Know Thyself - E148 - Vishen Lahkiani: The Formula for Thriving in a Changing World (Success, Intuition, & Fulfillment)

Episode Date: May 27, 2025

Vishen Lakhiani explores the profound shift humanity is experiencing and reveals why the old rules of hustle culture are no longer the path to true success. He lays out an 8 step formula for creating ...a life of alignment and fulfillment. He reveals how to redefine success on your own terms, embracing simplicity, and uncovering your unique edge in a rapidly changing world. This episode is perfect for anyone looking to better understand how they can thrive in this rapidly changing world.BonCharge Red light therapy:Go to https://BonCharge.com/KnowThyself and use code KNOWTHYSELF to save 15% Andrés Book Recs: https://www.knowthyself.one/books___________0:00 Intro2:15 The Definition of Success Is Changing6:32 Finding Our Unique Path to Fulfillment9:30 8 Rules: Simplicity is the Key to Success12:15 Wealth Comes from Opportunity15:12 Discovering Your Unique 'Edge'18:18 Following What You Love22:36 Unlearning the BS rules Society Tells Us 26:46 Demystifying & Strengthening Intuition35:52 Ad: Boncharge Redlight Therapy37:16 Purpose & Prioritizing Self Growth41:02 What It Takes to Combine Purpose & Profit45:26 Formula for Attracting Abundance 52:18 Make Space for Calmness56:21 Hustle Culture is a Thing of the Past1:00:51 The Future of AI Is Here: How Will Life Change?1:10:47 What's Our End Goal As Humans?1:14:39 Human Genius: What Defines the 1%1:18:57 The Power of Community1:21:40 True Meaning of Spirituality1:28:25 Relating to the Ego11:29:49 What It Means to Know Thyself1:30:24 Conclusion ___________Episode Resources: https://www.instagram.com/vishen/https://www.mindvalley.comhttps://www.vishen.comhttps://www.instagram.com/andreduqum/https://www.instagram.com/knowthyself/https://www.youtube.com/@knowthyselfpodcasthttps://www.knowthyself.oneListen to the show:Spotify: https://spoti.fi/4bZMq9lApple: https://apple.co/4iATICX

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Starting point is 00:00:33 If you think about human history, we've been slaving away for the longest time. What's about to happen in 2025 is that the definition of success is changing. This is the perfect time for us to fully, fully embrace what we love. What we should be teaching adults to do is to answer eight questions. Answer these eight questions, and I think you'll be setting your life up for a lot of beauty, elegance, happiness, and success. And what people don't even know is this. Stop trying to glorify hustle culture.
Starting point is 00:01:03 Hustle culture is a thing of the past. This is what I'm trying to wake people up to. We have two great spiritual needs. The need to grow and the need to contribute. You have that purpose. You have more fuel. You have more energy. You have more excitement about life.
Starting point is 00:01:17 You feel more fulfilled. But if everyone was doing that, imagine how beautiful the world would be. Hey, everyone. Welcome back to the Know Thyself podcast. Our guest today is a. best-selling author, founder, and CEO of Mind Valley, which is a global education company that is transforming the way we think about self-help, personal development, well-being. And it's been a pleasure to develop our friendship over the past couple years and see the inspiring work he's
Starting point is 00:01:48 really stewarding and pioneering in the space of helping people come back home into themselves and become powerful creators in the world. Vishin Lakiani, thank you for being here. Thank you, Andre. By the way, this is an amazing set. Thank you. I appreciate it. It's just so soothing. It's so peaceful. I've never been in a podcast set like that. It feels like you're in a, you're, you're in a spa, not a studio. Yeah. I try to make these conversations like the atmosphere feel a little bit more like a ceremony than just a, you know, than just casual. And so I'm glad it's cozy. Also, this tea is amazing. Yeah. I don't even know what you put in here. It's the stuff from Peak. They're a sponsor, so I'm glad you like it. Amazing. Man, there are so many amazing avenues I'm excited to explore with you. I really love individuals that are playing at a big scale that are very aligned with a message and vehicle of service to the planet.
Starting point is 00:02:45 I'm sure it's evolved over the years for you, but how do you currently, as of today, define what success means to you? So the definition of success is changing. only because we in 2025, literally this year, we're entering a new era of humanity. And that is the era of human beings working with AI to not just transform the world, build companies, but to make work dematerialize.
Starting point is 00:03:15 So if you think about human history, right? We've been slaving away for the longest time ever since we moved from being hunter-gatherers to farmers. Now, the hunter-gatherer lifestyle was actually a superior lifestyle. I mean, day one, you're hiking through, a forest, hunting animals. You'd probably be done with your work in two or three hours, have enough to eat, and then spend the rest of your time with nature, with family. But when we moved to farming and growing crops, life got really hard.
Starting point is 00:03:45 All historians agree on this fact. And what happened is working hours started increasing and increasing and increasing, because first you're managing the crops, then you are, or if you're not, managing the crops, you're building the tools to harvest the crops, or you're working on farms owned by landowners. And it got to a point where about 100 years ago, Americans were working 12 hours a day, seven days a week. Then Henry Ford comes along, and he changes to work dynamic. And he gives us the modern eight to nine hour a day, five-day work week. And this continues until now. What's about to happen in 2025 is that next big shift. And this shift is as big.
Starting point is 00:04:26 as going from hunter-gatherers to agriculturist. And that shift is, AI and robotics are going to start taking over a lot of our work. What's going to happen? Bill Gates just announced this last week. We're about to enter a two-day work week. Not only that, but just recently, one of the many robotic companies around the world,
Starting point is 00:04:48 they're around 30-40 robotic companies. They estimated to be, at a conservative level, a million humanoid robots in the workforce within the next three or four years, right? So one of these robotic companies just announced that figure, figures named the company, that we'll have robots in our homes in around two to three years because they're making such rapid progress.
Starting point is 00:05:11 And what people don't even know is this, as amazing as things are right now, AI is doubling in power, cost of power every 3.3 months. So in the next one year, it's going to increase by 16 times. in the next 24 months, 256 times,
Starting point is 00:05:28 and in the next five years, can you guess how many times? One million. It's exponential. If it's doubling every 3.3 months, in five years, it's a million times more powerful. So an AI is a million times more powerful, what is going to happen?
Starting point is 00:05:43 And that AI that's a million times more powerful now in robotic bodies, not only are white-collar jobs going to disappear, blue-collar jobs are going to disappear. Universal basic income is not a question of if it's now a question of when. And by the way, Elon said that. And so what we're about to enter is a world of abundance,
Starting point is 00:06:03 except it's no longer the hunter-gatherer world where you work for two hours and you don't have a roof over your head. But, you know, you're in nature. We're entering a world where we have everything we need. But we may only have to work one or two hours a day. That is crazy exciting. But that also means that how we set goals, is going to have to change.
Starting point is 00:06:25 Money is going to become less important. What you do with your free time, that's going to be more important. And so the way we are measuring our goals, human beings all around the world, is often, you know, like reinforced by culture. Culture is about to get completely disrupted. In the midst of culture getting disrupted,
Starting point is 00:06:45 I think it's really important to distill down and get clear as an individual when reflecting on what is going to be the most meaningful endeavor in my life, what direction do I want to go in? And I think of how the potential of a seed is encoded with it from the start. And so even before we go out and want to create or and contribute to the world, however we might, it would be really wise to spend time and really contemplate what is going to be the most meaningful for us. And so for you personally, in your own definition of success, and honoring and discovering what that unique seed is that you want to contribute to the world,
Starting point is 00:07:22 how would you describe that? So I'm actually working on an idea right now. I call it soul-packed. And it happened because I was looking at how I was building my company, and I realized all the old rules no longer apply. And what I want, what I thought I wanted, no longer matters to me. And at first, for about six months, I got really jaded, almost sad. So I used to love employing lots of people.
Starting point is 00:07:49 You know, at a peak, we were 400 people. I loved designer offices. My office twice made it to Ink Magazine, most beautiful offices in the world. And then all of a sudden, the world started changing post-COVID. And I realized, I don't want to work from an office.
Starting point is 00:08:03 I want to work from home. I want to be able to travel with my kids and really get to know my children before they leave for university. Still getting to work. But last week, for example, I was with my son and daughter in South Korea. The week before that, we were in Malaysia.
Starting point is 00:08:19 The week before that, we were attending classes in Singularity University. I like that freedom. Money has stopped mattering to me. As long as I have a home that I love being in, the things that most matter are human connection. And what has become insanely important is health and free time.
