Lex Fridman Podcast - #357 – Paul Conti: Narcissism, Sociopathy, Envy, and the Nature of Good and Evil
Episode Date: February 7, 2023Paul Conti is a psychiatrist. Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - NetSuite: http://netsuite.com/lex to get free product tour - Indeed: https://indeed.com/lex to get $75 credit ...- InsideTracker: https://insidetracker.com/lex to get 20% off EPISODE LINKS: Paul's Website: https://drpaulconti.com Trauma (book): https://amzn.to/40vCVJa Paul's LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/in/dr-paul-m-conti-845074216 PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lexfridman - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (06:28) - Human Mind (24:08) - Evil (30:22) - Envy (53:25) - Narcissism (1:21:59) - Pride (1:39:12) - Death (1:54:02) - Trauma (2:19:06) - Therapy (2:33:17) - Subconscious mind (2:39:13) - Conversation (2:51:59) - Emotion (3:15:11) - Advice for young people
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The following is a conversation with Paul Conti, a psychiatrist and a brilliant scholar of
human nature.
My friend Andrew Huberman told me that Paul and I absolutely must meet and talk not just
about the topic of trauma which Paul wrote an amazing book about but broadly about human
nature, about narcissism, sociopathy, psychopathy, good and evil, hate and love, happiness and
envy. As usual, Andrew was right. This
was a fascinating conversation. As the old meme goes, what does not simply doubt the advice of Andrew
Hugh Prowing? Allow me to also quickly mention that I disagree with Paul abluching this episode,
as I do another episode, even with experts. In part for fun and in part because I think
the tension of ideas and conversation
is what creates insights and wisdom.
My goal is to always empathize, understand,
and explore ideas of the person sitting across from me.
This agreement is just one of the ways
I think it's fun to do just that.
As long as I do so from a place of curiosity and compassion.
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And now, dear friends, here's Paul Conti.
Do you see psychiatry as fundamentally a study of the human mind and not just the set of tools for treating psychological maladies?
Absolutely.
I think psychiatry is our best way to understand who we are as people.
I mean, it looks at our biology.
How does our brain work?
How does it connect the parts with
one another? How does the chemistry in it work? It's the very foundational aspects of who we are,
and then it manifests as psychology. What do we think? What do we feel? What are our strivings?
What are our fears? So I think psychiatry provides tools that we can use to help each other,
but those tools come through it being a discipline of understanding. So with every patient you see, with every mind you
explore, are you picking up a deep understanding of the human mind? I think I'm
trying to, I think we should learn, should be able to take something away from
everything we do, you know, every interaction to some small degree. Every
conversation, it doesn't have to be a patient just anywhere, at Starbucks, getting a coffee,
you can learn something from that little experience.
Yeah, even if you just reinforce sort of gentle kindness and gratitude and
decent human interaction, there's a reinforcement of that that even if we don't take away memories
or lessons, so to speak, we can reinforce who we choose to be.
So I understand ourselves from those interactions, interactions, not just the general sort of philosophical human mind, but understanding our own mind and respect on how our own mind works.
Everything we understand about anyone or anything else is coming through here, right?
So, we're understanding others, we're also understanding
ourselves. It's all feeding through us.
Yeah, but it's a tricky thing to step away and look at your mind and understand that it's
just a machine. You can kind of control the way that machine processes the external environment
and the way that machine converts the things it perceives into actual emotions,
like how it interprets the things it perceives.
You just sort of step away and analyze it in that way, and then you can control it.
You can you can oil the machine, you can control how it actually interprets the perceptions,
you know, to generate positive emotions and be like a what is it like a mechanic for
the for the gears in the machine.
I mean, I think to some degree, to some degree of it, the difference, I think, at least as I
understand, I think of machines as not being inscrutable, right? That if there's enough
study, there's enough acumen applied that we can understand whatever it is we're trying to figure out, whereas
part of understanding ourselves is understanding that there are things we can't understand.
