I think that's a powerful idea for a lot of things in life, that all behavior makes
sense with enough information.
And you can really apply it to money too.
That you could easily tie how I spend my money today and save my money today based off of
the experience that I've had in life, how I was raised, where I was raised, how old
I am, the generation I was born into, all things that are outside of my control.
And it is very common to look at people who are spending a ton of money.
Well, there's a story behind that.
They're spending a ton of money because they want some, you know, for a lot of them, they
want some sort of attention.
They're trying to get people's attention.
Maybe sometimes they're trying to cover up a hole.
Maybe they are actually all really enjoying it.
People who are hoarding a lot of money.
There's a story there too.
They experience something that's causing them to do that.
And I think that this is really important for two reasons.
One it forces you to realize that there is not one right way to manage money, to save
it, to spend it.
You've got to figure out what works for you and what works for me might not work for you.
There's not one answer.
And it's not like math.
In math, two plus two equals four for everybody.
And in money, it's like you've got to figure it out for yourself.
It's almost like your taste in food or your taste in music.
Just find out what you like and do that.
The other thing is I think you become less cynical about other people's decisions and
you don't spend all your day saying, look at that idiot spending their money in a stupid
way.
No, it's just you got to figure it out for yourself.
I think you become happier when you're a little less cynical about how other people are doing
it.
For most people, including myself,
the whole notion of money and safety are very closely linked.
You know, do we have enough resources
to take care of ourselves plus a bit extra, one hopes.
I guess I would include in taking care of oneself,
buffering one's anxiety about not having enough money.
That's part of the psychological care.
And also taking care of others
that we might be responsible for or simply want to take care of.
That's very closely linked to notions of how much and what type of education to get.
I mean, I think everyone, presumably at some point, goes through the mental gymnastics
of is it worth it to get an advanced degree?
What major should I focus on?
Are there any jobs there?
When I went to school to be a neuroscientist, a cardiologist, a friend of our family said,
why would you go into neuroscience?
There are no jobs in that.
There were plenty of jobs in neuroscience and still are.
I wouldn't say that most of them are high paying jobs.
We know that higher education doesn't always scale with higher income.
As we grow up and move into the world, we're thinking about how to integrate all these
different things, what we want to do because it's interesting versus what will make us
money.
In your experience and observation and in writing your book, is there some sort of mental
path to cut through these different considerations?
When we talk about money and wealth,
what should we really take into consideration?
Is there some sort of checklist?
I mean, it becomes a pretty vast space.
I believe that you get the best workout of yourself
in terms of going after things
that you're really interested in.
But there may not be money in things
that are highly interesting to somebody.
I asked Daniel Kahneman a very similar question about 10 years ago.
Kahneman is a world renowned psychologist, won the Nobel Prize in economics, passed away
a year or two ago.
And he said, the trait that you need to do well with money over time, no matter who you
are, is a well calibrated sense of your future regret.
What are you going to end up regretting in the past?
I think at the highest level, that's how you should base all of your financial decisions
is will I regret spending this or not spending this?
Will I regret making or not making this investment?
Now, much easier said than done.
I think most people do not fully understand their own sense of regret, what they're likely
to look back and say, I wish I had not have done this.
The other thing is that it changes
over the course of your life.
I'll give you a perfect example.
I'm a big saver, have been for my entire adult life.
Heaven forbid, if I were on my deathbed tomorrow,
would I regret the vacations I didn't take,
the cars I didn't buy?
The answer right now is absolutely not.
I would feel so good
knowing that my wife and kids are going to be okay.
So I would take so much pleasure in knowing that I did not spend that money.
I saved it for their protection.
Well, I still feel that way if I'm 80 years old.
Then maybe I will look back and say, I should have lived a little bit more.
I should have given my money away while I could have seen it being given away.
So it changes throughout the course of your life.
But I think if you're always thinking through the lens of what am I going to regret, it's
never about YOLO or about like, oh, you know, save today so you can have it for tomorrow.
I think that's too simple to think about it.
You have to know what you're going to regret in the future and look back.
And back to everyone's different.
What I will regret might be very different from what you will regret. Very interesting story from Jeff Bezos.
He talked about when he started Amazon back in, I think it was 1994,
the reason he started it, and he knew that there was very little chance
it was going to work when he first started it.
But he said, if I do not try this, I will regret it.
And if I try it and it fails, I won't regret that.
That's an amazing story that talks about his entrepreneurial spirit.
The other thing, when I first heard that story is, bless him for thinking that.
I do not have that personality.
If I devoted my entire life and my family's money and my parents' money to a startup and
it failed, I might regret that.
I admire and I'm grateful for the people who do not have that vision as he does, made the
world better.
But everyone's sense of regret is going to be a little bit different. And sometimes this sense of what one
is likely to regret, if we have access to it at all, because it sounds like we're not very good
at anticipating this, as Kahneman pointed out, most people lack a well calibrated sense of future
regret. That's going to change over time. So it's dynamic.
And here we're talking about investing in two year or four year degrees. We're talking about
investing in one's time, that is, in a particular profession. And I think we come up with all these
explanations post hoc about, well, I went to that company, I went into that line of work, I spent 10 years there,
the startup failed, but I learned a valuable lesson that then really supported me in a
future endeavor.
We rationalize our poor choices from the past in ways that allow us to connect the dots
to sort of steal from the famous Steve Jobs speech.
Yet, all of this really says that we are very poor at placing our current experience
and our past experience into any kind of future projection of ourselves.
You talk a little bit about this in your book, and this really sunk in for me in a major
way that we don't really know or anticipate how we are likely to change as we get older. Right.
So there's a thing in psychology called the end of history illusion, which means that
you are very aware of how much you've changed in the last 20 years.
You are smarter, wiser, your beliefs about things in life have evolved.
And that's true for most people.
But most people, if you actually dig into it, they think if you say, who will you be
in 20 years from now? They think they'll roughly be the same person they are today.
There's always this belief that I have grown so much in the past, but I'm done growing
because it's hard to project how you're going to be different in the future.
A lot of that is if I tell myself 20 years from now, I'll have very different beliefs
about politics, whatever it might be.
What I'm effectively admitting is what I believe today is wrong.
And you don't want to believe that. Everyone wants to wake up and look in the mirror and is what I believe today is wrong and you don't want to believe that.
Everyone wants to wake up and look in the mirror
and say what I believe today is the right thing.
It's just like a self justification of your own beliefs
to makes it easier to go about the day is
what I believe right now is the right thing.
And maybe you have a little bit of doubt around the edges,
but most of it is what I believe is true.
So you don't want to believe that you're going to adjust
and adapt those beliefs over time.
So it becomes difficult to take a truly long-term view and make a decision today that is going
to be something that you're not going to regret in the future.
As I've always framed this, I think the only antidote to this of trying to get around this
problem is avoiding the extreme ends of financial planning.
And a lot of people are on the extreme ends.
Like on one end, you have the fire movement, the people who save 90% of their income and they
want to retire at 28, that kind of thing.
On the other hand, you have the YOLO crypto traders who are like, doesn't matter, just
throw it all down and let's see what happens.
Those extreme ends, you are most likely to regret at some point in the future.
The crypto, look, I think a lot of those people are young and they have time to make up for
their mistakes.
I did a lot of really dumb things with my money in my teens and 20s.
But I think a lot of them, that's where they are most likely to look back.
It's one thing to lose a lot of money in your 20s and say, ah, it doesn't really matter.
But then when you're 48 and trying to put your kids through college, that's when you're
going to look back and be like, I wish I hadn't done something like that.
So those extreme ends are like have the highest odds of future regret.
In order to, as I described it before,
carve a path through this for people,
I'm wondering if people generally fall into either one
or the other category of, as you described with Bezos,
not wanting to regret not having done something.
Okay, so I think of that in sort of pseudo neurobiological terms as being drawn toward
the possible dopaminergic or other rewards of having succeeded.
Really, that's what he's envisioning, presumably, is the pain of having not had been given himself
the opportunity to succeed.
Okay, that's one way to put it.
And then the other path would be just avoiding the pain of loss.
And there are a lot of studies, I think Kahneman did some of them in fact, that people work
a lot harder to avoid the pain of loss than to gain something.
But in thinking about the people I know across various wealth scales and different ages,
it seems that some people are just more motivated
to try new things because they like doing new things.
They like the sense of reward
that can come from doing those things.
And so it really is painful for them
to stay in the same place, financially or otherwise.
Other people, they like the sure thing.
They like reliability.
And you can see this in a lot of domains of their life.
I mean, I don't want to extrapolate this
to all aspects of their life, but some people like dogs that
the entire breed is known for rarely ever having bitten somebody.
Other people like to raise cane corzos, and while I'm sure there's some really nice loving
cane corzos out there, they occasionally bite it when they bite it serious.
Are we really talking about a propensity for risk versus safety?
And do you think that people fall into more or less
two camps on that?
I think it's true that some people would go nuts
if they took the safe path.
And even if they're doing it in the name of like,
I don't want to regret this,
but they need some sort of variability in their life.
They need to go out and do things.
The other element is we don't know the paths
that we didn't take.
And I'll give you a personal example of this.
20 years ago, I was enrolled in Pepperdine,
but I didn't go.
I was enrolled and just at the last second I transferred.
So I never actually attended, but I was all enrolled.
And of course I think, what would my life have been
if I had gone there?
Because the school that I transferred to,
I met my wife, started my career there.
And it's easy for me to say, God, I'm so glad I did not go there because my life would not
be what it is today.
But the truth is, maybe it would have been fine.
It would have been better.
You never know the paths that you didn't take, where they're going to end up.
So back to Conor's point, a well-calibrated sense of your future regret, but nobody knows
the paths that they didn't take and where those would go.
So it just makes it very difficult to have any idea of which path you should be on in
that end.
So I think just avoiding those two camps of the extreme ends of it.
But again, as I said earlier, I think that is actually more than half of people are on
some sort of extreme end of spending way more than they can or saving way more than they
need to.
There's a fat tail distribution in how people manage their money.
And so that's quite a few people.
And I think that's why, I think it's one of the reasons why we live in a society that
is richer than it's ever been by far.
Not just at the top, but at the median level, the average family is richer than they've
ever been.
But because we manage it in such extreme ways, is it making people happier?
Are we happier today than we were 40 years ago or 100 years ago? That there's not a ton of evidence for.
Because managing it in a way that's actually going to make you happier and reduce your
regret and live a more meaningful life is much harder than earning it and accumulating
it over time.
When I was growing up, you would see a mixture of newer cars, including some very nice cars,
as well as a lot of older, beaten up cars
driving around.
Nowadays, of course, this varies by area.
It's actually rare to see really old, beat up cars.
You see some really nice old cars that have been restored, but that's a different thing
altogether.
I assume this is because of credit, that people can now buy things on credit.
How has the ability to purchase things on credit changed the way that we think about
money generally?
I know people who have tremendous credit card debt, and I think are now at the point where
they figure that they're never going to pay it off.
They're just going to probably not live long enough to pay it off, and they're sort of
comfortable with that, which is kind of scary to see.
Some of them aren't even particularly big spenders.
They just accrued this debt early enough and they can't seem to get out from the trap of
that.
I know other people who, like myself, pay off my credit card bill every month.
I'm like, I hate the whatever it is, 18 plus percent interest.
Even if I'm one day late, I'm like, ah.
At the same time, I'm not somebody who likes to purchase many things.
I'm not a things guy.
I own one or two watches, one truck.
Like I'm just not a things guy.
But I certainly have my own psychological relationship
with money that after talking to you today,
I'm sure I'm going to realize is not optimized either, right?
So it's easy to point fingers at people
in these different groups,
but going back to this issue of credit, how has the ability to own and use things that
we don't really truly own, basically to exceed our income level in terms of the number and
type of luxuries that we can enjoy, change the way that people think about money and
use money? Because today's discussion in your book, we're talking about money as if it's
something that we have, but credit basically is living outside your means.
By definition.
Yeah.
I think the knee jerk response would be, oh, it helps you pull your consumption forward
so you can have more toys that you would not have had in a different era.
And I actually think for a lot of people, it's the opposite, that there are a lot of
people that have holes in their life, challenges in their life, and a very easy answer if you're not happy
with your life and you have a hole you're trying to fill is, well, if I had more money,
this problem would go away.
And in previous generations, previous decades, you could not just go out and have a ton of
more money.
You earned your money from your paycheck, that was what you had.
Today it makes it easier to try to fill that hole in your life with money.
And so you can keep on getting more and more and more.
And for a lot of people, they will wake up and say, oh, if only I had that car, my life
would be better.
And they go buy that car and they still feel the same.
So it's like, ah, you know what?
If I had that car and that watch, then I'd feel better.
They get the watch, they feel the same.
Ah, you know what's missing?
The house.
I got to go get that fancy.
It's this continuous spiral.
And since you can finance all of that, it makes it easier and easier to go on that spiral.
Will Smith made this incredible realization I love from his biography.
He said when he was poor and depressed, he had hope because he could tell himself, one
day I'm going to have money and all these problems will go away.
And then when he was rich and depressed, he was still depressed and he lost all of his
hope because he had more money than he could ever spend.
So he could not tell himself, if only I had more money, these problems would go away.
And so for a lot of people, the availability of credit is giving them, I think, a false
sense of hope that's keeping them on this hamster wheel of, if only I had this bigger
house, this nicer car, all these problems that I wake up with every morning would go
away.
And it keeps you on that path, which I think if you actually don't have access to that much
money, you're more likely to wake up and say, what is this hole?
I need to fix it in a different way.
It's health, it's relationships, it's purpose, whatever it might be, rather than trying to
put a bandaid of credit over it.
So interesting.
I sometimes think about the phrase, money can't buy happiness.