Starting point is 00:08:40 And so I've started re-evaluating all my goals. And Andre, man, it's been crazy because for the longest time, I was working towards building a company with the valuation of a billion dollars that it speak. We were just under a billion in valuation. And now I just don't know if that matters anymore. I still want to build something great,
Starting point is 00:08:59 but I want to build it with tiny teams, complete flexibility, few hours a day, and with tons of like AI agents supporting us. I love it, man. I think to a degree, there are these games that we play in life that we almost need to play out in order to go beyond them. You know, so money obviously being a big one of that, you know, for the entrepreneurial spirit in many of us,
Starting point is 00:09:26 it's building a big organization or building a team to almost prove something to ourselves in a sense. But then you get back to the core of, okay, how do I really want to live? And what is going to be the most impactful thing that I can do with my time for the planet? And as somebody who's spending so much time thinking about education from a new paradigm perspective,
Starting point is 00:09:47 and trying to bring more unity on the planet and democratize it in such a big way. What comes up for you in this new chapter of your life? So I was writing down my goals recently, right? And this thought occurred to me. School. School preparedness, according to Calton Coolidge in the 1920s, the point of education is to create cogs in the wheels of industry.
Starting point is 00:10:10 That doesn't sound like a really healthy way of, like, raising human beings, right? But we've been doing that for a really long time. I think that whole system is now ripe for disruption. I think what we should be teaching adults to do is to answer eight questions. Now, to make it easy to understand, I'd like to share these questions with your audience, and they spell out the word S-O-U-L-P-A-C-T, soul-packed. So I put it together in this simple abbreviation, so it's easy to remember. answer these eight questions, and I think you'll be setting your life up for a lot of beauty,
Starting point is 00:10:49 elegance, happiness, and success. The first question is this, basically, simplicity. Simplicity should be a goal. There's elegance in simplicity. If you're writing down a goal, your goal might be something along these lines. I run my business with only, underline only. Five people, three people, with only five people and a swarm of AI agents. Peter Diamandis said the next billion dollar companies are going to be built by teams of one, two, or three.
Starting point is 00:11:22 Today I listen to an interview with a college kid, 19 years old. His company just got a valuation of $2 billion, a 19-year-old kid and under 20 employees. It's wild, right? So simplicity needs to be an art form. We don't want complexity in our life. That's the first S. That's funny because I think a lot of people would hear that and think that is not simplicity in terms of having 20 employees or building a billion dollar company.
Starting point is 00:11:49 But in terms of how compared to how things have been done in the past, there is this distillation and simplifying of leveraging intelligence in ways that have that multiplicative effect. Okay, so S. So that's the S. Okay, now the O stands for opportunity. So here's a wild story. And by the way, just to go back in what you said in simplicity,
Starting point is 00:12:14 the reason why I use the example of a billion dollar company is because I don't want people thinking I'm telling them to not be ambitious, right? I mean, America is fueled by ambition. But if you want a company that comfortably brings you enough for you to have a wonderful life,
Starting point is 00:12:28 zero employees or one employee, that's great too. No one is saying you need to go out there and build something. I just wanted to use that example because I don't want to be accused of saying, sit in your butt and don't be ambitious.
Starting point is 00:12:41 Okay, O stands for opportunity. So a couple of years ago, I'm in Dubai, and I'm told I have to meet this guy. He's a brilliant entrepreneur. He's taken seven companies public, billionaire. And I meet him and he's got this insane apartment overlooking the palm, Jumeira, you know, those beautiful islands in a shape of a palm.
Starting point is 00:13:02 So he takes me to his balcony. I look down in this balcony, and it's fun. I was going to say. Unbelievable. I'm trying not to swear in this spiritual room here. It's unbelievable. And then we're quiet for a while.
Starting point is 00:13:18 And he turns to me and he goes, you know what it takes to be a billionaire vision? And I go, what? And he goes, work 21 hours a week. I'm like, what? He goes, work 21 hours a week, seven hours on Tuesday, seven hours on Wednesday,
Starting point is 00:13:31 seven hours on Thursday. Keep Monday and Friday free. And I go, why? and he goes because wealth comes from opportunity. You see, if you're building a company and you're hustling every day and you don't have free time, you will be stuck on that one hamster wheel.
Starting point is 00:13:49 But if you tell yourself, I only have 21 hours a week for this company, you'll figure out how to delegate, you'll find the right people, you'll create process. By keeping Monday and Friday free, you free yourself up for opportunity. He says, if someone calls me up and say,
Starting point is 00:14:01 Hey, Wayne, come to London. There's this beautiful property you need to check out. He says, I can fly out Thursday evening, be in London, spend Friday, Saturday, Sunday, Monday in London, fly out Monday night, be back in Dubai to go to run my company by Tuesday. Opportunity. Success and well comes from creating space for opportunity. Giving yourself thresholds like capacity of what you want to allocate to a project, not letting that project expand and free up your time,
Starting point is 00:14:35 but giving yourself opportunity where you can discover the world where you can see beautiful new things. Remember that trip we did on Egypt, right? That was amazing, right? Like we spent, what, seven, eight days in Egypt? But all of us could do it because in our lives,
Starting point is 00:14:51 we had created space for opportunity. And I think bringing this a little bit to the micro level, too, there's space for opportunity within our life, years, month, week, and also day. We can create spaces in these and pockets of these day where we kind of set aside all of the woes and all of the knowns in our life and create space for things to arise that are perhaps greater than we could conceive of. You know, and so I like that idea of creating space for opportunity, both of the macro scale in terms of our calendar in our life, but then also within our daily, daily moments too.
Starting point is 00:15:27 So the goal that you want to write down is, I create space for opportunity by, and then it could. be keeping Fridays free or keeping or stopping work after 5 p.m. So I can focus on learning and growth. Amazing. Okay. So what's the U? The U is unique edge. Unique edge.
Starting point is 00:15:46 The question there is, I am known in the world for, and describe that. So in a world of AI, generative AI can create, you know, that's that scene from that, that Will Smith movie, I robot,
Starting point is 00:16:02 And at this point, Will is pissed off at the robots. And he says, you know, you know something? You will never create art. You will never create poetry. You will never know what it's like to write something human. Well, Will was wrong. AI is creating art. AI is creating poetry.
Starting point is 00:16:18 AI is creating music. We got that wrong. So what makes us human? What we need to do is hone in on that unique edge. Maybe that unique edge is you're an incredible interviewer with a spiritual So you know how to make your guests comfortable? You know how extract wisdom from that. That's harder for an AI to do.
Starting point is 00:16:40 Typically, to find your unique age, you've got to find one or two or three things that you can be really good at and then combine them. So I combine. I studied computer engineering. So I combined that with spiritual teaching because I became a meditation teacher. And then I combined that with my stage presence because I studied to be an actor. So that's my unique age. I combine three things. You can't have a unique age
Starting point is 00:17:06 if you just have one thing. You've got to combine them. And if you can combine them in the right way, that could be a recipe for something really beautiful. What is your unique age? What are you going to be known for? There's a couple things that ring a bell for me when you talk about this.
Starting point is 00:17:26 First, the unique distinct differences between obviously humanoid robots to our breadth of an internal qualia experience, you know, of life and having consciousness in that way. And then, too, how we're going to change how we relate to what makes us unique in terms of human because societally for the past few hundred years, we've really pedestalized the intellect as sort of the chief, most impressive thing about us humans, right? And we're having a paradigm shift of what is intelligence and the democratization of that in this current moment.
Starting point is 00:18:02 But when you talk about unique edge, and I think of everybody who's listening right now, all of us want to discover and reveal what is our unique expression in life, both in terms of our creative arts, our businesses, our families in the world, and we're all unique humans, all life and nature as a unique expression, right?
Starting point is 00:18:21 And I've enjoyed seeing content conversations of yours over the years talking about this distinction between authentic desires and goals, which are culturally conditioned, you know, like, for example, our notions of what success means. And so when you think about that distinction, if we want to unlock and reveal our unique expression, how do you distill down what your authentic desires are
Starting point is 00:18:44 is that's the kind of revealing process for that? So this brings us to the fourth one, right, which is L. And L simply stands for love. So what is it that you enjoy doing? Even if you don't get any likes, you can share it on your Pinterest board, and you aren't going to get paid for it. So love, part of that can be a unique kid.
Starting point is 00:19:08 So let me give you an example. When I was young, I was deep into martial arts. Like I got all the way to a second degree black belt in taekwondo. And I was so into martial arts that I would have to take time off from school to compete in competitions. And I remember a teacher told me, why are you doing this? You're never going to make money in martial arts. What's the point? My dream at that time was to open a dojo.
Starting point is 00:19:33 Maybe I'd watched like one too many karate kid movies. I wanted to be like the Malaysian Miyagi. And for a while, I believed that school teacher. But that school teacher was wrong. So I followed martial arts because of love. I got to a level where I got to compete and represent my country, Malaysia, in the U.S. Open. That was my first time setting foot in America.
Starting point is 00:19:55 My God, Andre, I fell in love with this country. And so although I went to a British school and I was supposed to go to university in the UK. I decided to divert. I lost a year, but I decided to go and study in the United States. Now, of course, I had no idea about American geography, so I stupidly picked Michigan, the coldest, one of the coldest states possible,
Starting point is 00:20:15 minus 40 with wind chill in the winter. I know. I grew up in Michigan. You did? I know. I know the winters are brutal. And while I was there, I never forgot my martial arts. I couldn't find any good martial arts schools,
Starting point is 00:20:28 but I started studying meditation. And eventually, I started teaching meditation. Meditation and martial arts are very, very, very related, right? You've heard of the concept of Kung Fu monks. They are supremely related. They both come from Eastern cultures. They overlap a lot. And look, I took meditation, and I built an app that did over 100 million a year in meditation.