And I think that's that's indispensibly important to health and happiness and also to having
enough humility to see how people can be different from us, how we can be different from ourselves
at times.
So knowing that we don't know a lot and having some idea of what that might be, I think
is an indispensable part of the process, which I think is different from machines, I think.
Yeah, the machines, you're basically saying machines generally because they're engineered
from a design, they're usually going to be simpler.
They're for understandable.
And you're saying the complexity of the human mind is,
at least from our perspective, nearly infinite.
Is there metaphenomenal?
What sometimes gets described as sort of levels of emergence
where at increasing levels of complexity,
you have novelty evolved that you can't predict
from lower levels of complexity, you have novelty evolved that you can't predict from lower levels of complexity.
For example, atoms to molecules, it's just one example.
I think neurons to consciousness, consciousness to culture, that there are metaphenomenon
that separate from the phenomena underneath of them, and thereby add an entire aspect of novelty.
So I think we are, I mean, I really think this is true that we are all infinitely fascinating
because these levels of emergence of novelty that are inscrutable because you can't predict
from one level to the next or understand fully are what make us, and not just us, but I think sentient creatures, right?
Human beings, right?
But sentient creatures, inestimably more interesting than creatures that aren't sentient.
And I don't know, I think when we think about machine learning and artificial intelligence,
I think it's that that we're trying to create, the levels of emergence that now we don't
fully understand anymore, which I guess is both exciting and maybe scary too.
Yeah, so you start at the physics of atoms,
quantum mechanics, going to chemistry, going to biology,
from the biology of the functional phenomena, especially as manifested in the human brain, and then
multiple brains connecting together through consciousness intelligence creates civilizations.
It's pretty interesting.
Where do you think the magic is?
At which layer of the cake?
Every layer.
Because every time you emerge from one thing to another, I see it as an analog, like the
concept of the dialectic, right, where I think it was Hegel, right, who realized, hey,
when you have like thing A and thing B
and they're complicated and they come together,
you don't get a hybrid of A and B, right?
You end up getting something that's new, that's novel.
And I think that describes to some degree
that like what emergence is, except there's a whole new,
and it's a universe of novelty, right,
that comes at each layer of emergence
that allows infinite possibilities
that weren't possible before.
And I think that's why we're so complicated
that we're our functional neuroscience, right,
which I think is psychology, right?
Our ability to think about ourselves,
about others to be reflective,
is sitting on top of so many layers of emergence.
Like the idea of standing on the shoulders of giants, that we're, you know, each of us,
our consciousness is standing on the shoulder of a giant of many, many, many levels of
emergence, of novelty, so many of which we don't understand.
I mean, about subatomic particles, everything that quantum physics means, you know, when does time become important, right? As opposed to things happening outside
of time and outside of space, when do we slot into one temporal perspective and then the
complexity just I think grows and grows and grows?
Yeah, the interesting word he uses is novelty. If true, this really blows my mind. In some either shallow or deep sense,
it is true. I'm trying to figure that out. I don't know if you know something about cellular
automata. Is this very simple mathematical objects where you have rules that govern each
individual little cell and they interact locally and that you understand the very simple
operations of those individual cells, but at another layer of abstraction,
when you just kind of zoom out with blurry vision,
these meta objects start appearing that function.
You could build a tutorial machine
where you can build an arbitrary complexity
of computation on top of this kind of very simple object.
Yes.
And it's an interesting question whether that was always
there. The atoms somehow know about love, right? Like a Bacchusness, right?
About war and violence and evil and hate and all that. That's already leading in the possibility
of that, the capacity for that, it's already in the atoms. It's already in the possibility of that, the capacity for that it's already in the atoms.
It's already in the physics, it's already in them.
And all the different chemistry that builds up, and it's like even the origin of life,
still in mystery, that's known, that's in the physics.
That's known to the universe, the basic background physics in the universe.