My immediate impulse is to respond with,
well, somebody with a lot of money probably said that.
Not because I think money can buy happiness,
but money can buffer stress.
I have friends who've had children recently
who have night nurses.
They're looking a lot more rested than the ones that don't
because they can't afford them.
And on and on.
If you have a medical issue, right?
I mean, there's this whole world within hospitals that we won't talk about in this episode,
but there's this whole world about wealth and how one is actually even treated as a
person in a hospital.
There's a lot of knowledge behind the scenes about people's income level when they come
into a hospital.
People are going to go wide-eyed when they hear this.
They'll get shuttled to different rooms, different conditions that allow them to sleep better,
recover better, health outcomes depend on this, and on and on.
Money can't buy happiness, but it certainly can buffer stress and it can drive outcomes.
How should we frame that, especially if we are in the, or in the pursuit of acquiring more money, more wealth?
Because a lot of people are.
Money absolutely can buy happiness.
It's often though an indirect path.
And what I mean by that is,
will a big fancy house make you happier?
And the answer is probably yes.
But the reason it might is because it'll make it more,
it'll make it easier to host friends and family.
And that's what's actually making you happy.
It's those extra connections with those people.
Does going on a nice vacation make you happy?
An expensive vacation, yes, because you're going to form memories with your kids, with
your spouse, with your friends while you're there.
That's what's making you happy.
So you can't say that money doesn't make people happy.
It does.
It obviously does.
The other thing that's important is what really makes people happy in their core is some sense
of purpose.
There's a great quote from the movie Boiler Room where he says, people who say money doesn't
buy happiness don't have any.
I think there's a lot of truth to that, that people who become richer say, of course I
was happier now than I was when I was poor.
Of course, I would never want to go back there.
But often what's happening is the reason that you are happier when you are rich is because
the reason you got rich is because you found some sort of purpose.
You built a business.
You were successful in your career.
And that gave you a good sense of purpose and identity.
And where you see the opposite of that are lottery winners who become rich, but not because
they made a good investment, not because they built a business, not because they're successful
and their peers like them and whatnot.
They just got lucky.
And those are the people, so many studies that winning the lottery will not make you
happy.
It might for a very short period of time, but over time it doesn't because you didn't
get any added purpose.
You can't wake up in the morning and say, I built this business.
I did it.
I'm so successful.
I got my PhD.
I did.
There's none of that.
You just got lucky.
And so that's not going to bring you much happiness.
So money does make you happier.
I think it can for everybody if you learn how to spend it in your personality and whatnot.
Spending a lot of it, spending a ton of money can make you happier.
I think there's almost no limit to it, but it's different for everybody and it's often
a roundabout way.
I think a lot about this when if I go on an expensive vacation with my kids, let's say
that's a 10.
That's a 10 out of 10 in terms of just happiness, memories, whatnot.
But actually what was making me happy was spending uninterrupted time with my kids.
So staying home and playing Legos on the living room floor with them, that might be like an
eight and a half because that's what's making me happy.
You just have to figure out like the actual purpose.
I think a good formula for a pretty good life at the simplest level is independence plus
purpose.
You need to have a purpose that is bigger than yourself that you are chasing. Family, religion, work, whatever it might be, different for everybody. And you need to have the independence
to make sure you can do it on your own terms rather than chasing somebody else's goal.
That's the highest level of psychological well-being, independence and purpose.
And money is not one of those things.
But you can easily see how money can help those things.
Money brings you independence.
It can allow you to find your purpose in a bigger way.
You're not chasing, you're not at your boss's whim.
You can do whatever you want.
You're independent.
So using money as a tool can make you happier.
Spending money can make you happier.
But it's not the thing that is making you happier.
It's just a tool to do other things
and acquire other things
that are actually making you happy.
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I love the story about spending time with your kids
on vacation as unstructured time,
as well as spending unstructured time
with them playing Legos at home.
My graduate advisor sadly passed away very young of cancer.
She was 50 and I knew her kids really
when they were in the womb,
because she was pregnant
with the first one.
I attended the memorial service there.
It was an incredible thing because people gave their speeches and her kids got up.
By then they were, I think, about eight and 11 or so.
I'm sure they had a great many thoughts and feelings that they didn't share, but the one thing that really stood out
is they appreciated how much unstructured time
their mom had spent with them.
It wasn't this like big event or something,
it was all the unstructured time that she had spent with them.
And that was very inherent to the kind of person she was.
And so that really stuck with me
and God willing you live a very long time.
But I think for anyone listening to this
and because of the statement that Kahneman made
where that we are not well calibrated
to sense a future regret,
the unstructured time is perhaps one of the most valuable
things that we can give our relationships,
both the people we engage in them with and ourselves.
And I don't think it's discussed enough.
There's a gerontologist named Karl Pilamer
who wrote a great book called 30 Lessons for Living.
What he did is he interviewed about 100 centenarians and he just said, tell me about your life.
What advice do you have for the rest of us?
There's a section of his book about money.
He says of the 1,000 people he interviewed, of the 1,000 centenarians he interviewed,
not a single one of them looking back at their lives said, I wish I earned more money.
Not one, but virtually every one of them said, I wish I spent more time with my kids.
I wish I was nicer to people.
I wish I spent more time with my friends, my family.
That was universal, but earn more money was not in there whatsoever.
That stuck with me.
And as you point out, however, earning money allows for the opportunity to spend time with
kids and loved ones of
all kinds.
It can, but I think there are a lot of people from whom it's the opposite.
If you are a partner at a law firm, you're earning a ton of money.
Congratulations.
Great.
You drive a big house and a nice car.
You're also probably working 100 hours a week.
The things that might fill your soul, it's different for everybody.
This is not universal, but what might actually make you happy spending time with your friends,
your family, exercising,
sleeping late, is not available to you. That's why it's independence plus purpose.
I think there are a lot of people who make millions of dollars per year and have no
independence whatsoever. They are completely tied to their boss's whims, to their work,
to their employer. They might love it. I'm not saying you shouldn't do that,
but they have no independence at all. I think there are billionaires who have no independence
because they are so tied to doing things,
whether they like it or not.
And that's, I think a lot of people go crazy
in that situation because they're like,
I'm making $5 million a year,
but it's not making me any happier.
It's like, yeah, what would make you happier
is independence and you are pushing yourself away from that.
You were probably more independent when you were 15
and had no money than you are at 40
making millions of dollars a year.
So then in an ideal world, which of course doesn't exist, one would find a vocation or a pursuit that they found really meaningful, would work really, really hard, would make
enough money to then, I guess, retire and spend unstructured time with the people you love and then
simply stop working in this model that clearly is an artificial model that I'm creating here.
Because it seems like after a certain point, provided you earned that money through an
effort that you felt was meaningful, presumably with people you enjoy or even if it wasn't,
you found it meaningful, you make that money, then it seems that it's all about human interactions at that point.
Yeah.
What's true is that that scenario, that dream scenario, might be true for 1% of the people,
that they can earn enough money to retire young and then pursue whatever they want.
There's an entrepreneur named Felix Dennis who wrote a book many years ago called How
to Get Rich.
There's a quote in that book.
He says, he was at the time maybe in his 70s and worth about a billion dollars, something like that.
And he said, if I knew what I knew now and I could do life over again, I would make as
much money as I could, retire at age 35 and plant trees and write poetry.
And he's like, looking back, that's what I should have done is do.
But let's leave aside that, of course, not everybody can do that.
What did he do?
He kept working.
He kept working.
Even though he didn't need more money.
Absolutely.
This is interesting because people who do achieve a high degree of wealth at a young
age seem to keep going.
We could make all sorts of assumptions about why it is that they do that, expectations
from others, that their ego, literally their sense of self in some way or perhaps entirely
is tied to the sense that they're still in pursuit, that
it's somehow a failure to opt out at that point.
We can speculate all day, but what this guy Felix said really rings true.
It seems like once people reach a number, and for everyone it's going to be different,
it's not going to be a billion dollars for everybody.
Once they have enough resources for themselves and the people they need to take care of,
maybe a bit more as a buffer, it makes no sense to continue on that path.
Well, I think there are a lot of people, I think you're one of them and I'm one of them,
who enjoy what they do.
And if you and I got to a point where we're completely financially independent, all the
money we'll need for the rest of our life, I would still be a writer.
You would still do your research because we enjoy it.
Yeah, absolutely. I love learning.
It's not just a...
Right.
And I think if, actually, if you are the kind of person
who says, once I hit my number, I'm done,
you probably don't love your work at all.
Almost by definition, you don't.
I think what's dangerous, though,
is when the money itself is part of your identity.
I like being a writer.
I like the process of writing.
But if I were to say, I have to keep writing books
because I need to make more money,
I just, I have to have a higher net worth, particularly if I'm past the point of taking
care of my family.
Then at that point, I think money is actually like a liability.
It's a financial asset and a psychological liability.
It's taking control over what you're doing in life.
If you're saying I have to have more of it.
I mean, if there's anything in life where you're like, I have to have more.
And even when I get more, my satiation point goes higher and higher.
What is that?
It's an addiction.
And it's controlling you at that point.
So there are a lot of people for whom money
is a financial asset and a psychological liability.
And I think that's actually true
for some of the richest people in society.
That the more, like it grows exponentially over time,
the richer you become,
the more addicted to having more grows on you.
In the backdrop of everything we've talked about thus far
is the biology of dopamine reward.
Dopamine, of course, being a molecule
that people associate with reward,
but it's really about the pursuit of reward.
It's about more. It's about...
And it's no coincidence that dopamine is involved
in generating movement in the body.
That's why people with Parkinson's
who are depleted in dopamine can't generate movement.
And it's also involved in generating cognitive movement
and pursuit, paying attention to things.
There is this idea that I've been pushing
for a few years now that kind of throws its arms
around a big literature on dopamine that says that
addiction is a progressive narrowing of the things
that bring you pleasure.
But your definition is actually much better, I realize.
Addiction is a progressive narrowing of the things that bring you pleasure and or safety
or a sense of safety, right?
Because here we're not talking about making more money to enjoy things more.
We're talking about making more money to avoid the sense that pain is coming or that we are
vulnerable.
And for a lot of people, that pain is a social pain, that they're not going to climb high
enough on the social ladder, that their peers are earning more than them, that their neighbors
have a bigger house, whatever it might be.
That's the pain that they're trying to avoid.
And that is a game that cannot be won because gratefully, thankfully, there are a lot of
very wealthy people in this world.
And no matter how much money you're making, there's always somebody out there who's earning
more, living better, and has a bigger house and a nicer car.
That's always the case.
So if you are on that path of, I need to earn more to climb that ladder so I can have more
than the next guy, that's a game that you cannot win.
And I think that game of comparison, too, also grows the wealthier you are.
The billionaires are more likely to compare themselves to other billionaires than the minimum wage worker is to compare themselves to somebody making
$10 an hour or whatever.
You are more likely to compare your lifestyle the richer you become.
And since that comparison to other people is what gives you a feeling of inadequacy,
there's this irony.
It's hard to wrap your head around it and come to terms with it, but some of the most
money insecure people you'll ever meet are the richest people you'll ever meet.
People who live in a 15,000 square foot mansion, yeah, but he's got a 17,000 square foot mansion.
Things that ordinary people would never consider that just consumes their life.
And again, that's the point where money is like the psychological debt.
It's psychological liability.
It's controlling their, it becomes an integral part of their identity. They wake up in the morning and look in the mirror
and they see a person who makes money.
That's their identity.
Who are you?
I'm a person who makes money.
And that's when like your process of chasing it
just becomes like a detriment to your happiness over time.
You're not using it as a tool to live a better life.
You're using it as a yardstick to measure yourself
against others by.
I fundamentally believe that all forms of addiction,
all forms of addiction are fundamentally a fear of death.
They're a way of shrinking our aperture on time perception
so that we're in pursuit of something.
And for people that can place their addiction within work,
it has this feedback of being quote, functional as opposed to dysfunctional.
This is also true for people that are continually seeking awards within their profession.
I mean, there are these professions, academia included, but other professions where people
are constantly pinning awards on one another, and it gives this illusion of progress when
in fact there's a whole world of things happening.
Now, these people often have quite healthy families and relationships, so they're not
mutually exclusive.
But I think I know a few billionaires, not many, but I know some that are very happy.
They tend to be the people that are still working and in pursuit of new things, avid
learners.
But perhaps by virtue of the work that I do, which is focused on science, but also health,
the modern billionaires that I'm aware of
seem to be very focused on not just making money,
but also trying to secure their place on the planet
for a very long time.
Not through legacy, although I think many of them
like to provide for the next generations
and their family, surely.
Not so much by putting their names on the sides of buildings anymore, this used to be
the way it was done, but rather trying to secure their health status.
Because the one thing that money can buy sort of is better health care, but money can't
buy you more years of your life, except by virtue of the things that you are willing
to not do and do behaviorally.
You still have to exercise,
you still have to get your sleep,
you have to avoid certain things.
And so the modern billionaires often are talking
about what they're doing for their health
as opposed to their yacht, their car, et cetera.
This has now become the kind of metric for comparison.
Blood profiles become a sort of point of bragging for people.
It's pretty interesting, especially given that
you just look back about 50 or even 100 years
and further back and the more wealthy people were,
the less physical labor they were doing.
Now they're doing more physical labor
to try and live longer.
So what are your thoughts on the relationship
between physical health and money?
I mean, obviously there's a sweet spot there, but there's no pill that people can purchase
to live longer.
Right.
I view it in the negative sense of the people who work to get money so hard that it takes
a physical toll on their body.
And that is so incredibly common.
And that's another form of debt that you can very easy, you can easily measure your net
worth and your income.
You could put a number on it very clean to measure.
How do you measure?
It's much harder to measure your health.