Starting point is 00:20:51 So my teacher was wrong. What I did was I followed my love. Now, it didn't happen overnight. It took maybe 20 years, but I never did it for the money. If I hadn't followed my love, and love can lead you in really interesting ways, I probably wouldn't be sitting here today. I probably wouldn't be on stage a week from now in L.A., interviewing Gwynette Paltrow, on stage with Joe Dispenza, speaking about meditation.
Starting point is 00:21:19 I ignored the advice from my teacher, who was trying to train me for money. Remember his words, there's no money in this. I simply followed what I love. And I think there's something special there. It's not going to happen overnight. But in a world where work is going to dematerialize, where things are going to be abundant, this is a perfect time for us to fully, fully, fully embrace what we love.
Starting point is 00:21:45 Right now, what I love is experimenting with music. And so I want to teach myself how to DJ, how to compose music. My music probably sucks. No one's going to listen to it, not even my kids. I don't care. I love it. I love creating. And so what is it?
Starting point is 00:22:04 If you're the audience member out there, what is it that you can do, that you just love? No one's going to see it. Nobody's going to rate you. You aren't doing it for grades. You aren't doing it for money. But in that abundance of free time,
Starting point is 00:22:17 what can you do that just lights you up? And by the way, this goes back to your question. So if you identify that one thing that you can do, okay, so in my case, martial arts and meditation, that was my love. What I studied was computer engineering. So remember I said, your unique edge, you can combine do things. I combined engineering with meditation, built a meditation app.
Starting point is 00:22:41 That went to $100 million in revenue. It's really fascinating to see people's life journeys and how what they love and their natural proclivities to what their skills are combined in a vehicle that allows them to prosper financially. And, you know, of course, it's been quite the journey that you've been on in regards to that. I've seen you talk about the brules, you know, and these BS rules that we subconsciously are essentially programmed by to live by, culturally, familiarly. I want to continue with your soul-packed, but I'm just curious what comes up for you when we discover what our unique ideas. Like, we have an idea of something that we love, that we want to explore more. Maybe we have the idea to be capitalistic with, right?
Starting point is 00:23:31 Whatever, whatever the notion is there. But there are these deeper-seated programs that we kind of have to realize that we don't have to live by. No matter what culture you're in, we develop rules. Brules is what I count in my book, the Code of the Extraordinary Mind, it stands for bullshit rules, right? We develop bullshit rules about the world around us. And, you know, one of my mentors is Bob Proctor. Bob was a dear friend and very sad that he died in 2022. And he created a meditation that he dedicated to me.
Starting point is 00:24:05 It's called the Abundance Meditation. It's on YouTube. Go listen to it. It's amazing. And one of the things he says in that meditation, and it's in my mind because I was listening to it this morning, is he says, the greatest illusion we have as human beings is that there is anything in reality
Starting point is 00:24:21 that is outside our control. So what he's saying is literally all of reality is within our control. Now, it's within such a degree of control that whatever rules you've decided work, okay, outside the rules of physics and the rules of law, let's not try to bend those. But whatever rules you decide are true, become true for you. That is why being able to identify any truth that you see in the world, being able to identify, is this actually true? Or is this what my mom, my dad, my schoolteacher,
Starting point is 00:24:57 media, my political party, my culture, my race, my religion told me is true. Because it will be true for you. There's a lot of medical science for this as well. Whatever you believe to be true will be true for you. In medical science, it's called a placebo effect. If you believe you take a pill that isn't really a pill, you can heal an illness.
Starting point is 00:25:19 They're now seeing the placebo effect expand to surgery since 2013, it was proven that fake surgery can heal a patient. As long as the patient believed that the surgery happened, because the patient was put under anesthesia and could see some cuts on their body. And so our mind is a meaning-making machine. And as children, we take meaning from the world. These meanings become a scaffolding of rules,
Starting point is 00:25:43 and then we operate between these rules. The most harmful rules are rules such as, I'm not worthy, I'm stupid, I'm unlovable, I'm damaged, I'm not attractive. And by the way, I've had all of those rules growing up as a teenager. But once you can identify what is absolute truth and what is a societal opinion, you get to break free from these shackles, from this artificial scaffolding. And that's when you really get to understand the power of what Bob said.
Starting point is 00:26:14 Everything in reality is created by your mind. I like that. and that we are a co-creator with reality and we have influence over reality. And I love Bob too. I started with him earlier on in my journey. And I don't love the verbiage, everything within reality,
Starting point is 00:26:34 if he articulated it this way, is within our control. That word to me sort of denotes, like dominion over reality in a way which I think can set people up in an unrealistic kind of fashion. What do you think about there? And do you think there's a better word
Starting point is 00:26:52 that could be replaced with control. Well, again, I'm paraphrasing, right? I heard him citizen's meditation this morning. I think if you listen to his full abundance meditation, he describes it. But I think what he's really saying is that it is a delusion that you don't have control over your reality. We all do.
Starting point is 00:27:07 That's what he's saying. Yeah, and the realization that our thoughts do influence reality in ways we're only beginning to comprehend, you know, I think as you start to tear down that sort of illusory, inner societal scaffolding, as you mentioned, you know, those programs and those beliefs around self and the world and what's possible and what we're worthy of, you start to gain access to deeper intuitive pulls, I think, for your life. And this is something
Starting point is 00:27:35 I've seen you speak to a lot because I know how big intuition has been for you. I want to get your perspective on this because we're having more and more emerging scientific understandings of the inner workings of what intuition really is. I know you've studied it as well and leveraged it completely to be able to design your life in a conscious, in a conscious manner. So how do you employ intuition in your life? How are you connected to it? What do you feel it is? Intuition is a lot like an internal AI. Let me explain why. A lot of people think AI is this, this machine in the clouds separate from us. It isn't. You know what AI is? It's, it's technology, taking the grand accumulation of all of human wisdom, creativity, art, knowledge, uniting it. It's literally
Starting point is 00:28:28 uniting our brains and creating a layer on top of it where all of us have access to the collective creativity and intelligence of humanity. Right. AI literally scraped the internet, scrape all of these, all books, all put into large language models. Condensed it down. And allowed us to now create a poem. Create an art piece, greater music, it's trained on our collective work. Now, I believe that intuition is something similar.
Starting point is 00:28:59 All of us, I believe, are deeply connected. I don't think we can explain that scientifically yet, and maybe quantum biology will give us an answer, but all human beings are deeply connected. The closer you are to someone, the more deeply connected you are. This is why we sometimes sense things about our significant other.
Starting point is 00:29:20 This is sometimes why a much, mother knows when her child is in distress, has so many stories of this. And through this deep connection, this disconnection of all of humanity, I believe that's the source of intuition. So that instinct, that insight, that idea that you get, it's coming from a larger aspect of you that's connected. You and me are connected. You and everyone else in this neighborhood, in this city, in the world are connected. And intuition is tapping into that feel. Carl Jung called it the morphogenic feel.
Starting point is 00:29:58 Tapping into that feel and being able to source insight. Yeah, Sheldrick, too, is Morpric Presidents. Yeah, Rupert Sheldry spoke about the same thing, right? The feeling of being stared at. He spoke, no, it's the title of his book, he spoke about how sometimes you'll be walking somewhere and you'll feel like there's someone behind you staring at you. And you just know, you turn around.
Starting point is 00:30:20 And sure enough, there's someone staring at you know, and that sounds kind of creepy. But we have these instincts. Yeah, I think it's really important to demystify these terms. And there's a book actually around this general semantics called the tyranny of words that describe how we often use words without, you know, understanding or agreeing upon what they actually mean. And so I think it's really helpful to demystify a word. like intuition. And the way that you're kind of comparing it to a large language model, for example,
Starting point is 00:30:55 that we as human beings have access to all of our historical experiences, of course, genetically encoded, non-articulate, articulate, various forms of memory within us. And then we're also connected to a vast sea of information at levels we're only beginning to be able to comprehend. But nonetheless, we are absolutely connected to a greater field of information. and again, more and more science and studies and meta studies are coming out around this, which is exciting. And of course, we don't have to understand something to use it, to leverage it, to employ it in our life.
Starting point is 00:31:30 And so when it comes to intuition, as you've discovered it, what have been a couple examples in how you share your relationship with intuition as it can be your own connection to that source of information that is grander than our own logical mind? So I've had intuitive insights that have guided me to producing a talk or a speech or a book, right? Just as this, this insight. But I've also had intuitive insights that have saved my life. And intuition can come to you in different ways. People feel it in different ways.