Because if that's not the case, it's like, where does that come from?
Where's that magic?
And how many layers can the cake possible we have?
How many of us are going to keep building?
If we're constantly through this process of abstraction of adding a layer to the cake,
adding novel things, where's the ceiling?
As we expand on into the cosmos, if we successfully can do that,
are we gonna keep building like more miraculous,
complex objects, and then the brain is just like
a middle layer thing?
We tend to think of ourselves as a truly,
truly special manifestations
of what's possible in the universe,
but maybe we're just like the basic,
like tiny building block of something much, much, much bigger.
Where in the early days of being a brick and a very large building?
Sure.
But I think that's entirely possible.
I mean, I think the only emergent thing, so to speak, that we build this culture, right,
the aggregation of us. So you have individual
human minds, which are entirely unique. I mean, even the fact that time is different for you
and me, right? It may be by picoseconds, right? But we can engage because our perceptions of time
are parallel enough, they're close enough, right? That we can share a reality, right?
But we're all living in a different dimension of time, right?
I mean, we know that, right?
So we're unique in that way, and then the unique individuals that we are, just like the cells,
right, start to create not just one thing, not just a culture, but culture on top of our individuality.
There are uniqueness, our even dimensional uniqueness of time and experience and consciousness.
So we create cultures on top of us, but what could be beyond culture, right?
And what is different from us, either on underlying levels, like quantum physics or chemistry
or biology,
or entirely different and unconceived, I think,
is it's an immense question,
and I think it's one that should create humility in us,
that look, look how much we don't know,
and then how reckless we are with ourselves,
with our resources, with human life.
And I think there, it's important to say,
think about how entropy rules the universe around us.
How over-selected are we?
How many, not just hundreds or thousands of times,
but how many millions of times does there have to be
a selection branch point before we get
into a sort of eddy pull of counter entropy, right?
Where you can begin to create, which I think is why, so okay, the atoms know about love,
right? The fact that anything is being created, right?
Means there's this over selection for counter entropy where there can be a building of greater
complexity, of ultimately of novelty. And we don't often think about that,
of how far removed we are, maybe light years, so to speak, from any other location,
temporarily, physically in the universe where this could happen. And we don't think about,
what does that mean? Everything they just said, love, everything, is a counter entropy,
goes against the way the basic physics of the universe.
So maybe actually the atoms really don't like what we're doing.
They want us to stop.
They've been trying really hard to stop.
And despite that, we somehow started this whole bacteria thing
for like a billion years and not we're here.
I actually think of it kind of the other way.
I don't think there's any purpose to purposelessness, right?
So why would anything be here
if the drive weren't towards creativity,
if drive weren't towards those subatomic particles,
not being nothingness that blips in and out
of existence, like we think is going on an empty space, you know, for light years upon light
years, right?
But is there a design, either natural or intentional, for a schema, right, a scenario that allows
for the incredibly rare, but not non-existent, Eddie pull-of-counter entropy where good can happen, right?
Where creativity can happen, where ultimately something can grow,
something novel can happen.
There's no novelty in the vastness of space,
even though there's not nothing there.
There's novelty here because I think the layers of emergence
start stacking very, very, very high when we're
in a place of counter entropy, which then could provide even thoughts about good and evil,
the idea that creating, that preserving is good.
It's what we build upon.
It's how we get to the Eddy pull of counter entropy.
Then destruction is not good.
What good comes of aggression and destruction,
unless we're protecting, we can think of outlying cases,
but just think in general concepts.
Destruction destroys.
It brings us towards a state of entropy,
towards a state of nothingness,
whereas goodness, commonality, collaboration, right?
Nurturing, right?
Brings novelty.
It brings new existence into the universe.
And I think we don't think about that.
The way that we're in the middle of something so vast and built on top of so many layers.