And it's, I think it's easier for people to say, yes, I'm only sleeping five hours tonight.
And I'm getting, I'm on my third divorce and I'm overweight, but I'm making a lot of money
this year because one is very easy to measure
and the others are much harder.
Your happiness, your health, whatnot,
it's harder to measure that.
And I do think too that if you are very wealthy,
particularly the very, very wealthy,
you get so accustomed towards,
I can snap my fingers and literally get anything.
A Gulf Stream jet, a mansion,
whatever, I can get it right now.
But health is like this last elusive thing
that by and large you cannot purchase.
And I think that drives a lot of people crazy.
And that's why if you can have anything in the world by snapping your fingers and getting
it, then you eventually move towards what's the thing that you don't have, and that's
immortality.
And I think there's a long history of that going back to the robber barons.
John D. Rockefeller was obsessed with it.
Andrew Carnegie was obsessed with it.
If you can have everything material in the world, you're still going to have desire.
And ordinary people can sit around and dream and say, one day I'm going to have the mansion,
or not even a mansion, one day I'm going to have a house of my own, I'm going to have
a car, I'm going to send my kids to college.
Everybody wants to dream.
So if all that is a given, you have all the money you could ever spend, you still want
to dream.
So what do you dream about?
You dream about immortality.
And so I think that's been the case for a very long period of time.
What's interesting too is that there was a historian who looked back at the British peerage.
He got a lot of data on how long people lived in various points of the UK economy.
And what he found was until about, I think it was 1750, the richest members of the UK
had among the shortest lives.
The poorest people were some of them who were living the longest.
And he dug into it.
So how could this be?
The richest people die the fastest.
And what he found is the richest people were the only ones who could afford all the quack
medicines and the sham doctors who were just poisoning them.
They were poisoning them back in the day when we knew nothing about medicine.
So I think the idea of, I want a better life
and I should be able to buy that.
Like there's a long history of that backfiring
on people as well.
Yeah, there's a lot of excitement right now
about stem cells and treatments that currently
are not available in the United States
that are available out of country.
And I get asked about these a lot.
Most of them don't have FDA approval yet.
Some of them probably never will have FDA approval. We'll probably
talk about stem cells another time. Do you think you see this though where the wealthiest people
are spending money on treatments that you either know are not going to work or are a very
questionable work? Yeah, all the time. And then that might backfire on you that might make you
less healthy. Oh, absolutely. I mean, I'll just point out, I don't have anything against stem cell therapies.
I think they hold great potential.
But there is a true story about a stem cell clinic down in Florida prior to the FDA, you
know, bringing the gavel down on them of injecting stem cells into the eyes of wealthy people
who could afford the treatment.
These people had certain markers for macular degeneration and other things that can cause
blindness.
Guess what happened to these people?
They all went blind.
That brought the gavel down on stem cell therapy generally in this country.
A lot of people are getting infusions of stem cells and related things out of country.
They're coming back and they're walking and talking.
And they're calling me and they're asking what my thoughts are.
And I have a lot of thoughts.
I think that the basics of longevity are clear.
You want to avoid head trauma and environmental toxins.
Those things are real.
And if you have certain mutations like BRCA mutations, you need to be more careful about
cancer and avoid smoking.
All this stuff. Alcohol turns out to be pro-cancerous
and things of that sort.
But then it's physical activity, it's nutrition,
it's social connection, it's sleep, it's sunlight,
it's all the things that I've talked about on this podcast
and that other people talk about as well.
But yes, very wealthy people are looking for that edge
to live longer.
And it is true that when you start to layer in all the basics of do's and don'ts, all
the behaviors, and then you start to augment that with a few extra things, you get the
sense of more vigor that sort of suggests they may live longer, but we still don't know.
We still don't know.
With the exception of exercise that we absolutely know can enrich mitochondrial density, give
people more energy and vigor, et cetera.
Most of this is still a big question mark.
See, I can see a very wealthy person using their money
if you are very sick and you have a rare cancer
to throw the kitchen sink at it.
Oh, every excellent doctor.
Those million dollar therapies, well, not absolutely.
I think it's a different animal
if you are already pretty healthy to say,
I'm gonna throw my money at trying to become immortal
or close to it, whatever it might be.
That's a different thing.
I totally agree.
And I think what we're talking about here is,
you said it fairly quickly,
but I think I wanna highlight it
because I think it's really important
that even people who have billions of dollars still
have a sense of yearning for something that's missing or that they don't have.
In some cases, that's the sustaining factor to their well-being.
You say it's also good to be in pursuit.
Maybe that's with dopamine too.
We always want more.
It's the pursuit of more.
If you're wealthy enough to have everything, you still have a part of your brand that's like,
yeah, but I want more, I want more, I want more.
And if you've exhausted the physical part of the world,
that material part of the world,
and let's leave aside the billionaires,
even the average ordinary American family
that owns a modest house, owns a car that functions well,
owns nice clothes, will send their kids to a state school,
by a lot of historical definitions, they have everything.
They have everything you would ever need,
but you're always yearning for more.
It's always this pursuit of, well, what else don't I have?
And I think nothing, what you want more than anything
in life is what you want and cannot have.
That's what you're gonna chase with all of your effort
is the thing that you want and cannot have.
And I think that that's where health comes in
for a lot of these people.
As long as you think that there's a possibility
you could get it.
The dopamine circuit loves you want what you feel is just out of your reach, but might
be possible to achieve.
I mean, this is why people throw so much money away gambling.
But maybe with social media, it makes it seem so that there are virtually anything is within
your reach.
Because it used to be before social media that your view of the world was mostly your
neighbors and your coworkers and your co-workers and your siblings and
Now everybody's view of the world is a curated highlight real of the most extreme events in the world
So if you are a 15 year old scrolling through Instagram
Then what is within your reach what looks within your reach is a Ferrari and a private jet and a mansion in a way
That didn't exist when you and I were kids
I think it makes the aspiration level that much harder.
And real examples of people who went from nothing to immensely popular or wealthy, et
cetera.
I mean, gosh, I would say about once a month, somebody walks right up to me and says, just
watch someday, I'm going to have the top podcast in the world on blank.
And they're trying to seed this thing
that they've seen on social media,
which are examples of people, you know, kind of,
it used to be called rags to riches,
but you know, the parallels in different universes.
But there's a famous musician,
I think his name is Ed Sheeran,
who there's still a video of him early on saying,
like he knew he was gonna make it.
If you watch the Conor McGregor documentary, it's amazing.
I think it's called Notorious on Netflix.
Even if people aren't into MMA, they should at least watch the first part.
He was videotaping himself very early on and he made this prediction that he was going
to be a world champion and then he ends up being a world champion, right?
This is great anecdote that Kanye West used to practice his Grammy speech when he was
walking to the train because he couldn't afford the car.
Like when he was an absolute nobody,
he was practicing his Grammy acceptance speech
of just like absolute ambition of where you're going.
Yeah, and I don't know if this anecdote is true,
but there's the anecdote that I heard that, you know,
Matt Damon and Ben Affleck
practicing their Academy Awards acceptance speech
in the schoolyard when they were kids.
And then they gave their speech and they were laughing about that.
I grew up skateboarding, so when I first got into it, the Tony Hawks and the Mike McGills
and Steve Caballeros, these were the names at the time, were like these luminaries, right?
The gap between us and them was so huge.
By the time I was a junior in high school, my best friend at the time, Paul Zwanich,
sent in a videotape of himself to a company called Planet Earth.
He got sponsored.
Next thing you know, we're in the shop watching him skateboard, and within a year or two,
he had his own pro model.
So I think social media gives us not just the sense of what's out there, but it gives
us very salient examples of people that went from completely unknown to extremely known.
Just this last year, there's the, you know,
the so-called Hawk to a girl, you know,
is interviewed outside a bar,
saying like, she now has a very popular podcast.
She has sponsors, she's known.
Literally became one of the most famous people
in the country.
Right, and has a financial stream now
of income through her podcast.
And so this raises the sort of idea in people's minds
or the possibility, however remote, that if
somebody puts a camera in front of you, by virtue of one thing that you say, you could
suddenly be an internationally known person and potentially go from, quote unquote, rags
to riches.
If you look at the studies, when you ask teenagers, what is your preferred career?
What do you want to be when you grow up?
It used to be astronaut, used to be doctor, used to be entrepreneur, now it's influencer
by far, is what people want to be.
It seems like the quickest path to fame and wealth, and for a lot of people it is.
My sister-in-law is a kindergarten teacher.
She has a girl in her class who has over a million followers on YouTube as a kindergartener.
That didn't exist when you and I were kids, or it was so rare.
But now enough people know stories like that,
even if there are a few of them,
enough people know stories to give you the sense of hope
of like, well, if they could do it, I could do it too.
Well, I'll tell everyone out there that
if you think that fame is what you want,
fame restricts your freedom.
It does not increase your freedom.
There's a great quote from DeVall where he says,
what you wanna be is rich and anonymous.
That's the sweet spot that you want to be.
The opposite, you are poor and famous.
And that's the hardest spot to be in.
But if you can be rich and anonymous,
because I think there's a really important concept
with money that I call social debt,
which is when the money that you have influences,
it changes how other people think of you.
And even maybe how you think about yourself.
And you can measure your asset.
It's not actually debt, like it's not like that you repay the bank, but it is very much
a debt in terms of it is an anchor on your happiness that you have to repay.
And fame is the ultimate social debt.
And for a lot of people, their social debt of fame is more than the money that they made
from whatever made them famous to begin with.
And there's this anecdote from Tiger Woods where he said he loves scuba diving because
when he's 100 feet under the ocean is the only time in the world where people aren't
taking pictures of him and asking things of him and gawking at him.
Like that sucks.
That's not that you have a lot of sympathy for somebody like that, but it does suck.
Like you can measure his net worth very quickly.
What's your net worth?
Just show me the number.
How do you measure the liability of feeling like you have no privacy unless you are scuba
diving?
That's a hard thing.
And at various levels, a lot of people have that.
Even if you earn a modest income and all of a sudden your friends, your family starts
saying, hey, I heard you got a raise.
I could use a little bit myself.
That's a social debt.
They want you to pay at dinner and whatnot.
And, maybe you're happy to do that.
You're happy to share it.
But let's not pretend that there's not a little bit of social debt and liability that comes
with every added amount of income that you have.
So much of social media is just by definition in terms of the number of followers being
displayed, et cetera, number of likes and comments being displayed is designed to set up these metrics of comparison.
Yeah, the smartest minds of the generation
work at Facebook and Instagram and Twitter
to figure out how to give you FOMO,
how to generate a little bit more dopamine,
and they're very good at it.
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One thing that I wish somebody would do, maybe it's been done, is you mentioned earlier this
not typical, but I guess semi-common thing of an article will come out and say, the five
things that people say on their deathbed, or that they look back and they mentioned
that they'd spent less time at work.
They wish they had spent more time with their kids
or more time in nature perhaps.
Has anyone ever just asked people directly
what were the things that they are most proud of
or the things that they really feel
brought them tremendous meaning then
and as they're passing away?
Because it's related,
but it's kind of the inverse of the same question.
Yeah, Warren Buffett brought this up one time.
He said, a good way to think about life is,
it's kind of grim, but he said,
write what you want your obituary to say,
and then work backwards to live up to it.
And in that situation, if you were to write,
like, what do you want your obituary to say?
Most people would say, oh, I hope it says Morgan
was a good father.
He was a good husband.
He helped his community.
He was admired by his coworkers.
That's what I wanted to say.
And for a lot of people, it's different for everyone,
but it'd be something like that.
And why Buffett said it was important is because nobody
who's writing their preferred obituary would say,
would include the size of their house,
how many horsepower their car had,
how nice their clothes were.
Because everybody knows it doesn't matter.
And it's like, forget who made this idea,
there's a thing between resume virtues and eulogy virtues.
That was David Brooks.
David Brooks said that, thank you.
Resume virtues are how much money you make,
your degrees, everything.
Eulogy virtues is, he was a great father,
he was a great friend, he helped his community,
he was funny. And, he was a great friend, he helped his community,
he was funny.
And I think most people really aspire to have eulogy virtues, but they spend all their day
chasing resume virtues.
Resume virtues can be great.
I want a good education, I want a good income.
But what you're really trying to chase is to use those things to gain more resume virtues
at the end of the day.
So I think if you think about it through that lens, a lot of these things become clear.
And that's why, like I said, going on a great vacation with my kids, if that's a 10, what's
really fun about that is spending time with them when I'm detached from work.
I'm not checking my phone every seven seconds.
I'm just spending hours with my kids, giving them my full attention.
That's what made me happy.
The view was great on the beach, cool, but that's what made me happy.
And I can do that at home, can I?
And so that's the difference between like going to Maui is a resume virtue, spending time
with your kids is a eulogy virtue.
Why is it, do you think, that even though we've perhaps all heard by now that compounding
interest is great, right?
You put in, let's say, a small or a moderate amount of money into even just a savings account
that's accruing a couple percent.
It varies year by year with the economy, of course, or into the markets that over time,
if you quote unquote set it and forget it, just kind of like put it there and walk away
that you're likely to make X percent over time.
You can look at the plot.
You can look at that line upward into the right.
It almost always is jagged line drifting upward to the right.
And even just scroll over and see, okay, at age, whatever,
I'm going to have X number of dollars.
And that value is often very high
relative to where one's current wealth is.
Even if they're a student or they have very little put away.
We all hear this, we can see it, you can run the models.
It's almost trivial.
And yet people don't do that even if they have the income to save.
Is it that hard for us to project our emotional state and the sorts of things that we integrate
in terms of life meaning and value into the future that most people just don't do that?
And why do you think that is?
I mean, I'm not asking you to play neurobiologist here.