Starting point is 00:32:07 Clairvoyance is when you see something. Clare audience is when you hear something. Clarecentians is when you feel it in your body. Clarecentians, I think, is really a... interesting. You can be in a room or about to meet someone and you feel this feeling in your body. And it's like, no, no. You know, it sometimes happens when you go on a blind date or something along those lines. I had an experience of Clare Audience that saved my life. So it was, must be in 2007, 2008, the Black Iepie song, My Humps had come out. And I loved the Black IP. So I was driving down
Starting point is 00:32:39 the road. And the song came up and I was just paying attention to the lyrics and laughing because it was so cute such my hums my naughty little hums it was so awesome and so all of a sudden i heard a voice this is wild right i heard a voice like there was someone in the back seat of my car saying pay attention to the road and it brought my mind off the song back to the road and just then a truck hit a car the car flipped up landed in front of me and i had just enough time to break and it was wild right I possibly would have hit that car if I hadn't heard that voice. But I swear it felt like it was coming from the back seat. There was no one in the back seat.
Starting point is 00:33:24 So what voice was that voice to this day? I don't know. But it was a voice. That is clear audience, a form of intuition. It's so fascinating to just look at the research and how much information is available to our sensory experience at any given moment. and yet what we're consciously aware of is a small, small, less than 1% fraction of that for maybe none other than it would just be
Starting point is 00:33:51 simply overwhelming to be perceiving all that we have access to or connected to. But the fact that we are connected to it allows us to tune into that, you know, and what do you think is the relationship to intuition and getting quiet and feeling open internally in that sort of relaxed state of mind and how that opens up your intuitive capacities? So studies in intuition show that when it correlates with a certain brainwave state, that brainwave state is called Theta. So Dave Asprey, the famous biohacker, he has a facility in Seattle called 40 Years of Zen,
Starting point is 00:34:29 wonderful place. And they use biofeedback to train your brain to develop the brainwave states of monks, okay, Zen Roshi monks. So they're basically reversing the brainwaves of Zen Roshi monks who have spent decades in meditation. Now, here's what happens. There's a particular brainwave pattern. So Zen Roshi Mongs, what is unique about their brain is they have high alpha amplitude.
Starting point is 00:34:50 Alpha is a wave. High amplitudes of the wave as opposed to smaller amplitudes, and they have a left-right brain coherence. Now, they use biofeedback to put you in that brainwave state. And after you learn to be able to stay awake at alpha, like meditation, they take you deeper to what is called theta. Theta is really interesting. Theta is where, you know, when you're meditating
Starting point is 00:35:14 and your head starts nodding like that, you're dipping into Theta. And often you'll see dreams. Theta is where intuition lies. So you can train yourself to stay awake at Theta. And when you go into Theta and you're awake, you're tapping into something, man. Like it's insights, ideas,
Starting point is 00:35:35 all of this stuff starts flowing out. That is intuition. That's how it connects to brain waves. And I remember being on impact theory, Tom Billioux show. And we were talking about meditation. And Tom is a very science-backed guy, but he shared with me something. He's like, you know, I built billion-dollar companies. And I find that every morning, I wake up, I sit in bed, I relax, and I do this thing
Starting point is 00:35:59 called thinkotation. And as I think-cate, ideas come to me. Tom's talking about that. He's talking about getting really relaxed and seeing what's flowing from your brain. And if you can do this and the deeper you can go into theta, the more accurate and structured that intuition can be. Yeah, you can tune into those more coherent thoughts. Right.
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Starting point is 00:37:04 flicker, both near infrared and red light and one lightweight device. They ship worldwide and have an easy return policy and a bunch of other science-backed wellness products that you guys can check out as well. If you want to, you can go to bondcharge.com slash know thyself and use coupon code know thyself to save 15%. That's B-O-N-C-H-A-R-G-E dot com slash know-thyself and use code know-thyself to save 15%. Bon charge products are all H-S-A-F-S-A-E-Ligible, giving you tax-free savings of up to 40%. I hope. you enjoy it back to the show i think when you see the fruit and the results that listening to your intuition bears and again it can be an interesting uh navigational path to to discern what is intuition
Starting point is 00:37:57 versus what is programming because often programming can masquerade as an enlightened perspective you know like oh this is a great idea no it's your wounding and your mommy issues but again life is revelatory in this path where sometimes we need to experience these things to have that perspective and reflection and contrast of experience. How does this flow into what the Soul Pact is? So let's go through the rest of them. Yes, we went through the SOU.
Starting point is 00:38:24 So remember the SoulPack is a way of thinking about your life for an age where AI is about to disrupt everything. Okay. Okay. And the old rules of work no longer apply. Yeah. So simplicity. Simplicity.
Starting point is 00:38:34 Opportunity. Opportunity. Opportunity. Opportunity. Unique edge. Love. Space to do what you love. Now we come to the P-A-C-T. The first B is super easy.
Starting point is 00:38:42 Purpose. Find a purpose. We have two great spiritual needs, the need to grow and the need to contribute. I believe that as human beings like these needs, this is almost like what our soul craves. Tony Robbins talks about this, the two greater spiritual needs, growth and contribution. So opportunity O, that's where growth fills in, right? You rather than work a full 40-hour week, you work less, 35, 36 hours, but you create time for you to study to learn. Now, P in the P, is purpose.
Starting point is 00:39:15 That's contribution. Whether it is giving money away, or it's teaching underprivileged kids, or it's building a product that's making a better world, it's just so important to have that purpose. And you have that purpose. You have more fuel. It correlates with longevity, which is really interesting, right? So you have more energy. You have more excitement about life. you feel more fulfilled, but if everyone was doing that,
Starting point is 00:39:43 imagine how beautiful the world would be. Let's break those two down. So first, growth, as one of the most essential human needs, you've spoken to this rate of self-evolution and how it's an important pillar for understanding to orient our life and in a way where we have all these latent capacity skill set gifts that we just would not discover
Starting point is 00:40:04 unless we make space for truly growing, mentally, physically, spiritually. So what is that framework for you, Rose? Rose or Rose just stands for a rate of self-evolution, right? I think it's an important way of measuring how fast you're growing. And you can measure it in terms of a number of books you read, the courses you attend. It doesn't matter, but as long as you're making time for it. What is the unique difference between growing through learning and unlearning?
Starting point is 00:40:31 So unlearning is simply the act of understanding where you, your frameworks came from. And knowing was this a reliable source? It's understanding the difference between absolute truth and relative truth. Relative truth is what you learned from religion, culture, parenting, school, and media. And I can tell you this. All of us are swimming in a sea of relative truth. I live in five different countries.
Starting point is 00:41:04 And it's really interesting to see how different countries observe each other. Americans will be shocked at how the rest of the world observes this country, especially in the past four months with the tariff war. And so many of us live in our own little bubbles, but this relative of truth limits our capacity for growth, for understanding, for improving the world. Great news. The federal EV rebate is back. Eligible customers get up to $5,000 with the federal EVAP rebate
Starting point is 00:41:37 on select 2027 Volt in 2020s. Six, Equinox EV models. Visit your local Chevrolet dealer today for more details. How does that play now into contribution? And this idea of conscious entrepreneurship or enlightened entrepreneurship, you know, a lot of us feel the call and we discover a unique purpose and way we want to contribute to the world. And then it's a question of how can I scale this in a way that both nourish itself and
Starting point is 00:42:05 allows me to amplify that contribution towards others? So your purpose and your business. stop trying to mix them. Professor Scott Galloway, I was just listening to a lecture at this, and he said something really interesting. He said, we invite all of these speakers
Starting point is 00:42:19 to come and teach at our universities, and they always leave the audience with a stupid piece of advice. Find your purpose. He goes, no. No, finding your purpose isn't going to make you money. You want to make money, do unsexy jobs.
Starting point is 00:42:37 Go into, you know, transportation. go into sewage, go into retail. The jobs that are unsexy have the highest profit margins. The sexy jobs, nightclubs, personal growth teaching, music creation, lowest profit margins unless you're in the 1%. If you're not in the 1%, be realistic about it. Get out. Go get an unsexy job.
Starting point is 00:43:00 You can do an unsexy job and then on the side, have a purpose. So I know a guy who makes a ton of money. He makes, he has a factory that makes noodles. Literally like noodles. Makes tons of money. What's his purpose? He built a church and he feeds the homeless. Two different things, right?
Starting point is 00:43:21 The church isn't his job. Feeding the homeless isn't his job. That's just something he does for purpose. The noodles, that's his job. Let's stop trying to collapse the two. For many of us, I think we simply can't live life unless we combine the two. Like, for me, for example,
Starting point is 00:43:37 I don't know how to divorce what I do and my purpose. Like, there's only one option for me in terms of my vision for what I want to create in the world. And I know similarly for you... You're probably in the 1%. Your podcast is probably in the 1%.
Starting point is 00:43:50 Yeah, no, I mean, it is. And likewise with Mind Valley, you know, but I think... I don't think, obviously, one shoe can fit all for sure in this. And there's a lot of people who are going to work maybe an unsexy job like you mentioned
Starting point is 00:44:03 and have their way to more directly contribute to the planet in a different way. But for those that do feel the call to combine them and have the sort of audacious ambition to combine them and see the vision for themselves succeeding in that 1%. What have you learned of what it really takes? Because you spoke to earlier this discovering of love for what you do and then combining with purpose, growth, and contribution, why do those that make into the 1% of combining their purpose and contribution?