And I think it leads us to be cavalier, you know, with human life, including often our
own. So you think there's
an underlying creative force to the universe that might even have a kind of built in morality
to it, where creating is better than destroying. And then that somehow maps on onto our society,
what we kind of try to figure out what that actually means
in terms of good and evil.
So that's something is there like that.
But it's like, but it has to be,
it's like so nice, it's so perfect,
because it's rare.
It's sufficiently rare what we have our own space.
Like you can close the door and like,
I need to be alone right now
as human civilization to work on my thing.
So sufficiently rare that there's not other alien civilizations, they're just like constantly
knocking on our door, destroying us, but it still exists.
That's weird.
Right.
Right.
It's so fantastically improbable that I think we should be very respectful of it.
And I think you said there's a creative force that values creativity.
Yes.
Then we will show it. It's a creative force.
It's a ability to exist and to create
comes from something other than entropy, something other than so much dispersion that there's
nothingness. So the creative force will value the sanctity of things, keeping things together, not destroying things, building
novelty, including novelty of knowledge, novelty of sentience.
It fits with the idea that we're not nothing, that that's incredibly improbable, and that
there are these many, many layers of emergence that we're standing upon.
I think it tells us something that we're not doing
ourselves a service to ignore. It's not just a jump to saying, oh there's a
religious answer to everything. It's just no, it's saying science isn't a god
either. So if we think of science as a tool and not as an endpoint in and of
itself, what is the science telling us? Like I remember showing up at medical
school and it really is true.
I knew so little about the human body.
I'd only been in hospitals to visit people.
I'd taken pre-med classes, but sort of intensely at once after I didn't take any, and I was
working in business.
I knew next to nothing, and I had this idea that was so naive in retrospect that I was going
to learn so much, right?
I was going to answer these questions because I was going,
what's going on in the body?
What are these organs doing?
What are these cells?
And what I learned was there was so much more that was amazing
and mysterious and seemingly impossible,
like even how a cell functions.
Like what is going on inside of a cell,
the transport mechanisms and energy functions and diffusion functions, and then you can go down to smaller levels than that.
But when you come back out and you say, how all those cells make a kidney, it's not explanatory.
You know, I remember asking the OB who had delivered my first child, right?
I was so amazed and I asked him, like, what do you think?
Like, what do you know?
You do this, right?
You're seeing this life created.
And, you know, and his thought was,
nothing, where I just marvel.
I mean, I get to do this, but I just marvel at it.
And I think the more we know about us,
the more we respectfully marvel.
And we should do that.
We should proactively marvel at every aspect, at every layer, that
were the novelty emerges. Yes, we'd be a lot less likely to say, Hey, I don't like you because
of something, whatever it is, you know, race, religion, culture, sexuality, gender, identity,
whatever it is, you know, or I want to say, I want rights that you don't have, right? Or I want
what you have, right? I mean, there's so much of this. And I understand it's driven
by scarcity and by human insecurity and envy and all of these things that I think
drive us towards destruction. But all of that recklessness comes from not having this
initial appreciation and respect that you're referring to and just marveling at like wow okay we're here
That's amazing. Let's start with that
but if we marvel at this whole thing
The human project the human condition that all the different kinds of human beings that are possible
What do you then make of that some humans?
Do evil onto the world
First of all are all human beings capable of evil?
If we're in the process, now we've got a little bit of momentum in terms of marveling,
the layers of the cake.
Should we also marvel at the capacity for evil in all of us?
Yes.
Is that capacity there?
I believe it is.
Yes.
So what do we understand about the psychology of evil?
Where does it originate in the human mind?
Is it there in the neurobiology?
Is it there in the environment?
Any outing?
Can I clarify first?
I think the capacity for evil, I do believe,
is in all of us.
There's a difference between enacting evil
and a sort of preset, followed, developed plan of evil.
I don't believe that all of us are capable of doing what the people who perpetrate the most evil do, right?
But I do believe that we're capable of perpetrating evil, right? And the thought, one thought, would be that there are
drives in us. I mean, there certainly seem to be drives in us towards survival, towards gratification in some ways, towards pleasure.