I mean, I think we both agree that time perception
is a complicated thing,
but you would think that people would just sort of get it,
but we're not rational.
Most people aren't rational in that way.
They don't save, they don't invest,
and they don't compound interest.
And so they end up with a lot less money
than they could have and a lot more regret.
Yeah, I think there's two ways to think about this.
One is my friend Michael Batnick phrased it this way.
He said, if I ask you what is eight plus eight plus eight plus eight, you figure that out
in five seconds.
That's an easy one.
If I said, what is eight times eight times eight times eight times eight, even if you're
a math nerd, it's too hard.
You can't figure it out.
We're not wired for exponential thinking.
We just can't do it.
And therefore, even if you show you the numbers,
hey, invest a small amount, retire with a million dollars,
I think it's so counterintuitive that most people see that
and they're like, yeah, okay, that doesn't really seem right,
doesn't really pass the sniff test,
how big the numbers can get,
how quickly the numbers can get big.
The other thing is if you tell a young person,
hey, you have 50 years in front of you to invest,
that's great, time's on your side.
When you're 70 years old, you're gonna years in front of you to invest. That's great. Time's on your side.
When you're 70 years old, you're going to have $10 million.
50 years from now might as well be 10,000 years from now.
You're talking about people who don't know what they're going to eat for dinner tonight.
You're talking about, hey, let's talk about the year 2077.
It's so far out of there.
Even if that's the right way to think about it, it's a tough way to think about it.
Time perception, you mentioned, is so difficult for people. If I said you're going to get punched in the face in 10 seconds, that's a tough way to think about it. And time perception, you mentioned, is so difficult for people.
If I said, you're gonna get punched in the face
in 10 seconds, that's a fear.
And you're like, oh, I don't,
but if I said someone's gonna punch you in the face
50 years from now, I'll deal with it when I get there.
It's so easy to put out of sight, out of mind.
And so, and the other thing is,
Warren Buffett talked about this a lot.
He said, actually, it was Charlie Munger who said this.
He said, when teaching finance to young people, people either understand it instantly or never.
It's like some people are just wired to get it and some people aren't.
And that's always been the case.
Munger often said all the time, he said, the iron rule of math is only 1% of people can
end up in the top 1%.
And that's why for a lot of people, yes, you should save and invest for 50 years.
Let's not pretend that that is easy or that everybody is psychologically able to do it.
Some people are wired differently, of course that's the case,
as they are with health and intelligence
and lots of other things.
So I do think there's a thing for financial education
where of getting people to understand what is possible,
but I don't think we'll ever live in a world
where everyone gets it and does it.
I don't think that world has never existed
and I think will never exist because it's not math,
it's not a spreadsheet. It's behavior.
We now live in a world where we understand the dangers of smoking and highly processed
foods and whatever it might be.
Even if we know it, people still do it because it's behavioral.
It's not intelligence.
Showing people the numbers and getting them to do it is night and day.
Do you know how they got people to stop smoking, in particular young people?
It wasn't by scaring them about their health.
Turns out the most effective campaign to get especially young people to stop smoking was
to hijack the inherent rebellion of youth and to display ads of wealthy older people
in rooms full of smoke.
So it became us as the youth rebelling against them,
the older generation that are trying to take our money,
it had nothing to do with health.
I love that.
And it absolutely worked.
Yeah.
And I have friends that work on this sort of thing
in the context of public health,
as it relates to all sorts of public health initiatives.
And the effective way to change human behavior
as it relates to health is to incentivize aesthetics,
to incentivize fear or to hijack fear of dying.
But even fear of dying is not sufficient
as compared to hijacking these cross-generational,
let's just call them frictions
that exist.
So I found that to be interesting.
You used a math example of eight plus eight plus eight
plus eight versus eight times eight times eight times eight.
And you said that the human brain is not capable
of exponential thinking, or most people's brains
are not capable of exponential thinking.
I think you either intentionally or inadvertently
hit on something really important.
I don't know that the dopamine reward system, which is the fundamental currency of pursuit
and reward across all timescales, it's kind of wild, right?
One neuromodulator, and there are other things involved that modulate that modulator, but
one neuromodulator is involved in reward pursuit across all timescales.
Whether or not we're playing,
let's say we're both competitive enough
to play a game of chess or checkers,
dopamine is motivating the pursuit for the win,
or a four-year degree, or an eight-year degree,
or why you would want maybe your kids to win a soccer game.
Now you're like a third-personing dopamine, right?
It's across all times time scales, all scenarios.
It's incredible and across many species.
So, it makes me wonder, and I'll have to ask some of my colleagues that work on these dopamine
reward schedules for a living, whether or not the dopamine reward system actually can
do exponential math.
It might not be able to do exponential math.
It might be that the pursuit of water, the pursuit of mates, the pursuit of food, the pursuit of shelter, which
is what these dopamine circuits evolved under the constraints of, whether or not they are
even capable of doing exponential thinking.
Or if it's like the marshmallow test, which got misconstrued in many ways, but it's like,
yeah, would you rather have one right now or two in the future? I think for a lot of
people it's just like there. There are some people for whom like they're wired
so differently for this.
So you hear stories about like the old,
the old very wealthy people, the old billionaires of them.
When they were 20 years old,
they would not get a haircut because they knew
that $3 haircut would compound into $100
by the time they're older.
They were just so wired from birth to understand this
and to have a very long perception of time to do it.
By definition, that's the rarity.
Most people are not like that.
And I don't know if they should be either.
I don't know if you should be the kind of person your entire life who is always saving
for a future and never enjoying what you have too.
That could lead to a lot of regret as well.
And there are those people.
So let's parse the marshmallow test.
The marshmallow test, I think, initially done at Stanford.
I think it was at Bing Nursery School or something like that,
or maybe somewhere at Stanford.
If I'm wrong, someone will correct me in the comments.
Of course, for those that don't know,
they brought these really cute kids into rooms,
and they put the marshmallow in front of them,
and they told them they could eat it now,
or they could wait, and they could get two marshmallows later,
and then they videotaped them,
and the videos are absolutely delightful of the kids, you know, like, distracting themselves or having the marshmallows talk or taking a little piece of two marshmallows later, and then they videotaped them, and the videos are absolutely delightful of the kids,
like distracting themselves or having the marshmallows talk
or taking little piece of the marshmallows.
I mean, it reveals as much variation
on human self-constraint behavior
as you could possibly imagine.
And they're really interesting, as you know.
I would like to know whether the children
that were able to wait and therefore get two marshmallows,
were trying to resist the temptation
or whether or not they were being pulled forward
by the anticipation of two marshmallows.
My understanding, and maybe this is not complete,
but my understanding, at least part of it,
was neither of those two things.
The kids who did the best and resisted it
were the ones who distracted themselves.
They weren't even thinking about the marshmallow.
They would sing a song,
they would start playing with their shoes, they'd play with another kid, and the ones who distracted themselves. They weren't even thinking about the marshmallow. They would sing a song, they would start playing with their shoes,
they'd play with another kid.
And the ones who could not resist
are the ones who just sat there staring at the one marshmallow
that was tempting them.
That's too hard to resist.
Almost everybody will resist that.
It was like the environment that they put themselves in.
But they weren't thinking into the future
about how great it would be to have two marshmallows.
I don't think so.
I think they were so,
because their kids are so distracted,
they have the memory of a goldfish,
they wanted to just go do something. They'd sing a song, they'd play with were so, because their kids are so distracted. They have the memory of a goldfish.
They wanted to just go do something.
They'd sing a song, they'd play with their shoes, they'd play with their friends.
And then by dint of doing that, all of a sudden they had waited long enough to get the two
marshmallows.
I think that was at least part of it.
And I think that's true for a lot of people too.
Think about the stock market where so much temptation to always watch it and see what
it's doing, because we have CNBC and there's ticker, and the lights are green and red and whatnot.
For a lot of people, it's impossible to watch that.
Or even worse, in Robinhood, you get a push notification on your phone.
That's too hard to resist.
But you know where you see very good investing behavior, where people do a really good job,
is when you invest automatically every paycheck into your 401k and you forgot your password.
Because that environment is
Against temptation. There's there's nothing to do you forgot your password
But if you're just bombarding yourself with stimulus of what to do, most people cannot resist that
My way of dealing with social media. I would say compulsion not addiction is I now one could take an old phone
I actually got a phone specifically for social media.
So I have Instagram and X on that phone.
I don't even recall the number of that phone.
I airdrop things onto it if I want to post
and I do what Rogan calls post and ghost.
So you post and then it goes into a box
because otherwise I'm just absolutely blown away
by how much time can be sucked away.
All of it.
You tell yourself, I'm gonna just look at social media for a moment,
and then you're pulled down some rabbit hole.
It's just incredible the way they've designed
these algorithms to get you.
And of course I like social media,
I teach on social media.
This conversation will probably be,
fragments of it will be on social media.
But I think that people don't realize
how compulsion inducing the dopamine circuitry is. on social media, but I think that people don't realize
how compulsion inducing the dopamine circuitry is.
And once you start getting pulled down it,
you're a different organism altogether.
And it's not a coincidence that the people
who have the largest social media accounts
spend very little time on social media.
This is-
If you spend too much, it just gets overwhelming.
Well, you're spending time doing things like commenting
and liking, and there's a liability to some of that,
but there's a reward to it too, an immediate reward.
What you're not doing is going and doing the thing
that you bring to social media
that brings you more followers and views.
So I always think of social media as the last point
in a funnel where I go do things
in real life, like research papers, talk to people, learn, and then organize that learning
into a format that I think people can benefit from, and then put it on social media.
But that's the end point.
And so, if I stay too long there, then I'm not getting more material. It's almost like if I were a farmer,
this is like, once the crops ship,
I'm not gonna stand there just like looking at the road
as the truck goes by.
You gotta go plow the field.
Yeah, you gotta get back and plant more seeds
and plow the field.
I mean, so I like to think about these things
in these very basic terms,
because I feel that the dopamine circuitry
has, it hasn't evolved, right?
But we have new technologies
that have hijacked it to some extent.
Jerry Seinfeld said one of the reasons he quit his show
in the 1990s was because what made it so good and so funny
is that he and Larry David would go like sit in a deli
and watch people order and make a joke.
And so they got their content from was observing the world,
but they got so busy and so famous
that they couldn't do that anymore.
And he knew that it was gonna come
at the detriment of the show,
that it wasn't like the ultimate reward
of like how big was the season?
How many people watch the show?
How much money do we make?
What made them great was going out and living
and doing their thing.
And once it came at the expense of that,
it didn't work anymore.
Well, this raises a really key point for people,
including myself, which is in an ideal world,
one can make a living that is sufficient for their needs,
doing something that you truly enjoy doing.
Or I would say to be realistic,
where 75% of the activities are pleasurable,
maybe 15% are kind of neutral.
And then the remainder, there's some punishing features.
There are punishing features in every profession.
Yes, Jeff Bezos said,
if you can enjoy half, that's pretty good.
Okay, all right.
So I'm a little more stringent with my, yeah,
more of an optimist than Bezos.
Hey, I don't, but then again, he's Bezos.
Yeah, I mean, you want to be able to enjoy your work.
Not all aspects of it are going to be pleasurable,
but ideally that's the case because what we're
talking about here is effort that precedes dopamine.
And I'm a big believer that dopamine that is not preceded by effort is very dangerous.
It's not just things that are addictive, but by way of example, methamphetamine, cocaine
dramatically and quickly spike dopamine levels.
With no effort put in.
With no effort put in.
And then of course we know from the beautiful work of my colleague Anna Lemke and others
that then the dopamine profile is that then the higher the peak and the faster the rise
to peak, then the more drop below baseline and the more time it takes to return to baseline.
And typically what people do is when they're below baseline in terms of their dopamine,
that's when they really start hitting the hammer
with whatever behavior or substance.
And all it does is drive that baseline further
and further and further down.
Maybe that's a good analogy for the lottery winner
who gets a lot of money, a lot of dopamine in this example,
but didn't put anything into it.
You didn't build a business, you didn't work at your career,
you just got lucky.
So it doesn't feel as good.
There's no effort put into to like base it against.
Compare it against what you were talking about before,
which is time that's unstructured
with your kids playing Legos.
It's almost, it sounds effortless.
It's not like you're like,
oh, I gotta go play with my boys Legos.
I'm sure that you're like, yes, like this is fun.
This is the good stuff, as they say.
And so there are forms of reward, it seems,
that are not preceded by effort,
although you had to raise those kids
and your wife had to give birth to those kids
and it's work.
But in terms of what's happening in that limited timeframe,
it's just so seamless, right?
It's just sheer pleasure.
And yet that kind of pleasure is enriching.
This has me very perplexed.
As a biologist, I still don't know the underlying mechanisms,
but clearly we have multiple paths to pleasure, but I think we have only one path for motivation, and that's dopamine.
But I think there are multiple forms of pleasure, and I'm certain that dopamine that is high
levels of dopamine that are not preceded by effort are not just bad, they are downright
dangerous.
I feel like so much of it too with parenting.
This is a slightly different topic, but it's the things that you're not trying to have fun with that build the biggest memories. And for me, it's when
I travel with my son, he's nine, so we go on a lot of trips now. What's fun is not the
event we're going to, whether it's skiing or a football game, that's not the best part
of the trip. The best part of the trip is flying with him, renting a car with him, going
out to dinner with him. That's where you get all the memories. It's like, it's a process
of doing it that's gonna, you're really enjoying, that's gonna build all the memories. It's like, it's a process of doing it that you're really enjoying
that's gonna build all the memories,
not necessarily the final destination where you're going.
Yeah, I just wanna hover on that for a second
because I can think of numerous examples in my life
where the best parts of a relationship
were like a drive home with someone
where like, you know, I'm asleep for part of the time,
they're asleep for part of the time,
and you get back and like,
you feel like you really did something.