Starting point is 00:44:33 should make it while others don't. Well, I can be really honest, a lot of it is luck. It's luck. There was a study done by, I believe his name is John Goss. He ran a company in Silicon Valley called Ideal Labs. And look at all of these startups in Silicon Valley and what contributed to their success. Employees, 13%. Investors, 17%.
Starting point is 00:44:55 Timing, 40%. Luck. Now, you're listening to your intuition. you probably are going to be better at getting that luck right because timing is so unpredictable, algorithms aren't going to figure it out, but sometimes that intuition can guide you. Just like the intuition,
Starting point is 00:45:14 my intuition, that voice saying, pay attention to the road, perfect timing for me to avoid a collision. So that's how I'd answer that. Okay, let's finish with SoulPack. So we got P now what's A. A is abundance. Okay, so the thing people got to understand this
Starting point is 00:45:29 as work dematerializes, okay? What used to take you five days, you're soon going to be able to do in one day, that's going to happen before the end of this year with Agentic AI. So what you did take five days, you can now do in one day. So if you want to keep yourself busy, you don't need to, but let's say you still want to work a decent 30 to 35 hour week. You could have Business One, okay? That's the boring moneymaker, business two on Tuesdays.
Starting point is 00:45:53 That's the purpose. Business three on Wednesdays, not purpose, not money, just something you love. Thursdays could be for opportunity. Fridays, you could focus on something else or just not do anything and embrace that. That's where we're going. So that brings us to, A, abundance, right? Abundance is this.
Starting point is 00:46:15 So, you know, I remember when I was first starting out, I was in Malaysia, and I go to the KLCC mall. Back then, it was one of the biggest malls in the world. This is before Dubai Mall was built with the twin towers, tallest buildings in the world. The mall is filled with the most luxurious stores. And I go into the store called Zena. So I go there and I'm just browsing and I'm a kid, I'm maybe 28 something.
Starting point is 00:46:42 And the shopkeeper comes to me and I'm dressed really plain. And she goes in a Malaysian accent. I'm Malaysian so I can do this accent. She goes, excuse me, sir, this store not for you. Because you cannot buy anything here. Everything here, very expensive. And I was pissed. I was pissed.
Starting point is 00:47:04 I walked straight out. The ball, the ovaries on that. Straight out of that store. Now, flash forward over a decade later, the little, so back then I was just teaching meditation. I had pathetic money. All of a sudden, the day my company did over a hundred million in one year. Okay.
Starting point is 00:47:26 I decide. At that point, I'm living in Dubai. I said, I'm going to go to Dubai more. I'm going to go to Zena. And I'm going to pick up something. Because that shopkeeper, her words were still in my head. So I go to Zena and I see the most amazing white sweater. And I tried on.
Starting point is 00:47:46 And my God, that sweater was so good. It looked so good on my body. It felt so amazing. As I'm going to pay for it, I look at the price tag. a thousand bucks. And I'm thinking, what the fuck? Is this made from like Unicon fur? I am not paying a thousand bucks for a sweater
Starting point is 00:48:03 when I can buy something that's 95% as good for a hundred bucks from H&M. So I don't buy the sweater. I walk straight out of that Zenia store. But I realized something that day. I was limiting my abundance with that attitude. See, about a year later, I was talking to Marie Diamond. She's a spiritual teacher, one of the teachers in Mind Valley.
Starting point is 00:48:23 And Marie explained it to me. She said, abundance is an energy flow. Okay, and for abundance to come to you, you got to give abundance. This is why Muslim people believe in Sakat. When they give money, more money comes to them. When you spend money, more money comes to you. I'm not saying spend everything. I mean, definitely, like have savings, like invests.
Starting point is 00:48:43 But you got to keep money flowing. That's abundance. And to keep money flowing, what Marie told me is. She said, Vision, you're too comfortable. Expand your desire. So at that point, I had a beautiful apartment. I loved my apartment. There was nothing else I needed.
Starting point is 00:49:00 But income-wise, I was not growing. She said, I want you buy a new apartment. I want you to then, and then she looked at my watch. I was wearing a $200 watch from, I hate to say it, from a duty free store in Istanbul airport. She said, Vision, I need you to go. So I met her in the south of France near Nice. And she said, I need you to go to Monaco.
Starting point is 00:49:23 There's a Cartier store there. Buy a watch. It cannot be less than $5,000. So I bought this Cartier. This is six grand. Then she said, show me your wallet. I show her my wallet. She's like, what the hell are you doing?
Starting point is 00:49:36 You're disrespecting money. Go and buy a proper wallet. Right next to the Cartier store, there's Georgia Amani store. So I buy an Amani wallet. Marie made me do all of that. And she said, they should spend. So I decide, now I go and I buy an apartment in Dubai. a multi-million dollar apartment.
Starting point is 00:49:56 Then I go and I buy, this was a dumb one, but I bought a plane, right, for short air travel in Europe. Ended up selling that for a loss. Stupid idea. Don't buy planes. Bought another apartment, massively luxurious apartment, one of the most glorious buildings in the world. And as I did that, guess what happened, Andre? Company started doing better and better and better. More and more and more money flew to me.
Starting point is 00:50:20 My royalty rates from book sales and teachings went up. Profits from the company channel back to me, my stock portfolio exploded. Even the property I bought grew 40% in valuation in just 24 months. Money and abundance are a cycle. Now, the mistake people make is because of culture. I grew up in immigrant culture. Immigrant culture say save, save, save, save. Bad times are going to happen.
Starting point is 00:50:45 Save, save, save. That may have been okay, okay, in the 1950s and 60s. Still, have some money, you know, in case things go wrong. Don't be living in debt. But have goals for what you want. The beautiful house, the good clothing, the latest iPhone, the nice car. When you have those goals, you're basically telling the universe, this is what I desire. And you're giving the universe space to expand your ideas, space to expand your business.
Starting point is 00:51:18 You're allowing your intuition to channel through you. Because you know one funny thing about intuition? Intuition needs a direction. It's often not just random. When you set a goal, I want to earn this much, the ideas come to you through intuition to get you to that goal. You got to give your mind a compass direction.
Starting point is 00:51:38 That's why setting goals for abundance are important. But no, it's not just abundance. Many people make this mistake. They're just all about the possessions. And so they run at the time, they lack passion, they don't do what they love, they don't have a simple business, they don't have opportunity, they are tied to their job, their job has become a golden handcuff. Don't do that. That's why SoulPack is eight things. And abundance is only number six right now. It's fascinating because I've
Starting point is 00:52:05 spoken to many, I guess, affluent abundant individuals and there's many different perspectives on our relationship to money, to material possessions. I think that it's important to have our external reality and the things that we wear and the places that we live as best as we can to be a reflection of the abundance in which we want to call more of in and at the same time what we lack in resources we make up for in resourcefulness while i i agree with you on the notion of investing in things that make you feel abundant and that there's this reciprocity and you're not hoarding money you know and you let it flow and you invest um into things that you believe in and you know you can buy a nice things and not feel shameful about it and at the same time I think there is the mindful consumerism
Starting point is 00:52:55 piece as well because it can be very easy to slip into being possessed by your possessions so yeah it's a good balance so what so what are the last two calmness is to see p-a-c t so purpose abundance calmness make time for calmness every given day you got to give your body at least an hour for meditation, massage, therapy. People are starting to become aware of this. This is why longevity centers have become a really hot business. They're booming all around the world. I mean, I'm visiting L.A. right now.
Starting point is 00:53:30 I booked an Airbnb right next to a longevity center because it's so easy for me to go there and be in an oxygen chamber or do red light therapy. Just let my body. be calm. That's so important. You know, one thing I like about you, Andre, is before we did this interview, you put me on that massage chair for five minutes, that vibrating massage chair. That was embracing calmness. Calmness is so important. When we can treat our bodies with respect and allow our bodies to just release tension, to self-calibrate, to soothe, that's going to fuel
Starting point is 00:54:11 us for the rest of the day. So an hour of calmness a day, I believe, will lead to, even if you have an eight-hour day, the old paradigm of doing things, you take an hour away for calmness, in the next seven hours, you will outdo what you would have done in eight hours. We see this. There are actually numerous meditation studies that talk about this, that prove this. Try it. I've experienced this in my life. Make such a difference. And the T of the calmness is time.
Starting point is 00:54:40 Set a goal for time. And that goal looks like this. I only work X hours a week. Let's stop. Let's stop trying to glorify hustle culture. Okay? Hustle culture is a thing of the past. It doesn't apply anymore.
Starting point is 00:54:58 Stop trying to glorify it. I am choosing now to build beautiful businesses that can change the world. So I have all the abundance I want. I have the purpose I want. I love what I do. but I'm choosing to do it in under 35 hours a week. And for the first time in human history, because of AI, this is now possible. You're right.