And that can get very complicated
because pleasure inside can be relief of distress.
So if I feel very badly about myself
and I can feel a little better about myself
by making you feel worse about yourself, right?
Which that plays out in a lot of human beings,
it is that an indirect way of bringing pleasure, right?
So it gets very complicated what's going on inside of us and sometimes the perpetration
of evil things can be through misunderstandings, anger, impulsivity.
I mean, there are things that we can have in us and other times there can be other things
going on which are through the lens of unhealthy human
psychology. So for example, the psychology of envy, which I think drives the lion's share of
the orchestrated evil, right? There's a difference between impulsive, reflexive, evil and highly
orchestrated evil, which I think is driven by envy.
Highly orchestrated evil,
are we talking about as scale societies,
like totalitarianism,
so if we're thinking about somebody like Hitler,
so as scale orchestration of evil, envy driving that.
So, I mean, that's really interesting to think about,
I'd love to hear more about it.
So some of it, there might be some psychological forces that are in tension with each other.
So one is, if you look at something like Hitler, it's difficult to know what was going on
in his mind, but it's possible to imagine if you just look at dictators thought history, that he thought
he was doing good, not just for himself, but for the people he believed have value.
So one way you can achieve what we consider as evil is by devaluing some group of people.
And that could be all group of people.
So it could have sort of a narcissistic
type of idea that you basically don't care about other human beings. That's one. Envy is different.
I mean, maybe they can collaborate together or even like you mentioned, you can actually enjoy
doing bad to others. That's almost like different because if all it is is like narcissism, you disregard
you don't care what how others feel, then you can just have make cold calculated military,
almost economic decisions and you don't care if a million people die here or there.
But if you actually enjoy some aspect of that, or there is like a resentment that fuels it. It's not just
cold calculation. It's like fueled by some kind of personal or cultural resentment.
It's all fueled by that. You think so? I think it's all fueled by that. I think the idea that
say Hitler thought he was doing good, right, is like that is such a thin facade that it flies away like a
handkerchief in a hurricane, right?
Okay, yeah, that's wow, and that's beautiful.
Yeah.
It's built upon, like, it says, I'll explain logical lies, right?
Because people can build lies upon species logic, right?
So the idea that, okay, I am doing good because I believe that this ethnicity of people is good and this is bad.
And now I'm going to do this and I'm going to make the world different and it's going to bring better to the world.
And now I'm raising armies and I'm building concentration camps.
And I think like this is all in the service of good is I don't I don't think anyone ever thinks that right or they they think that
But with because they're living in the surface patina, right?
Like they they're not allowing the hurricane in that blows away the hankerchief and says like this is all this is all
This is all evil, right? I mean who how do you decide that?
Some group of people is good and some is bad and like what what is it that you take upon yourself to
to some group of people is good and some is bad. And like, what is it that you take upon yourself to play God or make decisions about the world?
And I think what really is going on
is people are not doing that, right?
There's something cobbled together to say,
like, why this is right and this is okay, right?
And this is even good, right?
But it is all a lie, right?
It's a lie that's adorning that what I believe is the fact I believe that
what's going on is the gratification of envy inside of the person. And whether someone
says, oh, I think this is good and it's okay if a million people die, or I'm going to
enjoy that a million people die, I think is the same. I think the enjoyment, the gratification
of the orchestrated evil is there, and that it all comes from vulnerability
and insecurity. It all comes from deficits in the sense of self. I'm going to have the process that
my my my my slow penny and PC is processing that. So, and we underlies all of it. The psychological concept of envy. What is that?
I keep putting myself in the mind of Hitler, I guess. That has nothing to do. It doesn't have to do
with Jews or Slavic people. Does it have to do with specific amorphous other in his mind, he's enviated self. I think it has all to do with him, all to do with him.