There's something bonding about, about traveling with people.
Yeah.
Even in the absence of external input, like you're, you're just, what is that?
It must be something fundamental, some fundamental circuit about, about journeying with, with
other members of our species.
Going through a challenge with someone, going through, going through a journey of like,
we did this together, we went through it together.
I think there's so much of that.
If you go on a long hike with somebody at the top,
like you want to hug each other,
like we just did that together.
And it's not even about being at the top,
it's like the journey you did with each other.
So cliche, but I think it's true for a lot of things.
And what's that movie with Emil Hirsch,
where he, it's a true story about the guy
that goes out into the Alaskan wilderness
and lives on that bus and And sadly he passes away there.
I just spoiled it for you.
But he has, I think it's called Into the Wild.
Into the Wild where he's obsessed with this notion
of bonding with nature.
But then in his journal, a real journal of a guy
that really died out there,
he gets to the realization that the fundamental pursuit
in life is to experience things with other people. With other people, absolutely. Yeah. he gets to the realization that the fundamental pursuit
in life is to experience things with other people. With other people, absolutely.
Yeah. Yeah.
And this is why solitary confinement is such a torture.
The extreme end of it.
Brutal. Right.
Brutal.
On the other end of the spectrum, there's freedom.
So let's talk about freedom.
Yeah.
It means different things to different people,
but certainly one does not want to be enslaved by anything
including their own pursuit of work.
So there, I think at least two forms of anti-freedom.
One would be the type that exists within our head.
We have to continue on this track
because I'm afraid of failure
or I'm in pursuit of something
and we are actually enslaved in a way that we
sort of create for ourselves in the act of pursuit.
The other is the job where, you know,
it's providing resources,
but we really don't need to be there.
And yet people don't hop off the train.
You know, they could, they could escape the dreaded boss or the dreaded circumstance. there and yet people don't hop off the train. They could.
They could escape the dreaded boss or the dreaded circumstance.
I remember a time when all I wanted was a window at work that opened for fresh air.
That's all I wanted.
All these other things, I just wanted a window that opened.
I even tried to find one of these little saws, but then the maintenance people or whatever
the facilities people told me I'd get in trouble.
We yearn for freedom.
We hate enslavement for all the obvious reasons.
In your observation, what is the best way to frame this need for freedom?
And I have to imagine that people listening are at various points along their careers.
What have you observed here in yourself and with other people you talk to, wealthy, not
wealthy?
What is freedom?
How do we get real freedom?
I think there's this anecdote that I love, which was from Franklin Roosevelt when he
was a kid.
I think he was like five years old.
He complained to his mother one day.
He said, my entire life is rules and schedules, and I hate it.
So his mom said, okay, Frankie, tomorrow,
you can do whatever you want.
The day is yours, anything you want.
And his mom, Sarah Roosevelt, wrote in her diary that night.
He said, that day that he could do anything,
he went back to his normal schedule.
He did everything on schedule like he was supposed to do,
but he was much happier
because nobody was telling him to do it.
And I think that's what's true for a lot of people.
Freedom does not mean you do nothing.
It doesn't necessarily mean you retire.
It doesn't mean you quit working.
I want to be free and independent, which means I want to wake up every morning and say, I
can do whatever the hell I want today, even if most mornings what I want to do is work
and be productive and put myself to use.
So I think a lot of people misconstrue freedom as I'm going to ride off into the sunset and
do nothing now.
It's like, no, I think people have an inherent drive to want to be productive and social
and do things.
But there's a big difference between your boss telling you to do it and doing it on
your own terms.
When I was a junior in college, like a lot of young men, I wanted to be an investment
banker.
That's what it looked like, power and prestige.
So, I got this investment banking internship and it was absolutely miserable.
They had this saying that is so funny in hindsight.
They said, if you don't come to work on Saturday, don't bother coming back on Sunday.
Just the culture of it was work is work 100 hours a week.
Just go nuts with it.
And I hated it.
I hated it every single second and I had to leave.
But it wasn't because I was not into hard work.
I think I was absolutely willing to work hard.
I just didn't want anyone telling me to do it.
And so when I became not necessarily financially independent, but I could have a job, it was
more entrepreneurial, it was like, oh, I will work very hard.
And sometimes I might work as hard as an investment banker.
I might work 80 hours a week, but it's on my terms.
And I think everyone is way more willing to do that than they are to be told what to do.
I think that is an inherent human driver.
If you can use your money for independence to where you can wake up and say, I have the
financial flexibility to work where I want, live where I want, retire what I want, take
a different job, move to a different department, even if it's going to pay less, that giving
yourself independence and autonomy, I think for most people, is what's going to drive.
That's the highest tool that you can use with money.
And what's important about that is where do you get independence with money?
It's the things you don't spend money on.
It's the car you didn't buy.
It's the house you didn't buy.
And most people will view that as like idle money.
You're saving up money.
It's just sitting in the bank doing nothing.
No, no, no.
It's giving you independence.
And once you view it as like every dollar that you don't spend is money that you are
actually spending on independence
It's not idle. It's giving you a it's giving you marginal more independence than you had the day before
Then I think that's to me. That's why I save money. I'm not saving money because I'm a pessimist
I think it's all gonna come collapsing down
I'm saving money because I want to be independent because that's what I think is gonna give me the most fulfillment the most happiness
And that's where the savings comes from
Wow, I think this gonna give me the most fulfillment, the most happiness. And that's where the savings comes from. Wow.
I think this is a super important concept.
How should the person who is,
let's just say early mid-career,
who likes what they're doing,
but thinks that this is probably not the thing for them.
I hear about this all the time.
Like, is this like, yeah, like it's good, but it's a ton of work.
It's unclear how it's going to turn out, but they feel like they're already on the conveyor
belt.
There's always this question of, do you stay in investment banking another year to make
a bunch of money, and then you get out so that you then have the freedom to pursue something
where you have more freedom?
People are always playing this kind of mental math, and I don't think there's a clear answer, unless, of course, you're lucky enough that you fall in love with science.
I mean, I did not become a neuroscientist to make money, and Lord knows I didn't.
I mean, I made some.
I made a living, but if people heard what I was making as a tenured 45-year-old professor
at one of the premier universities in the world, where the salaries are relatively high,
they would be shocked, just shocked at post-tax income is quite low by Bay Area standards.
Right.
But did you feel like you had independence?
You can teach what you want, say what you want.
There was a level of independence that I think would be-
Absolutely.
Oh, and I loved it.
And I still teach there, and it's one of these things where I wouldn't trade it for anything.
Also, in terms of intellectual stimulation, in terms of being able to look to my left
or look to my right and realize that most of the people at Stanford, students included,
are just phenomenal.
Their level of intellect, their drive, their excitement for what they're doing, no one
ends up there by accident.
That was and remains extremely exciting.
I think a lot of people, unless they find a profession that they really love, or there's
some feature of that profession that keeps them looped in in a way that feels satisfying,
the people, et cetera, most people are kind of thinking like, all right, how do I work
to make a living?
And then, like, what's the exit ramp?
People think a lot about exit ramps, and sometimes it's a dollar amount, but also it's the idea
that maybe, you know, go work on their real love, which might be like gardening.
They want to hear about these, these sort of hobby interests, right?
I'll go, I'll write poetry or all, you know, go, you know, ceramics or something like that.
The things that they truly enjoy doing.
How, how should people optimize along those must versus want to
versus sort of aspirational goals?
Two things come to mind here.
One is like, if most people understand inherently
the dangers of communism or something,
if the government's telling you what to do,
when to do it, what to say,
that's a bad thing that's gonna erode society.
But a lot of those people work at a job
where their boss tells them what time to come in,
what to wear, what to say, how to act, whatnot.
So they really understand it fundamentally at one level, but they're actually doing some
version.
Now, companies have to manage their employees, whatnot.
It's not a knock against that.
But I think what's really true for independents and people, if they eventually move on to
writing poetry and playing in their garden, whatever it might be, is that you eventually
is that you leave on your own terms.
That whatever your exit from your career was, was because you wanted to do it on your own
terms.
So the thing in psychology called the peak end rule, where to simplify it, minimalize
it, a lot of how you remember any endeavor that you did in life, a career, vacation,
whatever it is, is how you felt at the very end.
And for a lot of people, if you have a great career, you enjoyed your career, you helped
people, you made money, your colleagues appreciated you, but then you got fired or your boss came
to you and said, you're too old to keep doing this.
You'll never recover from that.
And you compare that to the people who quit on their own terms.
They said, look, I'm proud of my career, but that's enough.
I'm going to take a step back and pass the baton to another generation.
Those are the people who, even if they didn't really enjoy their career that much, will look back at it fondly because it gets back
to freedom and autonomy and control.
Do you leave on your own terms or are you forced out on somebody else's schedule?
And so I think wherever you go in life, whatever you're doing, even if you're not an entrepreneur,
maximizing for independence and autonomy and doing it on your own terms, on your own calendar
is absolutely vital in anything you're doing.
I mean, most people are not necessarily,
particularly as they get older,
are not necessarily scared of death.
They're scared of a death not on their own terms.
That's gonna sneak up on them
where they're not gonna have a chance to say goodbye.
So I think that's a good analogy for a lot of these things.
We're not scared of the ultimate outcome.
We're scared of not being able to do it on our own terms.
I once heard Ray Dalio say something along the lines of, you know, the first third of
your life is spent trying to learn how to function in the world.
Then there's a kind of middle third where you are acquiring resources to be able to
take care of yourself and people close to you.
And then in the final third of your life, you want to take your knowledge, take what you've gleaned in terms of financial
and other types of wealth,
because of course there are other types of wealth,
and put back for subsequent generations
is a beautiful model if you think about it.
As we've been able to-
I heard a phrase that when you get older,
you either become an elder or elderly.
You get to choose which one,
do you want to be an elder and help other people
or elderly, you're just going to disintegrate over time.
You got to choose which one. Do you want to be an elder and help other people or elderly, you're just going to disintegrate over time. You got to choose which one.
Nowadays, we have both the benefit
and the problem of people living longer
and maintaining vigor longer and therefore working longer.
This is certainly true in academia.
People don't like to retire.
They really do not like to retire.
And I don't think it's just so they can make more money.
I think it's so they can stay intellectually active. People get into science typically because they like learning,
or academics generally. They have a campus office where they go to, and it makes them feel socially
connected. So you can understand all the reasons why these people in their late 60s, 70s, and even
80s, sometimes even 90s continue to go to work.
It's rare for these older generations of people that stay in various professions to continue
to glean resources, but it happens.
How old is Buffett?
93 maybe, yeah.
He's still investing?
Yeah.
Oh yeah, full time.
Okay.
Presumably he's going to use that money for what?
Either philanthropy or generational wealth within his family
Is that the plan he's already given away?
I think about a hundred billion and the plan is to give away the vast majority
I think he announced recently that he was going to leave each of his kids a billion dollars for philanthropy not for their personal use
But for philanthropy and the rest is all is all given away
Oh, yeah, the the children of the ultra rich that inherit all their wealth. I don't know what the numbers are there
I know a great number of them squander it.
But I also know a few examples of some that really
made good on those incredible assets that they inherited
and are very thoughtful, hardworking people.
It does happen.
There are a couple of families.
I think of all the big robber baron families
of 150 years ago, the Rockefellers probably
did it the best.
The Rockefellers still have a lot of wealth.
The Vanderbilt's by far did it the worst.
They just squandered it in a couple of generations.
And this is fairly well known now, but it's pretty interesting.
The first Vanderbilt heir who did not get a trust fund for whom all the money was dried
up, the first person who didn't get any money was Anderson Cooper of CNN.
His mother, Gloria Vanderbilt, was the last Vanderbilt who got a big trust fund.
And Cooper, I think not coincidentally, is the most successful and probably the happiest
Vanderbilt heir in 150 years.
And he's talked about this.
He was like, I was the first person in my family who had to make a name for himself.
The fact that his last name's not Vanderbilt, it's Cooper, and he didn't get any money.
He was like, I had to go out and find my own way
and find my own identity.
Whereas all of his ancestors,
their identity was you're rich from birth.
That's your identity.
You don't need to go out and make a name for yourself.
You don't need to work hard.
You don't need to create anything.
All you need to do is sit here and spend your money.
And it made them miserable.
And Cooper was the first person,
look, this is very anecdotal. I'm not saying this is how it's gonna work for everyone, but the first person, look, this is very anecdotal,
I'm not saying this is how it's gonna work for everyone,
but the first person who had to make a name for himself
and work for himself was the one who was the most successful
and probably the happiest.
Super important concept, again, incredibly important,
I think because people often will think that they,
because they were born into families
that didn't have a lot of money,
that somehow they were given the short end of the stick.
And in some sense they were, right?
I mean, it's one thing to grow up in a world with assets and another world where you don't
have assets.
But we don't often hear about the downside.
It's hard to have sympathy for a Vanderbilt heir who inherited $400 million on their 18th
birthday.
Well, they're going to have a lot of sympathy for that, right?
Right, well, the show Succession, right?
You know, it's all about the horrible interpersonal dynamics
of people that have a lot of wealth
because it's never enough,
and they self-destruct, essentially.
I think the situation is you don't have sympathy for them,
but you should also realize that if you were in their shoes,
you would probably self-destruct as well.
It's very difficult to do.
Once in a while, you see someone
who is completely motivated, irrespective of money.
Mark Zuckerberg was offered a billion dollars cash for Facebook when I think he was 22.
He said, no, I don't want it.
I'm going to keep going.
That's a ridiculously rare personality.
I think most people, if I inherited a billion dollars on my 18th birthday, I probably would
have no motivation.
If Musk did, if Elon Musk did, wouldn't slow them down whatsoever.