Starting point is 00:55:20 I love how invigorated you are by AI. It seems like it's really taking up. Remember, I'm a meditation teacher and a computer engineer. Right. I'm a Zen geek. It's great. I love that. And we, I think, are going to experience, again, one of the biggest shifts,
Starting point is 00:55:39 humanity has ever seen over the course of the next five years. And so it's hard to not be captured by all the revolutions and technology and all the changes that are coming. I do think that relationship to time, how we spend it is really important. And there is this transition of seeing trading time in for money and this notion of hard work versus smart work. And so what is a big shift there in terms of this notion of of feeling like we have to work hard in order to see a reflection of abundance in our life. The word before that you used, which is finding your sense of calm and creating at least an hour a day for you to kind of focus not on just what you're doing, but also the energy in
Starting point is 00:56:25 which what is being done, you know, and that's also why I put you in that vibration chair beforehand. It's partly what I would want as an interviewee, if someone who was interviewing me, like, especially after a long drive or travel, allowing your state to come into a, space that is going to inform all the thoughts and words and all that that you're going to do in the world and in this podcast for example and so i think that's just an example here but like in our own life we can create those practices and create space for that to uh to align ourselves into that sense of of calm and quietness within so that we can make choices that have an exponential effect and
Starting point is 00:57:02 they're more of like a 10x instead of a 2x so what comes to mind there in that transition from hard work Well, hard work is an ridiculously obsolete concept. It just doesn't apply in the world anymore. And you can test this for yourself. I read about this billionaire who's spending $100 million to restore his help. He got sidetracked, overworked himself, lost his help. He's now decided that he's going to help working, spending $100 million to restore us help.
Starting point is 00:57:38 No matter how rich you are, if you lose your help, you will give anything to get that back. But our schooling system doesn't train us for this. What was the last longevity class you took in high school? Nothing. But tons of classes on how you can be a good, obedient employee, right? And then let's look at relationships.
Starting point is 00:58:01 If I was in a situation where I either never see my children again or my business completely vanishes and I have to work, you know, like a regular job just to survive, but I would have my kids. I don't even have to think about it. My children are more important than my business. And so as human beings, we understand this.
Starting point is 00:58:25 Our bodies are important. Our relationships are important. Our love is more important. Our peace of mind is more important. But in society, we fail to make time for that. work seems to expand and fill up right now 70% of our waking hours. This is what I'm trying to wake people up to. I think one of the most important things governments can do right now.
Starting point is 00:58:50 And I mean right now, as in this year, is mandate a four-hour work week. And by 2030, reduce that, sorry, a four-day work week, mandatory. It should be illegal to ask employees to work more than, more than four days a week, same pay. By 20 to 30, take that down to a three-day work week. By 20-35, take it down to a two-day work week. Work will still get done. It's just that technology is progressing so fast,
Starting point is 00:59:22 human beings are not going to be required for that work. And if we did this, I mean, if we just move to a four-day work week right now, it's not easy. Like if I tried to do this with my employees, what will happen is our competitors would crush us because they're not going to do it. But if it was mandated by law, this has to be the mission of government. If it was mandated by law and everyone's doing it,
Starting point is 00:59:42 think about what this would do for America. Health would go up because we have more time to focus on our health, whether it's going to the gym or it's taking a nice long run or its longevity therapies. The way we raise our kids would change because moms and dads are no longer coming home stress. They have a day, an extra day, to spend time with their children. And while we're doing that, we should also reduce, potentially, reduce the school week to four hours, to four days a week. Why the school, why is school five days a week? Well, because, you know, adults work five days a week.
Starting point is 01:00:18 This gives parents, moms, and dads and their kids more time together. The next thing government should do is start investing in social spaces, parks, town squares, walkable cities, so human beings can come together and connect. that's going to be really important in an age of AI in an age where you don't have to go to an office anymore. And so this has to start happening at a governmental level, but this is inevitable. We have to do this. If we don't do this,
Starting point is 01:00:47 we are going to be exacerbating what's already happening, which is massive layoffs due to AI. Most companies I know are not hiring and are laying off. It does seem like there's a big distillation process happening in terms of a mass amount of jobs that are either currently or about to be replaced. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:01:10 But then again, every challenge has the unique polarity of the opportunity that it presents itself. And for us as human beings, that's like, okay, then what is my unique edge? In what ways can I contribute uniquely? That is not something that a robot can just do. Exactly. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:01:29 I'm curious, as somebody who's, built systems within an organization and company that scaled so large, if somebody was to eavesdrop and spy onto the internal systems and culture that's been created within what you've created, what do you think would be the most surprising observation that they would have about the systems and culture behind the scenes that really enables so much success to happen? Yeah, well, I think if you were to look at my company, what you would see is how rapidly we leverage AI. We've been shrinking the company. We went from 400 people to now 240, and it's going to continue shrinking. When we let people go, we ensure that they have a good severance.
Starting point is 01:02:08 There's also natural turnover. But I believe we'll be able to significantly increase revenues and do it, but under 100 people, but a swarm of AI agents. And so we have a central AI called Aura, and Aura allows all our employees to assemble data and then work with create AI assistance that can help them with their work. and or us getting so powerful, work is disappearing.
Starting point is 01:02:33 It's dematerializing. I'm really excited. What do you think life's going to be like 15 years from now? 15 years from now. Ideally, we will be have a work week of two to three days a week. Governments would have wised up and they would have started investing not in roads, but in public transportation,
Starting point is 01:02:56 walkable cities, town squares, city centers, places where human beings come together. It's sort of like the European model, right? Where, you know, in Europe, cities frequently have these beautiful spaces for people to collide. That's going to be so important. Longevity therapies and health are going to be booming. Personal growth is going to be booming. Because, but all of this extra time in your hands, what you want to do is you want to make a,
Starting point is 01:03:24 you want to quit a population that's not going to be immersed in a virtual world as much, but also emerged in the physical world. But ultimately, what's going to happen is we are going to be living in two different worlds. Fifteen years from now, the holodeck from Star Trek will be real. We'll be able to go into fully immersive virtual worlds. VR-AR glasses will be like regular glasses. You'll be able to sit in a chair, put on these light headsets, tactile, it'll be able to feel things, and you'll be able to be in completely virtual worlds.
Starting point is 01:04:01 But there's a danger there, and that is a loss of human connection. So you want to be sure, and that's why I'm saying town squares, like physical spaces where people can bump into each other. Otherwise, what we're going to see is less dating, less connection, birth rates going down, right? Now, the other thing that's going to happen is humanoid robot. Almost everyone is going to have a humanoid robot. pretty much as popular as we see people with dogs and cats right now. You'll have factories, will be completely robotic.
Starting point is 01:04:31 So all of this thing Trump is saying about bringing the jobs back to America. No, those jobs, even in China, so Americans are clueless about this. Factories in China are not run by human beings anymore. I'm sure you've seen the viral radius of the new Huawei factory. It's run completely by robot. Do you know what's the poverty rate in China right now? Well, let me ask you this. What's the poverty rate in America?
Starting point is 01:04:52 Extreme poverty. What is the extreme poverty rate? I'm not sure. No, 2%. Okay. 2%. So 1 in 50 Americans live in extreme poverty. You know what's the poverty rate in China?
Starting point is 01:05:02 Zero. China has virtually eliminated extreme poverty. China, the reason for the Trump tariffs, some people say, is not for jobs to come back to America because no one American, no American wants those factory jobs. Even the Chinese aren't doing them anymore. Robots are doing them. Is to create a robotics industry here.
Starting point is 01:05:20 So that people like Elon Musk and his, you know, the robots, is creating, they can start manufacturing in America. Robots, manufacturing, robots. Robots manufacturing everything we need. What I think they haven't thought about is what will happen to the workers, the blue-collar workers. And this is where universal basic income has to happen. It is inevitable. It has to happen. Some people really don't like that idea. That's because of a bullshit American rule that you have to work hard to mean something. Absolutely nonsense. that that's an American thing which which I think America has to has to self-examine itself
Starting point is 01:06:00 and pull itself out of that stupidity. What do you think about the, I mean, this is a rabbit hole we could go down. So we're building a future society. The most important thing is this, okay? Even if you disagree to universal basic income, there are four things we have to do. Everyone should have to, every child should have to have the right to education, not just at the age of seven, but, you know, at the age of three, preschool. Everyone should have access to health care. Everyone should have access to food,
Starting point is 01:06:30 and everyone should have a roof. If we're not doing universal basic income, provide that for it. That has to be the mission of government. Yeah, fulfill basic needs. Stop this ridiculous idea of, oh, you've got to pull yourself up by your bootstraps, right? It is fucking insane how America treats people.
Starting point is 01:06:48 I agree. No, I agree. And by the way, the rest of the world sees this, and they realize this. They look at the data and the metrics on America. Yeah. How do you think education in particular is going to be revolutionized? Because I know you've been spending the past couple decades.
Starting point is 01:07:04 Every child is going to have an AI-based tutor. So here's how education is going to work. Firstly, early brain entrainment training. So, you know, I investigated when my son was born, I went and I investigated facilities around the world where they were training kids to develop superior cognitive skills, institutions such as the Doman Institute. So the Doman Institute, they started working with kids who had brain damage, like literally kids who were born with half their brain destroyed.