There's not a love of the people with whom he allied, or even a sense of the people who
he persecuted were worse than him.
It's all projections out of what was going on inside of him, which was an intense sense
of inadequacy, a rage at being someone he perceived as lesser than. That's a difference
between so we can define words in different ways even within psychology but let's say
we take the definition here of jealousy as being sort of benign, right? The idea that
oh I might see something that you have that I don't and I might think I like that maybe
I'll work harder to get it, right? Or maybe I can't get it, maybe it's that you're younger than I am.
They say, okay, you know, okay, you have that and I don't.
I mean, I have other things too, I'm okay anyway.
But I might want those things, but it's very benign, the jealousy.
I'd like to be younger, I'd like to be richer,
whatever it is that we people think, right?
But it's just a thought, and it's a thought
that can result in strivings or acceptance, right? It's very very different. It's completely different than envy, which is destructive.
It's a thought of I see something that you have that I don't have, right?
And instead of me working for it or accepting that I don't have it, what I like to do then is bring you down,
take you down to where I am, and then I'll feel better, right?
Because from the perspective of envy,
it is all relative.
So it's jealousy, it's a part,
because he said completely different,
but it's jealousy, potentially like a gateway drug to envy.
Like does it, does it, like, is it a slippery slope?
I think no, I think that jealousy
is a natural, just part of the human phenomenon that we go through life. And when you see like, oh, I'd like to have that. I think it's I think that jealousy is a natural, just part of the human phenomenon
that we go through life. And we see like, oh, I'd like to have that. I think it's, it's
probably part of our incentives, right? If, you know, if I'm farming and I have one
row of crops and I look over and I see that you're working harder and you have two, and
I'd like to have two, that can make me work harder to have two.
You don't think it's a slippery slope from one to the other to at first, you're like,
I'd like to work harder, but then you keep failing and the weather sucks and you keep failing and the other person becomes more successful
Plus he's got a new hot wife now. There's a nice tractor
There's a field is all working and then you get this idea that you know what I'm gonna steal all this stuff
I got to murder him and that you know, there's anything that's just like a leap
No, I actually think no no no because they leap of the same phenomenon? No, no, because
they think there are things that are in us as humans, right? So, so the things are just by being
human, like we can, for example, feel, we can feel compassion, right? We can feel interest, right?
We can feel jealousy in that benign sense. Like, it's all part of just being human. If we,
if we start going from, hey, you have more crops than I have.
And United seems like actually have a better life in a lot of ways than I have.
I'm going to kill you.
That's not a progression of something benign, right?
That is...
But wait a minute, but that is a human leap of the same thing, isn't it?
Because you're drawing a line, stuff you're saying this is the human stuff is regular life is benign
but it feels like this benign thing is just a low magnitude thing version of the thing that's not benign
like there's this probably a gray area where it's stopped being but like jealousy you can have like healthy
jealousy you can have a little bit slightly unhealthy is It's, I think, jealous guy, this John Lennon song that I love is just beautiful. I mean, there's like, this jealousy inside relationships
can make you feel like, you know, take your minds in all kinds of silly directions. And
it's crazy. But I get feels like that's an extra neighbor to like being really crazy
in toxic and all that kind of stuff inside relationships. And then that feels like an extornable, it's like an apartment building.
That feels like an extornable, that eventually gets the Hitler with envy and resentment
of entire population of people.
You're right, and that there's a causal, there can be a causal chain.
Like if I'm not feeling jealous, maybe I won't ever feel envious.
So you can see, okay, so it can kind of
lead to, it can open gates to, huh, like how much do I dislike that you have things that
I don't have, right? So yes, in that sense, but, and I think this is the part that I think
is so important, that I think there is a disjunction, right? There's an asymptotic shift, right?
From one thing to another, because I just speak in my language mathematically.
Yeah, orthotically, yep. Yes, that's the way to convey, right, something that's entirely right from one thing to another because I just think in my language mathematically. Yeah.