Jeff Bezos did, Mark Zuckerberg did.
Those are very rare people who have a motivation that is so detached from money.
I wonder if it's the excesses of wealth that destroy people or if it's the fact that the
excesses take them away from the pursuit of what delivered the wealth
in the first place.
For a lot of those people, it's the pursuit of solving the problem that's doing it.
I have a good friend, Patrick O'Shaughnessy, who phrased it this way.
I'm going to paraphrase him, but he said, if you had to describe the mindset of those
very successful entrepreneurs, it's not driven, it's not motivated, it's tortured.
That they wake up every morning tortured by the problems
that they're not fixing and the opportunities
that they have not yet found.
And there's a famous Elon Musk interview,
I think it was on Lex Friedman where he was like,
you think you wanna be me, the richest man in the world,
but you don't.
And he was like, it's a storm up here, it's a mess up here.
I think that's true for a lot of people.
My friend David Senra, I was a great podcast founder. I love founders podcasts. Such love founders podcast. He's one of the best guys in the world I've ever met.
He said of all the 350 founders that he's profiled, only one of them has he actually
said I would want that guy's life. It was Ed Thorpe. But put that aside of the other
349, I think you read their biography and you can say, I'm so glad that they existed.
Most of the time, they did a lot of good in the world.
They created products that make us better off.
And never in a million years would I want his life.
It seems miserable.
Because most of the time, the simple answer is, their financial and career success came
... The reason they're so successful is because they devoted every waking second of their
entire life to this one problem, this one endeavor.
And that came at the expense of their family life, of their health, of their mental health,
their physical health.
And if you get a full view of their, it's easy to look at Musk and say, oh, richest man
in the world, that would, wouldn't that be fun?
Yeah, but it came because he's had this life of a singular devotion to, well, in his case,
two or three different companies. And I think if you take that full picture,
it's less glamorous than it would seem.
And it's too tempting in life to have envy of someone
and say, oh, well, I want their money
and I want their career and their relationship
or their humor.
Like you're picking little bits and pieces from their life,
but it's not how it works.
You gotta take the full package.
And when you look take the full package.
And when you look at the full package of those people who you might envy, if you actually
take a complete view of their life, maybe some of them you would say, no, that is a
great life, like Ed Thorpe.
But I think for a lot of them, if you got the full view, you would look at it and say,
oh, that's actually a lot different than I thought.
I frame this one way.
If you look at this flagrantly anecdotal, but among the 10 richest men in the world,
there are a cumulative 15 divorces among them.
So it's very easy, particularly for young people to say, oh, that's like, I'm jealous
of that person.
I envy that person.
I want to be that person.
But I think for a lot of them, if you actually got a full view of their life, it's not nearly
as good as you would think.
I think people like Elon Musk, people like Mark Zuckerberg,
they represent these incredibly extreme examples
that obviously most people can't even,
including me, can't fathom what a day
in their life must be like.
Matt Zuc, he was on this podcast
and it seems that he really enjoys doing what he's doing.
But I think for me and for most people,
it's just like so far out of the stratosphere
of understanding is similar to the amount of wealth
that they've acquired.
It just sort of like, what do you even do with all of that?
And people go, well, I'd figure it out.
Yeah, I'm sure you would.
But it's just, it's so astronomically outside the scale
of one's normal kind of dopamine
reward schedules that it's hard to imagine.
And what are you going to do?
Buy a plane as big as a state?
But there's a place in between struggling to quote unquote make it and being at that
extreme, where people hit that sweet spot.
And I think a lot of your work is really aimed at at least shining light on the possibility of a sweet spot
where you're doing something that you find meaningful,
making sufficient income, that your anxiety is buffered.
You have meaningful relationships in and out of work
and you've essentially built a quote unquote good life.
I mean, I think I heard in a vault say something recently where he said, you want resources
in the, along the dimensions I just mentioned, a healthy fit body, a calm mind and a home
full of love.
I think it's pretty awesome list right there.
It's a lot of work though.
Just to check off even one of those four boxes, a lot of work.
Right.
I think because money is so tangible, of counting it is so easy and so tangible, that even if
people know that, they're going to put an inordinate amount of effort towards making
more money at the expense of their relationships, their health, their children, their friends,
their family.
It comes at the expense because if I were to say, you know,
how do I increase my income by 10%?
And it's like, I can wrap my head around that.
I can give you a number of what that would be
and how I might be able to do it.
But if I said, how do I get my kids to love me 10% more?
Like, ah, I have no idea how to measure that
or how to even pursue it.
So even if I want that, because it's hard,
it's not tangible, it's much easier to ignore
and just pursue the thing that you can count,
which is money.
Do you have a dog? I do, golden retriever.
I was gonna say, you want them to love you 10% more,
get them a puppy, but it sounds like you already did that.
I'm just, I'm only half kidding.
I would say that, you know,
dogs are not only unconditional love,
but they have the ability to give on it on a, you know,
daily basis,
multiple times per day in a way that,
I mean, they give love as readily as they receive love.
It's just like this perfect reciprocal loop.
And they're constantly in the moment.
They're just living right there.
This is great cartoon.
A lot of people have probably seen it.
It's a guy and a dog sitting on a lake
and the guy's thought bubble coming out of his head
is he's thinking about money.
He's thinking about work.
He thinks he's thinking about stocks. The dog's thought bubble is a of his head is he's thinking about money. He's thinking about work. He thinks he's thinking about stocks.
The dog's thought bubble is a picture of them sitting on the lake.
The dog's just right in the moment, just enjoying what he's doing right there.
I think that's like, that's my jealousy of my dog when I look at her.
24 hours a day, everyone will, there's a dog will recognize this.
They're just in the moment.
They just enjoy what they're doing, whatever they're doing.
And everyone, including me, is either worrying, thinking about the past or dreaming about the future.
I love that. What's your dog's name, if I may?
Lucy.
The golden retrievers are an amazing breed
because they also are universally loving.
They love the person that, you know, they, their owner the most,
but they also love people that stop and meet them on the street.
Not all dogs are like that.
The worst guard dogs in the world.
You can break into your house, the goldenriever will just come up and wag its tail
and lick you.
I love it.
Let's talk about this social comparison thing.
I'm trying to make this practical for people that are both partnered and not partnered.
Seems to me that a lot of what I've observed in terms of people who are on the conveyor
belt, work, work, work, work, work, have a picture in their mind of where that's all
going, when enough is enough, and when they plan to hop off or stay on, or how late to
stay, in large part based on, yeah, their upbringing, yeah, kind of who they are, but also the messages that they're getting
from typically the one other person
that has the greatest degree of input, right?
Like you could create a picture where the spouse
in either direction is saying, like, we need more, right?
That changes the picture completely,
where the spouse just says, like,
I would just like to see you more. I don't need says like, I would just like to see you more.
I don't need any more stuff.
I just wanna see you more.
We wanna see you more.
These are the sorts of at home dynamics
that I think drive a lot of decisions about career,
not just what careers to pursue,
but how long to stay in,
whether or not you try and make partner in a firm,
whether or not your social media account
needs X number more followers or not.
I think to me this is as important as the social comparison of your peers at work or
online.
The messages that we receive by the people closest to us about what to be afraid of,
what the needs are.
I don't know that people have really parsed how to resolve all that, but I'm guessing
you probably have some thoughts about this.
Well, I think it's the balance between it is so difficult because for a lot of people
who have families and are working very hard, at the core, if you said, why are you working
so hard?
Well, to make more money.
Why do you want more money?
To take care of my family.
It's for very good intentions, but it's coming at the expense of time with your family and
whatnot.
So a lot of things, it's not that you're making a terrible decision.
You're doing what you think is right.
And then if you said, well, how much is enough to take care of your family?
By and large, it's a game of comparison.
The way that people lived 100 years ago, what is a good life 100 years ago, is a completely
inadequate life today.
Not even 100 years ago.
You go back to our parents' generation and say in the 1950s, there is a nostalgia for the 1950s of, oh, life was so good then and so great and the white pick
a fence and the dog and the stay-at-home mom.
It was a good picture.
But what was the definition of a good life back then, a good middle-class life, was an
800-square-foot house with one bathroom for four people and camping for your annual vacation.
You would describe a life that most people would say that's inadequate today.
That's not my definition of a good life today.
So that is shifting all the time.
And therefore you're saying like,
well, how much money do you need to be happy?
The truth is I need more money than the next family,
than the next person.
It's this continuous chain.
And I think a lot of that is just evolution.
It's a competition for resources
and it doesn't matter how much money you have. What matters is that you have more money than the next person. That's the sad truth for a lot of that is just evolution. It's a competition for resources, and it doesn't matter how much money you have.
What matters is that you have more money than the next person.
That's a sad truth for a lot of this.
And therefore, you can easily imagine a world in which my grandkids are earning, on average,
way more money than we are today and have way better resources, better health, better
technologies, and they're no happier for it.
And they don't feel any more relieved for it.
They don't feel like they can scale back and work less for it because they're going to
be competing with other people that have all of those things.
John Maynard Keynes, a great economist, very famously predicted a world where people would
be working 20 hours a week because technology was going to make it so we didn't need to
work.
That's not how it works whatsoever.
We are working less than we did back when everybody was a farmer, but not nearly as little as
we could be if we still had the expectations of a 1950s family living in an 800 square
foot house.
If we had those expectations, people could be working way less, but it's all a competition
between other people.
So even if 100 years from now, a middle class family is living in a 5,000 square foot house
with a spaceship in their backyard, if that becomes the norm, you don't appreciate any of it.
I mean, if you took someone 100 years ago,
if you took John Rockefeller,
the richest man in the world 100 years ago,
and brought him to today
and showed him a middle-class family in America,
he would say, what is this, like Advil?
You take a pill that makes your headache go away?
You have sunscreen, you just rub this on the face,
you don't get sunburned?
His jaw would be on the floor.
But nobody appreciates that today like he would because it's just commonplace.
Your definition of a good life is I expect to have that.
So it's always going to be the case that the reason we're working hard is to take care
of our family and what we feel like is an adequate amount is a growing level over time.
I should also say that that is by and large a great thing.
The reason society progresses is because most people wake up in the morning feeling a little
bit inadequate.
Whatever I have today is not enough and I need to go work harder to get more.
That's why we have good technology and economic growth over time.
So at the macro level, it's a great thing.
That's what pushes society forward and better medical technologies, all better technologies.
But the individual level, it creates this hamster wheel of a constant feeling of inadequacy
that we try to compensate for by working harder and working harder, even when it comes at
the expense of things that should be more dear to us, like our friends and family and
health.
And with social media, we now have access to millions, if not billions of comparison
points, whereas just 30 years ago, even 20
years ago, we only had access to local comparison points.
Like the people in your neighborhood drove certain types of cars.
Now online you can see people that you went to high school with that have certain lives
and their vacations that are spectacular relative to the ones that one typically has.
I'd like to talk about this notion of social comparison as a function of place.
We can touch on some major cities.
We were doing this before we started recording.
It's kind of fun to do.
In the Bay Area and Silicon Valley area where I grew up, it seems like there's a high value
place on the people who manage to do things that wick out to the
entire world, the building of companies or technologies that go everywhere.
It's not just because of Facebook and Instagram, it's also because of biotech, it's because
of all sorts of things.
Apple, right?
I mean, there's a whole history of that.
What would you say for New York City? What is the dominant message that's being pumped
into the psyche of New Yorkers? And by the way, I love New York City, but it'd be fun to play this
game a little bit as an example, and then we'll then wick it out to people regardless of where
they live in the world. Well, this is one of those things where what is so good and beneficial for
society is what makes individuals miserable. So I think what is the message here in Los Angeles or in New York or any other big city,
San Francisco, the message is waking up in the morning and feeling inadequate because
you are surrounded by people who at least look like they're doing better than you.
And you say, I have to chase that person.
I have to get what they have.
That is great for society.
That's where we get new technologies, new innovations and growth.
The individual level, it's very difficult.
I grew up out in the woods in Lake Tahoe.
And in that region, if you are a dentist, let's say, you are on top of the world.
You are the richest guy in town.
Everybody looked up to you.
You had the nicest house, the nicest car.
If you are a family dentist here in Los Angeles, you don't stick out whatsoever.
You might feel like you are so far behind, because you're surrounded by legitimate billionaires.
And so I think it's interesting to ask,
is the dentist happier in Lake Tahoe or here?
I think it's probably in Lake Tahoe,
because your comparison group is so much less,
especially back in the pre-social media days.
The states that are statistically the happiest
in the United States, it's not for cities,
it's not Los Angeles, it's not New York,
it tends to be in the Midwest,
where wonderful places, what not,
but less competitive than the grind of the big cities.
And so, but that's where, you know,
at the individual, where are you happiest?
It's where you have less comparison,
but for society, what is better?
It's when you have a huge competition for getting ahead.
So I don't know where I come down on that,
of like where I would wanna be.
Of course, I wanna be happy as an individual
but I want to live in a society that is moving ahead.
And the reason it's moving ahead
is because most people wake up feeling inadequate.
You grew up in Tahoe.
Yeah.
I love Lake Tahoe, but can I ask you,
did you grow up being competitive
or thinking about how well people skied or snowboarded?
Yes, absolutely.
It was also, I lived in Tahoe pre-tech money.
It's very different now,
because so much Bay Area tech money just flooded into it.
It's its own little Hamptons now.
But back in the day, it was, I felt like when I grew up,
normal people drove old pickup trucks
and rich people drove new pickup trucks.
That was the difference between rich and poor.
And both in a city like Los Angeles and New York
and in a social media world especially,
it's normal people drive Honda Civics
and rich people have private jets.
Like the stratification between them
is just blown so far out of proportion.