Starting point is 01:07:33 They were able to get these kids back to normal functioning with half the brain matter. That's how incredible the human brain is before the age of six. Now, when they started doing it with regular kids, and I went to visit, and this was wild. When they started doing the same form of training with regular kids, these kids developed genius abilities. I met kids who could do, complex math calculations in their head with no calculator. I met kids who could quote Shakespeare. I met a five-year-old who was reading the book Shogun. I asked him, well, you know, that book Shogun has some adult parts.
Starting point is 01:08:05 What do you do? He goes, when I come to an adult pot, I just turn the page and I skip it. It was really cute. So I took some of those methodologies. I applied it on my son. We didn't do it as vigorously as Domen, but my son, he scores off the charts. He speaks seven languages right now. His school teacher calls him a mathematical genius.
Starting point is 01:08:25 How old is he? Well, at the age of 16, he scored in the top 0.25% of his SATs. I did it in year one. A lot of languages. 30 minutes, year one, year one, using flip cards, Doman method. This is going to become more and more prevalent. So human beings are going to become smarter.
Starting point is 01:08:40 Now, the next thing that's happening is, within 15 years, we will have brain-to-a-I interfaces, super-tiny, attached to your head, and they will allow you to control the AI around your rule. How long will you wait before you personally get that implanted? It's going to be, it's not an implant. It's a tiny prick, tiny prick. You don't even feel it, and it's the size of a human hair.
Starting point is 01:09:04 It's literally like a hair. What do you think about the potential loss of human faculties in the sense of if you don't use it, you lose it? Not going to happen. In what regard is not going to happen? It's not going to happen because what's going to happen is rather than simply use our eyes and our hands to interact with AI, the user interface is going to be different.
Starting point is 01:09:27 I've already been 40 years of Zen where they use biofeedback, 12-point hats around your head that train your brain to improve its efficiency and function at the brain of a Zen Roshi Monk. Our brain does not differentiate between the 12 points of electrodes on my head and my actual hands. It's using those 12 points to self-regulate itself and then influence computers. This is a unique feature about the human brain.
Starting point is 01:09:55 It's crazy. Now, all that's going to happen is the brain computer interface is going to empower our brain to work in new ways. We will have something called ambient AI. Your computer is not on your desk. Your computer is the room. That room using sensors, using video, will, not only help you self-regulate.
Starting point is 01:10:22 So, for example, you might hear a voice saying, Andre, I notice that based on the slight flush on the skin on your cheeks, your heart rate has gone up. Would you like me to power up the massage chair for you? Okay, so what happens is, Ambient AI is watching us with our permission, taking care of us, and when you need to get something done, not a computer, you can be sitting out having a cup of coffee, you just peek it into existence,
Starting point is 01:10:53 and the AI creates it. This is becoming faster and faster and faster. Three weeks ago, I spent 15 hours with a tool called Replit. I've forgotten how to code because I graduated to computer engineering school 25 years ago, but I built in just 15 hours on Replit, an insanely advanced app to function as my medical doctor because I was tired of dealing with human doctors, right?
Starting point is 01:11:20 And so this is the world we're going into. You will speak things into existence. Work is going to disappear. What do you think is the end goal of the age of AI? Do you feel like the singularity is like very much so upon us? Yeah. I don't think the age of AI has an end. goal, but we human beings need to. What we need to start looking at is how to reorganize
Starting point is 01:11:48 Earth civilization to be more functional. Now, we are making good progress. We don't see this in the news. Can you guess the number of people in the world right now that are living in poverty? It's 9%. It's 9%. But most people assume it's 40%. And what degree of poverty? Would you say like extreme poverty? Under under $2 a day. Okay. It's 9%. Got it. Right?
Starting point is 01:12:15 Poverty, it used to be 40%. Just 25 years ago. It's like over 700 million people. Exactly. It's a lot. Exactly. So a world is getting better and better faster. Populations are, also the population crisis isn't going to happen.
Starting point is 01:12:28 We're about to plateau in terms of population. So that's a good thing. But what we got to be... Some people say it's a really bad thing. But it's controversial. We'll sidebar that. But what we got to be paying attention to is the quality of... of our world, the quality of our water, the quality of nature.
Starting point is 01:12:49 So one of the things that's pretty unfortunate right now is 90% of all biomass in the world is biomass to feed human beings. So if you look at all the animals, all the animals, all the plants in the world, 90% of it is stuff for us to consume. 10% of it is that. It's just plants existing, right? And so, sorry, I'm talking about animals here, not plants. animals, biomass. And that's an unfortunate thing. We have to start creating more beautiful
Starting point is 01:13:17 wild spaces where we can go and be one with nature again. So we need to start looking at re-engineering the world. Now part of this also means re-engineering countries. We have to start breaking down borders. And this means countries have to stop worrying, populations have to stop worrying about things such as illegal immigration. Do you know what percentage of the world actually lives in a country outside they were born in? 3%. It's nothing. And that's including nations like the EU, right?
Starting point is 01:13:51 We don't have a world where people are just flooding across borders. We don't have a world of poor people that are producing more kids than what Westerners think is necessary. A lot of that is myth created by politicians to create fear because fear keeps them in power. What we need to start looking at is a world with really, regions like the UN. America, Canada, and Mexico, remove the borders, have trade treaties.
Starting point is 01:14:19 Sort of like how the EU functions. That will actually increase wealth, GDP, diversity, food quality for everyone. Now, I'm not talking about one world. That would be dangerous. You don't want one leader of one world. You know, that's like Palpatine from Star Wars. But what we should be looking at is regional unions, an African Union, a Southeast Asian Union, an East Asia Union, a South Asian Union, a North American Union, South American Union, that will allow a world where there's greater equality, where there is greater diversity, there's more peace, and it will prevent, it will allow us to make better choices for our children.
Starting point is 01:15:06 Welcome aboard via rail. Please sit and enjoy. Please sit and sit. Play. Post. Taste. View. And enjoy. Via Rail, love the way.
Starting point is 01:15:22 It's really exciting to see what's going to unravel over the next 10 years. I just think it's got to be one of the greatest times to be alive, you know, what we're seeing the birth of. I want to bring this down to more of the individual because we've been a little bit more on the macro side of things. Is that cool? Absolutely. So you've been working with for the... over the past decade, some of the most incredible teachers
Starting point is 01:15:45 in the personal development, spiritual space. You've been able to bring them on your platform, have them speak at events, build courses, and connect with them, become friends with them, you know, and learn from them. What has that revealed to you about what human genius is? Like when you work with people
Starting point is 01:16:02 who are at the top of their field and have really discovered their unique edge to the top degree in terms of like what they're here to do to support the planet, What really makes it? If anything, it's made me understand that being human is so much more complex than what we think it is. Because I have brilliant engineers, teachers, Keith Farazi, people like Stephen Kotler, incredible left-brain people, right?
Starting point is 01:16:33 They're the ones who you read business books about. They lecture at Singularity University in Abundance 360. Amazing folks. but I also meet teachers who work with intuition, and they have a different type of intelligence, intuitive intelligence. They just know things. And this is incredible.
Starting point is 01:16:51 They just know things. And then I meet people who are relational. And they feel things in a different way. They are so acute at looking at you and knowing how you're doing and being able to intervene to soothe you to help you feel better. And they teach other people these skills.
Starting point is 01:17:08 And then I meet people. who are extremely aware of the body's energy. People like Jeffrey Allen. Not some of them can see energy so they know if you have an illness because they can literally see an energy pattern. But they can also, or Lee Holden, the Qigong master, work with energy
Starting point is 01:17:27 and then move that energy over your body and you feel it. And then I meet people who have body kinestatic intelligence, people like Ben Greenfield, who was one of American Fitness Trainer of the Year at one point, guys who can run extreme ultra-marathons, and their bodies are just like world-class machines. And you start to understand that being human
Starting point is 01:17:49 is so much more diverse than what we think it is. There's a few incredible books around multiple intelligences and frames of mind, I believe, by Gardner, who talks just about how we have primarily these eight different categories of kinesthetic intelligence to, musical intelligence to logical mathematical intelligence. But he misses out intuitive intelligence and energy intelligence. Intuitive intelligence is the ability to tap into source.
Starting point is 01:18:19 Energy intelligence is the ability to feel energy and work with that energy. It's what Chi Gong masters have. What would be interesting is to examine how all those forms of intelligence, for example, musical, logical, mathematical, kinesthetic, they all have intuitive aspects of them. And when you go deeper into any field, you can see how your connection to source, if you will, your intuitive capacities help amplify you, become one-of-one unique, discover that unique edge in that field. You know, I think musicians are really known for getting quiet in a space and they have these melodies. Melodic tendencies come to them or certain rhythms that end up being, you know, world hits.
Starting point is 01:19:00 You work with energy healers, body workers that have this sort of intelligence about them and how they navigate. your body or the body, the intelligence of that. Great physicists and mathematicians have gone into this space, you know, as well, like Albert Einstein and Newton and so many great thinkers of the past and have leveraged that too. So I think of that as a sort of positioning and way to amplify any of those intelligence.
Starting point is 01:19:27 Yeah, I think you're absolutely right there. I think one other thing that's important to talk about with you, because you've been a big orchestrator communities and I think in a time where there is sort of this perceived split happening of like this virtual world that we're getting more and more immersed in it it runs the tendency or the capacity for us to lose the physical connections and how important that is for not only our health but so many aspects of life and so what is the importance and power of community in your eyes I think community is what really makes us human
Starting point is 01:20:06 Human beings are like ants. We function best when we are within a group. We collaborate, we love, we connect. This is why so many studies show that loneliness is so bad and damaging for our help and our happiness. And, I mean, just to cite some of the studies, Harvard, loneliness is worse for you than smoking a pack of cigarettes a day. Another study by Gallup showed that if you work in a company and you have a best friend in that company, meaning deep human connection, your engagement at your job is up 7,000%.
Starting point is 01:20:43 And then of course, there are all of the studies on love that show when you have someone you love, life is just so much better. Your health is better. Married people live longer. Happiness levels are better. There are studies that show that people who go to church or mosque or temple. because to come together as a community just have higher levels of happiness.
Starting point is 01:21:05 And so we are built. We are built as a species to be collaborative. And what we got to pay attention to is in a world of remote work, in a world of AI, in a world of virtual reality, we cannot lose that.
Starting point is 01:21:20 We all have our unique gifts and how we want to contribute to the world. And some people have a great gift of being a bridge for other people in creating containers and spaces for people to meet who have like my similar interests and aligned values and whatnot. Yeah. Yeah. I'm curious how you see your role in the next
Starting point is 01:21:38 decade, too, in the evolution of mind value. I know you talked about the internal changes within team and everything as AI grows. But what is your unique contribution you feel in the next 10 years? Well, what I'm trying to do is based on my understanding of futurism where technologies are converging and my understanding of the human mind and society, what I'm trying to do is do my part to help human beings take the right action so that we truly build a world that's great for our help, our hearts, our emotions, primarily our children.
Starting point is 01:22:10 We're not doing that right now. And so countries need to operate in a different way. Companies need to change the way they work with employees. Governments, regional, national, they need to start thinking differently. The problem is so much of the world is trapped in all paradigms. the voting public need to be smarter at who they are voting for. I see my job as helping spread awareness of how we can make the right choices
Starting point is 01:22:38 towards building a better world. One aspect of that, because I love that beautiful, noble mission of yours. And one thing, because we're in a similar space in terms of the industry and the people that we work with and are connected to, there is this amazing thing that happens when an entrepreneur creates a platform for scaling mindfulness and understanding and insights for well-being, how that becomes a touch point for so many people to discover the tools and knowledge for their own personal path of self-actualization and healing and also beautiful
Starting point is 01:23:14 and important, where we can run the risk, I suppose, of this sort of notion of commodified spirituality where consumerism captures spirituality for for its benefit there's obviously there's a light and there's a shadow for for all of this but what are your thoughts on the potential pitfall of this commodified spirituality that can become pretty solipsistic and all about self and how do you plan to guard against that so spirituality itself as a word is really hard to define, right? People define it differently. What we want to avoid is spirituality that takes away your human ability to make your own choices, make your own decisions, and live life your way. And a lot of spirituality right now put you in boxes, follow these rules, follow this dogma,
Starting point is 01:24:16 these are the commandments, these are your people, don't betray your people, don't love other people outside that box, that's what we have to clear up. So true spirituality is one thing. It's unity. It's not unity with just people with your skin color, or unity with people who follow your rulebook, or unity with people within your border. It is unity, period. Unity with all human beings and all life. True spirituality has no borders. Ken Wilbur, the philosopher, says, that's moving from ethnocentrism to world centrism to cosmocentrism. Cosmocentrism is where we want to be. This is where we see unity with the entire world.
Starting point is 01:24:55 If you're making decisions based on concepts like country or tribe or religious groups, you're already obsolete. You're living in an outdated modality of the world. There's one thing we have to be headed for as human beings right now, and that is global unity. I don't give a fuck about any single country. The only flag I would wear on my chest is the Earth flag. And by the way, that does exist.
Starting point is 01:25:22 This is why I have multiple residencies and multiple countries. I love all of them. But I would never, ever, ever identify as a person of one single nation. Earth first, unity first. That needs to be the aim of true spirituality. Anything that tells you otherwise is limiting you.
Starting point is 01:25:42 What do you think is going to be the process of religions dismantling coming to a sort of... religions are going to merge. Merge. Yeah. That's quite an audition. In a way. It's already doing it.
Starting point is 01:25:56 You mean like dissolve? It's going to dissolve. They're going to have porous borders. Borders need to become porous. When we talk about things like tariffs, we are hardening borders. Everyone suffers. It puts us and it's us versus them mentality. It's backward thinking.
Starting point is 01:26:13 Dumb ideas. Same thing happens to religions. When we say, oh, you know, you need to me marry someone with this particular fate or our laws are better than the our laws. Look at what's happening in the Middle East right now with Israel and Palestine. I mean, that whole war,
Starting point is 01:26:33 those tens of thousands of people dead, those thousands of people kidnapped, murdered, all of that happened because people had different definitions of God. What I believe God really wants, what spirituality really wants, is for us to stop heaven. having allegiance to our spiritual books that is artificial, it's outdated,
Starting point is 01:26:55 but it's not having allegiance to Earth and the human race. That's what, centrism. We move there, we build a better world. Yeah, and it can get quite idealistic unless you understand the process of human development and the human developmental journey and also how it can be quite a messy process as a birth of a new way of being is born, you know,
Starting point is 01:27:19 just like the process. the birth of any new being is born, is quite messy. And in that transition from ethnocentrism to world centrism to cosmic centrism. The answer is very simple. Stop raising your kids with your religion. What makes you think your religion is the one? My children get to choose their own religion. The reason there is because people believe religions to be true.
Starting point is 01:27:43 That's why they, you know, their believer in that particular religion. And so I do, I do think... Religion is beautiful. Yeah. I love, there are so many practices right now from different religions which I'm mixing. I'm mixing Kabbalah with aspects from Islam, aspects from Hinduism, Christianity.
Starting point is 01:27:58 I've been indoctrinated in different religions. I'm exploring Buddhism right now. That's the way it should be. Would you want to eat one food for the rest of your life? But the biggest thing, okay, if you ask me, how do I know when I'm moving up the ladder of spirituality, you stop telling your kids that you are Muslim
Starting point is 01:28:18 or you are Jewish or you are Hindu or you are Christian. You stop that. You let your child grow up to decide for themselves. Teach them goodness, teach them humility, teach them kindness, teach them unity. But don't teach them that this book is the one and everything else is not good. I think it's St. Francis of Assisi who talks to, says that quote, paraphrasing, preach every word. you go and when necessary use words, right? Meaning make your life a living expression
Starting point is 01:28:53 of that to which you believe to be true. And if that is certain qualities and values of emanations of Christ's consciousness, of love, of unity, then by your actions, like you should be known for that. I'm curious about your own thoughts around, and this is kind of my last question and thought for you around all this is the nature of ego
Starting point is 01:29:16 and how you relate to it, and this idealized notion of egosiness, but also leveraging ego mindfully as you're building the way that you are in the world, how do you come to relate and think about ego? So ego is your mind attached to a singular identity and stubborn towards any movement that might allow expansion. So ego might say,
Starting point is 01:29:42 listen, I'm a lawyer. I've worked so hard for this. I have my law practice. and you're telling me that I should now cut down my working hours to 20 to 25 hours a week, why would I do that? Ego is this, is this, ego is bad when it causes a fear of you losing identity. But to really be an advanced human being, you've got to be fluid, you've got to be open, you've got to be willing to dump what doesn't serve you,
Starting point is 01:30:09 you've got to be willing to question yourself, identify your own brules, understand your beliefs about the world, whether these beliefs are relative, of truth or absolute truth, constantly upgrade, upgrade, upgrade, ego locks you down. And so when we talk about dismantling the ego, that's what we're really talking about. The ego isn't bad. Ego is part of your identity, but ego has to be fluid. Ego can't slam the door. Ego has to occasionally open the door for new ideas.
Starting point is 01:30:38 Yeah, just like a flexible body is less prone to injury. So our minds, as they stay flexible. are with life, what does it mean for you to know thyself? To know thyself means to fully understand what makes you you. And that means being aware of your trauma, your pain, being aware of what you experience as a child and the meanings you made about it. And by being aware of that, we give ourselves permission to grow out of it,
Starting point is 01:31:15 to expand in different ways, to know thyself is to expand thyself. This was a great combo, man. I really enjoyed it. Thank you so much, man. You got this event next week. I'm excited for you.
Starting point is 01:31:28 I think I'll come pop by. That'll be amazing. I'll love to see you there. And yeah, many more adventures to come, man. I appreciate you. Any last words you have for the audience or anything before we close up? I think we're good.
Starting point is 01:31:37 I think we're good. All right, everyone. Thanks for tuning into this episode of the Nellaself podcast. Until next time, be well.

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