I see this with my nine-year-old son,
who like a lot of kids watches Mr. Beast,
who I think is great.
I think he's an awesome, awesome guy.
But it's completely warped my son's sense of money.
Because Mr. Beast will be like, oh, keep your hand on the table and the last person with
their hand wins a million dollars.
It's like, if that's your sense of money, it's completely warped and skewed.
And so, look, it's a tough way to live.
And I think the more of that angst that people have of, I'm inadequate, I need to get ahead,
the better society is going to be, the more technology we're going to have.
Great example of this is what decades were the most technologically innovative?
By far, it's not even close.
It was 1930s, the Great Depression, and the 1940s, World War II, when society was on fire.
That's when every business, every scientist, every entrepreneur woke up every morning and
said, I need to figure this out right now, today, immediately.
During the Great Depression, if you were a business owner, it was, if I don't figure
out a way to become more efficient, I'm bankrupt tomorrow.
So that was the birth of a lot of the assembly lines.
It was the birth of the grocery store, the birth of the laundromat.
Every business got more better at what they do.
And the ones that didn't went out of business immediately.
World War II was if we don't figure out new technologies, uh, we're,
we're going to lose everything.
Hitler's going to control the planet.
So that was nuclear energy, radar, jets, go on down the list of things that we
benefit from today happen because of that social angst that we had back then.
And so I think there's so much evidence that society progresses when things are a little
bit on fire, not too much on fire, because then you just get overwhelmed with it.
But if you have a little bit of angst of, I need to wake up, I need to do this.
And when societies become fat and happy and decadent, or when companies do this, companies
that just are minting money, and there's no pressure on it, they have more money than
they know what to do with, that's the downfall of a lot of companies Sears IBM Intel Boeing
Who are either not around to our shells of their former selves?
I think you can tie a lot of that to the success that they had in the past when there was no pressure
To innovate and get it and get ahead
It was just a culture of we have so much lying around here that we can do anything that we want
I had a guy tell me one time. We, every business should have a little bit of debt
because it keeps you in check,
keeps your ambitions in line of waking up and being like,
no, I have to succeed this year
because we have debt to pay off.
And when you have too much freedom
and a little bit too much autonomy,
you have a higher chance of just letting it slip away.
What made you great when you were young and poor
and broke and hungry,
slips away when the
wealthier you become.
Tell me what you think of this mental exercise.
As you're describing this to me, I'm thinking about how at different stages of my career,
first academic science, and I still teach, but I'm shut down my animal lab, still involved
in some human research, but mainly focused on the podcast these days.
I can look to different things around me that were the forces pulling on me.
I like to think in terms of carrot and stick.
For those that don't know what that is, because we have a lot of listeners from outside the
US.
Carrot is the thing you're working towards, the enticing thing, the reward.
Stick is the punishment.
Carrot and stick.
Because frankly, that's how the brain works,
carrot and stick, right?
And a lot of what we're talking about today
is carrot and sticks of different sizes,
different types, et cetera.
For every stage of my career, graduate student, postdoc,
professor before tenure, professor after getting tenure,
it's kind of interesting concept.
People think of it as job for life,
but it's really academic freedom.
And you're still on the fundraising treadmill.
Or even as a podcaster, you know,
like what the force was inside me
and not trying to make this about me.
I just kind of, I know that there are different people
that I'm trying to satisfy.
And of course, satisfy my own curiosity and intellect,
but there are forces.
There's the, I'm part of a group, I'm part of a team here.
I can't let them down.
So it doesn't matter how well I slept last night.
Happened to sleep pretty well last night,
but it doesn't matter.
I got to show up.
You got to suit up and show up, as they say.
Do you think it's worthwhile for people to stop
wherever they are in their life arc
and just think about where are these
forces pulling us, the carrots and the sticks?
Because I think therein lies a lot of information.
Are you working for an expectation that you need to fulfill because you did it before?
I sometimes think about professional athletes.
They sometimes have a shorter professional life than in other careers because just physical capabilities give way.
But what drives them? I often want to know what pulls them? Where do they feel obligated?
Not just what the drive is, but where do they feel obligated? Where do they feel pulled? Is it to the general public?
Is it their parents? Is it their bank account? Is it the fear that they're gonna have to retire
at some point?
Do you ever think about this kind of stuff?
Yeah, I think a lot of it is tied to your identity
of just who do you see in the mirror
when you wake up every morning?
And if your identity is I'm a professional athlete,
if your identity is I'm a podcaster, I am a rich person,
whatever it might be, then that's what's pulling you.
It's that source of your identity.
So this gets back to the Paul Graham idea
of keep your identity small. I think he meant it mainly in the context of politics.
So politics can just poison your identity and it really affects your thinking.
But keeping your identity small for a lot of things I think is a great point of view.
The more you look in the mirror and say, I am a blank, doesn't matter what that is.
I'm a professor, I'm an author, whatever it is.
It's hard to give that up because part of your identity.
I saw this with my own dad who was a doctor and he retired and he went back to work a
year later because I think at least part of it was when he looked in the mirror, he had
to say, I am a doctor.
That was his identity.
And when he retired, he couldn't say that anymore and it drove him crazy.
I think that's true for a lot of people.
Now that could be great.
For him, it was great.
And I think for me, my identity, I think my core identity is I'm a father, I'm a husband,
I hope to be a friend.
But then maybe it's I'm an author.
And if I had to give that up, it might sting a little bit.
It's not maybe the core of my identity, but it's right there.
And I think for a lot of people, if you're successful, core to their identity is I'm
a person who makes a lot of money.
I'm a person who makes X dollars per year. And they're unable to give that up.
And that's, again, I think if we're talking about money,
that's when money becomes a liability,
is when it's ingrained in your identity
and it's controlling you.
You're not using it as a tool.
It's using you as its little Marionette doll
to control you every day.
And I think that's when a lot of people go astray
with their happiness with money,
is when it starts controlling them
because it's so core to who they see in the mirror every day.
Yeah, that's like that cartoon of the person standing
with a little cage in front of their face.
Like they're giving up freedom by virtue
of some mental construct.
I wonder if perhaps even better than Paul's idea
of shrinking one's identity to make it operational
and make it verb based.
Because it's one thing to say,
I'm gonna not use my professional title
of podcast or professor, author, doctor,
but if one gets to the verb function
that drove the pursuit of things in the first place.
I enjoy doing this.
I'm a curious person.
Yeah.
Like, you know, I have the,
I seem to mention them all the time
and I'm just gonna do it,
cause it's my podcast.
Rick Rubin's a close friend
and I feel so lucky for that friendship.
Of course I love the music he's produced,
but that's not why I love the friendship.
I happen to just really think Rick's a great guy,
but because he's so verb and action-based,
it's about almost everything Rick talks about
in terms of creativity and productivity
is about discarding with titles and concepts
of who you were before,
and just being in the verb state
of wherever you happen to be at that point in your life
and creating offerings.
And he actually likes to remove the concept of an audience.
He actually talks about, this is your offering to God,
and the audience may or may not like it,
but that in his words is the way to frame it
because otherwise you end up trying to satisfy people.
And then you're no longer in the process
of exploring your curiosity or creativity.
So yeah, I've decided at this moment
and I'll put it on record
that I'm not gonna think of myself as a podcaster.
I mean, I did a lot of things.
Pursued skateboarding, pursued tropical fish tanks, pursued, you know, science
and research sciences, teaching, which, you know, and then this public education and podcasting.
I fully expect that in five to 10 years, I'll be doing something completely different, but
it'll still be attached to the verb state that drove every single one of those professions
or every single one of those pursuits.
Because as Rick's taught me, it's the energy that you need to continue to tap into that
is self-rewarding, the feelings of delight, of friction, and then release when you solve
a problem.
It's not really about the profession or the title or even the resources that come from
that, but that in fact the greatest resources, in particular financial resources,
coming from identifying the verb state
of being in pursuit of something that's truly unique to you.
And that changes over time.
I'm always amazed at these examples like the Warren
Buffets and these people that have been investing
their whole life.
You pointed this out in your book
that one of the fundamental things about Buffett being
so successful is that he's had a lot of time investing.
Been doing since he was 11, he's 93.
Right, doesn't seem like he needs another venue.
It seems like he's got it dialed, that's his venue.
If you were a golfer, he'd be dolphin at 93.
Yeah, he's doing it because he loves to do it.
I think it's, for me as a writer,
what's always been the case.
I wonder if this, I think this might really apply
to your own career.
I've always written for an audience of one,
which is myself.
I just want to write things that I think are interesting.
I want to write stories that I find appealing.
I want to write it in a style that I would enjoy reading.
And I don't care that much about the audience
who might read it.
Of course, I want them to read it
and maybe buy the books and enjoy it,
but I'm writing for myself.
And I think you always do your best work when you do that, if you're writing or producing
a podcast for an audience of one, which is you.
And so I think if you're doing it otherwise, it's performative.
And people do much worse work.
They're much less creative.
They're much less enjoyable when it's performative, when you start off by asking, what does the
audience want to hear or see?
Yeah, that never works.
And let's do that.
But that's what most people do.
And even what does every writing 101 teacher teach their students?
Know your audience.
I don't think it's good advice because know your audience very quickly becomes pandered
to your audience.
Not just as writers, but in any form of work that you do, pandering to your boss, pandering
to your quarterly metrics, whatever that might be, you're always going to do your best work
if you have the independence and the autonomy to have an audience of one, which is yourself.
Brian Chesky of Airbnb talks about this.
He's like, don't build a product that 1,000 people like.
Build a product that 100 people love or that one person you love and use it.
That's when you're going to always do your best work.
You're not trying to manage a product or a book or a podcast towards some metric or goal.
You're doing it because you love doing it.
Much easier said than done for a lot of careers
because if you're working for a company,
you do have metrics you have to follow.
You'd have formulas and policies you have to follow.
So it's not that everyone can do this,
but it's unavoidable that you're always gonna do
your best work when it's yours
and you're doing it for yourself,
not because you're trying to reach some metric.
I guess the phrase, you know, be a lifer.
I used to think that meant if you were a musician,
stay a musician.
If you're in finance, stay in finance.
But I think now I'm going to revise that to one wants to be
a lifer at tapping into the energy of pursuing things
that are really meaningful to them in that moment.
In that phase of life.
Cause it's so different.
I mean, when I was a kid, I was obsessed with fish tanks
and tropical birds and then skateboarding, punk rock music,
and it changed.
I mean, the venue changed, but we don't really change
in terms of identity very much, right?
These professions and these bank accounts,
and we don't actually,
we're not fundamentally changed by them.
It's really a bunch of verb states that drive all this.
And I actually hope that in 20 years,
I'm doing something different,
that I'm not writing about the same topic.
So maybe I hope I'm still writing and thinking
and reading and learning,
but if you're always doing the same thing,
I think someone like Buffett is an incredibly oddball,
rare bird who's been doing the same thing
for 80 years and loves it.
Like I wanna grow and adapt and evolve in what I'm doing.
But if something becomes core to your identity,
then it's hard to release that and let go.
You feel like you have to keep doing it
even when it's not that fun anymore.
And you're not getting the dopamine rush
of trying something new.
You're attached to something,
you keep being a lawyer or whatever it might be
because that's your identity
even when you don't like it anymore.
Think about Michael Jordan playing baseball,
which he did for a little while.
He wanted to play
professional baseball. He gave himself the shot. I think it's awesome, even though it didn't turn out as well as basketball turned out for him. Because it just reflected his inherently competitive,
high-performance nature. I had to keep doing something or Bezos, so I keep bringing it up.
But you build the biggest, most successful company in the world, Amazon. What do you do
in your retirement?
You start a rocket company kind of thing.
It's like, maybe he did, I don't know this,
I don't want to put words in his mouth,
but maybe he did get a little bit bored with Amazon.
And it was, he needed to do something else,
but he's not gonna retire, he's not gonna play golf,
he's not gonna sit on his boat,
he's gonna go build another company.
Always have to be doing something,
even if it's growing and adapting.
You're working on a new book
and I eagerly anticipate the release of that new book.
When's it coming out?
September, 2025.
Okay, so we got a little while to wait.
Are you willing to share a few things
that you're thinking about
or that we might expect to see in that book?
Yeah, I think there are pieces of the book
that you and I have talked about today.
The book is called The Art of Spending Money.
And I make a point of the book is not called
The Science of Spending Money,
because spending money is not a science.
It's not something where you can say,
here's the formula that works for everybody.
It's an art.
And what is an art?
It is different for everybody.
It's subjective.
It's often contradictory.
And I think that's what an appropriate way
to spend money should be.
So at no point in the book do I say, here's how you should spend your money, because I
don't think anybody can accurately do that for a broad audience.
It's a look at the psychology of envy, of keeping up with the Joneses, of social aspiration,
of identity that we've been talking about, managing money and kids, of being jealous
of other people, of wanting to get attention for yourself.
It's a look at the psychology of that
without offering any firm concrete advice,
which I would say a lot of people don't like that.
A lot of people are like,
well, just tell me what to do.
But I try to make a point in the beginning,
same with my first book, Psychology and Money,
of I can't tell you what to do because I don't know you.
And what's right for you is gonna be maybe not right for me.
You have to figure it out for yourself.
But I can tell you what's probably going through your head
as you're going on that journey.
I can tell you about what the psychological pitfalls
and challenges and advice that is psychological.
It's not what you should do, but here's how most people
and why most people fall for envy
and why if you understand the mechanics of envy,
how silly it can be.
That's what the book dives into.
In a lot of ways, what sounds like you're describing
is kind of identifying the sources of self-seduction.
Where we, by virtue of social media
or just by virtue of being human,
we compare what we have to see if it really is what it is.
You would think that we would be pretty good as a species
at just experiencing things,
kind of like the dog sitting next to the lake.
Given that we can understand that we have this propensity
to compare and to regret things of past,
but not be able to anticipate future regret,
you'd think we would be better at that,
but clearly we're not.
Well, I guess this gets back to basic evolution.
Evolution doesn't care if you're happy.
It cares that you reproduce and you grow over time.
That's what it's maximizing for.
It doesn't really care whether you have a good time
during the process.
Make more of yourself and take care of the young
and then you're dispensable.
Keep going.
Louis C.K. says more of me.
That's what we're trying to do.
And whether you're happy or not
doesn't really play into the situation
and actually might reward the person
who is gaining a ton of resources,
even if they're miserable in the process,
who's making a ton of money in the process,
even if they wake up miserable every morning,
they're gaining a lot of resources
that might increase their fitness over time.
Happiness doesn't play much of a role.
Do you think birth rates are going down
because people feel that they have to use more
of what they earn for themselves or that it's
harder to establish a relationship to money and resources that makes them feel capable
of taking care of others.
I think it's so complex.
It doesn't lead to simple answers, but I think there is a lot of evidence that what happens
why societies all over the world, this has always been the case, have fewer kids when
they become wealthier is because their expectations for those kids go up.
So if you're living in a poor society, poor economy,
or during a poor era, you could have 10 kids
because you knew all 10 of those kids,
or at least the ones who survived,
were going to become farmers.
That's what they were going to do.
And that was their only hope.
That was all they could do.
And you didn't need to provide a lot of resources for them.
If I give them basic food and shelter and clothes,
that's all they need to become a
farmer.
And I think if you fast forward to today's economy, the expectations are so much higher.
You want your kid to become a PhD, to become an astronaut, to become a hedge funder, whatever
it might be.
And there, because of that, you need to provide so much more resources for that kid.
I need to foster their growth and development from the time that they are infants and provide
them tutors and afterschool activities and maybe send them to private school and definitely
send them to a college, which is going to cost a fortune.
Because the expectations for what you need to provide are so much higher, you feel like
you can only provide that to maybe one, maybe two kids, which would have been a couple of
generations ago, three or four kids, and a couple of generations before that, 10 kids.
There's also a very grim statistic about it used to be, well, why did people used to
have 10 kids?
Because six of them died before they were five.
And so if you needed those hands on the farm, you needed to have a lot of kids to make sure
you had a lot of teenagers who could help you one day.
And so I think we're blessed to now live in a world where, thankfully, the infant mortality
rate has collapsed so much that we don't need to play that lottery game that we used to.
What are you teaching your kids about money?
And at what age should we start to do that?
And for those listening who don't have kids, I suppose it's never too late to learn.
I think one of the points I always make that I've learned the hard way, parenting, is I
don't think you need to sit your kids down and teach them about money because they're paying attention whether you know it or not.
Kids are so incredibly good at learning.
They're better at learning than adults are, particularly for things like language and
whatnot.
But you don't need to sit your kids down and say, this is how much we spend and this is
what we value and this is why I save.
They're paying attention.
They're figuring it out.
Every time they hear you say, I can't afford this, every time we're at the store and they say,
oh, look, this is on sale, let's get two of these,
they're making a mental note of everything.
Every time they hear you bicker about work,
every time they hear you talk about a raise,
even if it's just in the next room,
they're piecing it all together.
And I don't think they even know it,
but they're so good at learning
that they're building a mental model.
And so even if you never sit your kids down and teach them,
by the time, certainly they're
teenagers, they know a lot about money.
And maybe some of those things are good, maybe some of them is bad, but they're paying attention.
And so I think the only thing you can do as a kid, or as a parent, I should say, is to
lead by example.
Because we talked about this earlier, the propensity to rebel as a kid, as a teenager.
You talked about the smoking ads, where they just wanted to do the opposite of what everyone
else is doing.
I think particularly for teenagers, which I don't have yet, but if you sit them down
and say, this is what you should do, you should always do this, you should never do that.
Their propensity to rebel is enormous.
So I think I should think it can backfire if you try to teach them.
I think the best you can do, the only thing you can do is lead by example with people.
One thing that a lot of not just very wealthy people, but moderately wealthy people will
say is, or ask is, how do I teach my kids about money without spoiling them?
How do I use my money to help my kids without spoiling them?
That's a big topic for a lot of people.
Even if you're like a middle class family, how do I leave a small inheritance or help
my kids?
Should I buy them a new car or should I help them through college?
I think a big thing that is easy to overlook is two things.
You might think as a parent that you are teaching your kid grit and independence by withholding
resources from them.
And you're doing it very well-intentioned.
You need to earn your iron my money and this is mine.
You got to go figure out your own.
I think it is very easy to overlook that you are not teaching your kid independence and
grit.
You're teaching them to resent you.
And I have a good friend, Chris Davis, who told the story.
Now, he's an extreme example.
Chris Davis's grandfather is Shelby Davis, who was a billionaire investor, one of the
greatest investors of all time.
And Chris tells a story that when he was a kid and his grandfather took him skiing, his
grandfather would say, if you want me to buy you a lift ticket, you need to hike up the
hill first and ski down, hike to the top. And if you do that, then me to buy you a lift ticket, you need to hike up the hill first and ski down, hike to the top.
And if you do that, then I'll buy you a lift ticket.
And Chris said the lesson that they learned from that was not grit and independence and
hard work.
The lesson they learned from it was grandpa's kind of a jerk sometimes.
And I think that's an extreme example, but you see that a lot with kids.
One very practical takeaway from this is that I think as a parent, you have to live the
same lifestyle as your kids.
It's very difficult to say, mom and dad fly first class, but you're back in coach.
Does anyone actually do that?
Oh, absolutely.
Maybe that's still a very extreme example, but what you think as a parent that the kid
is learning is, oh, if I work as hard as mom and dad, one day I'll be sitting up there.
And they don't. The lesson they learn is, mom and dad think they if I work as hard as mom and dad one day, I'll be sitting up there. And they don't.
The lesson they learn is, mom and dad
think that they are superior to us,
or mom and dad are superior to me.
I'm inferior to them.
I think this is why you see a lot of very wealthy kids
who are just psychologically broken.
Because I think you have well-meaning parents who are,
like, look, we're very wealthy, but you're not.
You've got to earn your way.
And all the kid hears throughout their life is, I'm inferior.
I'm inferior. I'm inferior, I'm inferior.
And by the time they become adults,
it's so ingrained into who they are
that they can't take a step forward.
They can't advocate for themselves.
And so, look, that's what the very wealthy deal with,
but I think that's what I think a lot about with kids.
The other thing that every parent with more than one kid
will understand and recognize this,
my two kids could not be more different.
Their personalities, their goals,
even with the same parents living under the same roof,
they are a million miles apart.
And so if you say, what are you teaching your kids?
I don't know who they're gonna be when they grow up.
I don't know what their goals
or their aspirations are gonna be.
So is it right for me to tell my daughter,
oh, here's how you can save and become super wealthy
over time, what if she doesn't want to live that life?
What if she does have more of a YOLO personality of like,
oh, I just want to go travel the world.
I don't, I have no aspirations to become super wealthy
and retire early.
So you have to let them figure it out for themselves
and realize that what might be right for you
and what may have been right for the era
in which you and I grew up in might not be right for them
and might not fit the era that they grew up in.
I like this saying, none of us know what it's like to be, you know, picking age, 13 years old in 2024.
We think we do because we were 13 years old at one point.
Your earlier descriptions of depriving kids of the first class ticket,
putting them in coach and the parents flying in first class,
it makes me realize that we like to think
that those sorts of things will drive integration
of the lesson, but each one of your examples
pointed to the fact that kids are integrating
based on the emotion they experience at the time.
They're not thinking about the larger lesson.
No, they're thinking about-
They're in their moment.
They're thinking, I'm hiking up this hill and this sucks.
And they're not piecing together things over time.
Like, okay, I'm doing this
and he's trying to teach me a lesson.
Right.
It's really, they're very attached
to their immediate feelings.
Right, and maybe it would be different
in Chris Davis's example,
if the grandpa hiked up the hill with them.
Cause then the lesson you're taking is like,
oh, we're gonna do this together. And that is teaching the value of hard work. I'm gonna do it with you hiked up the hill with them. Cause then the lesson you're taking is like, oh, we're going to do this together.
And that is teaching the value of hard work.
I'm going to do it with you.
I'm going to suffer with you.
So leading by example rather than by humiliation,
I think is the way to do it with kids.
When I was a kid, my dad used to walk me to this point
along our street where then he would split off
to go to work.
He was a scientist.
He would go to his laboratory and I'd go off
to kindergarten and first grade. And I remember one day asking him what he He was a scientist. He would go to his laboratory and I'd go off to kindergarten
and first grade. I remember one day asking him what he did for a living. He's a physicist.
He said, well, I'm a physicist. I said, what's that? He explained a little bit about what
it was. I'll never forget, we still talk about this, I'll never forget. I said, do you like
it? He said, well, you know that feeling the night before your birthday? I said, do you like it? And he said, well, you know that feeling
the night before your birthday?
I said, yeah.
And he said, I feel like that every day.
And then I think he also said,
and I'm still a little bit murky on this one,
I need to touch base with him about this sometime again soon,
was he said, yeah, you don't always get presence.
It doesn't always work out, but the feeling that you might
or that you're likely going to, or there's a possibility,
that just feels so good.
That's cool.
And I think I must've internalized that lesson
because what I like is work.
I don't think I'm addicted to work,
although some in my life have accused me of that,
and I'm willing to be open to that possibility,
but it wasn't even really about discovery,
it was about the possibility of discovery.
And so I think in terms of teaching to kids and teaching to peers and teaching among humans,
getting people to think about the verb states that really motivate them from the best place
seems to be the kind of general theme throughout today's discussion and in your book somewhat.
I'm not trying to summarize to too fine a point here, but if I may, it seems like,
and what Rick Rubin has said about,
you know, he has this like just supernatural track record
at bringing out the best creative elements in people
from different genres of music.
It seems to be about tapping into these verb states of,
like, what is the thing that brings out your best
as opposed to thinking about the rewards that come from that.
But it's hard, right?
We see those numbers, we see those, the followers, the dollars, et cetera. We see the metrics of comparison.
It's tough. There's a work to this that is not obvious. I think it will always be like that.
We're never going to live in a world where people don't compare themselves to others. We're never
going to live in a world where people don't feel inadequate to others who have more than them. But
back to kids, I think this is a great place to tie this together.
If you ask most parents, what do you want for your kids?
Most parents will say, I just want them to be happy.
I hope they're happy one day.
And then if you said, well, do you hope that your children are rich and successful?
Parents might say like, yeah, but mainly just happy.
I just want them to be happy, regardless of what they're doing.
If they're a kindergarten teacher, I want them to be happy.
And I think the parents themselves say that because they haven't done that themselves,
because the parents themselves have chased money over happiness, and they see the downside of it.
And that's very common. And that's why they say, I hope my kid does this, because I haven't done a
good job of that myself, because the temptation is to do that, is to pursue something that's
not going to make you, is going to make you richer, but not necessarily happier.
Now, that's not an argument against money or working hard, which I want to do.
I want to work hard and make money and have more money, of course.
But I think there's such a stark difference between using money as a tool to make yourself
happier versus as a yardstick to compare yourself against others by.
And so much in the modern world is the latter.
We're not using money to make ourselves happier
or freer or more independent or to sleep better
or to spend more time with the people we enjoy.
We use money to measures ourselves against other people.
It's just, do I have more than you?
Is my car faster than yours?
My house bigger than yours?
And all of that is completely separated
from what we actually want,
like for our kids and ultimately for ourselves,
which is can I use this to become happier
and live a better life?
What a wild concept, but it seems just spot on.
So we need to think about money a little differently or a lot differently if we are to get the
most satisfaction from our work and from resources.
It requires a lot of looking in the mirror and just saying, who am I and what do I want?
I think that's the biggest thing, particularly when we started this conversation by saying,
everybody is different.
What's right for me is not right for you.
Inherent in that is that you have to understand yourself.
A lot of financial damage is done when people have a financial plan that is right for another
person but it's wrong for them.
That's dangerous because it's the right financial plan,
maybe for a lot of other people.
So it makes sense.
It's rational.
It makes sense on paper, on the spreadsheet looks good,
but it doesn't fit your personality.
That's when a lot of damage is done.
So I think to do better with money,
you need to spend a lot of time thinking about who you are
and your family and your goals and your aspirations,
realizing that all of those things will change
and adapt over time.
So what was right for you 10 years ago
might not be right today.
And in a way that might seem selfish,
like tuning out the rest of the world
and tuning out other people and coworkers
and neighbors and whatnot, and being just saying,
how can I use this as a tool to become happier,
to live a little bit better life?
Like, what's the purpose of money if it's not that?
I love it.
Well, Morgan, thank you so much for doing the work
that you do.
It's an incredibly unique perspective on this thing
that we all have to deal with, grapple with,
and hopefully can develop a symbiotic relationship
with money.
And it's clear from talking to you today
and also from reading your book that,
there's a
strong central core to benevolence in all of this.
I don't know if that was your intent.
It seems to just come through in who you are.
But when I read your book and as we talked today, it's just so clear that you want the
best for people.
So I think that's an important thing to highlight because there are a lot of people out there
telling people how to make money, what to do or not to do with their money, but you're telling us how to live more meaningful lives
Which is something just in order of magnitude more important
So for that and the work that you've done and that you're doing I'm eagerly anticipating your book next September
And for coming here today to educate us. Thank you ever so much. This has been so much fun. Thank you, Andrew
Thank you for joining me for today's discussion with Morgan Housel.
To learn more about Morgan's work and to find links to his two superb books, The Psychology
of Money and Same as Ever, please see the links in the show note captions.
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