Toticly.
Yep.
Yes.
That's the way to convey something that's entirely different because if I start thinking,
you know, I'm not going to try and make things better.
Right.
I'd like instead to harm you.
That's that's qualitatively different.
Oh, it's almost like, you know what it is?
It could be, I don't know what you think about this, but it's in which direction your motivation is pointing.
So if in the response to the feeling of jealousy,
your sort of the motivation says, okay,
I understand this feeling, I wanna do less of it.
I think there must be a threshold
to which you actually wanna do more of it. Like it becomes a vicious a threshold to which you actually want to do more, like it
becomes a vicious downward cycle. So that's what envy becomes. Like the first feeling,
this idea that I'm going to kill the farmer, turns into like more and more and more and
you can't sleep and you have visualized in the farm and it becomes the devil and like
you have this very, you know, it's basically a thing that builds into the negative direction versus
returns to the stable center. Now, a person is cultivating evil. They're saying,
hey, there can be seeds of evil in all of us. Let me take that seed out, dust it off, plant it,
nurture it, and then grow that seed of evil, which will affect all other parts of the person's life.
They won't behave the same towards others in their life.
They'll become different as they nurture fantasies of evil,
as they begin to create with inside of themselves,
the motivation and the will to enact evil.
The Hitler analogy would say,
look, you take someone who had a bad childhood,
who was not loved, who was taught and told that he was less than.
Okay, like that, we know that happens.
I mean, that's why a child abuse is so evil, right?
It's telling children the worst possible wrong lessons, right?
They're not good enough.
They'll always be hurt.
You know, they can't keep themselves safe.
They don't deserve safety, right?
So then you take someone
who then nurtures that seed of evil, which is a choice. That's why I can't paint well enough.
No one appreciates me. I don't like how I look. I don't fit in with the people I want to fit in
with and on and on and on and on and on. There's a hatred of self through that lens of misery, of just being repulsed by the
self, but that's unacceptable to the self. So it has to be someone else's fault.
Right? So my fault, whose fault is it? Right? And then you see on mass, the
an action of evil towards groups of people who who somehow in this
person's mind are responsible for his misery.
And there's the justification of evil and then all the, you know, whether it's, this will
be better for the economy, this will be good, this will be that.
That's all lies built to justify the evil.
Those are surface loving narratives.
Yes.
And the envy is the deep-dom mechanism that enables.
And that's the end point that's being served.
What's being served is destruction, right?
Which is why it always brings more destruction, right?
How many times do wars that were started for purposes that we would look and say, like
those were evil purposes?
Like how many times does good come of that?
Even we look at the modern world, what comes of it is more evil is more destruction.
And Hitler's outward destruction eventually came inward
and you see pictures of what Berlin looked like
after the Second World War, right?
It wasn't just destruction perpetrated outward
as awful as that is, it's catchy, right?
Like people used to worry before the time of the Manhattan Project, right?
If you start this chain reaction,
you know, we, you blow the whole world up, right?
Or will it stop within this bomb or not?
And we see, okay, the chain reaction of evil
hasn't yet blown the whole world up,
but look at the, look at how the catastrophe spreads.
You think 50 to 60 million people dead
in the second world war, which
truly was a world war, what destruction was spread around the globe? And this is something
that can't be stopped once the chain reaction starts. Like if Hitler was successful, like
it would just keep going. If he had been, and his personal psychological level, I mean,
right? Because we think from the perspective of destruction,
success would have led to the need to conquer more
than there's factions and infighting,
and eventually you get the same mass destruction, right?
And never does the inaction of evil satisfy
what the person is initially seeking.
People want to feel better about themselves, right?
We, like Winnecard, who was a British pediatrician
who wrote about children and adults
from very deep perspectives,
he wrote about the idea of good enough, right?
And then you can extrapolate that to like,
we all want to feel good enough,
like not just limp over the line good enough,
but I want to feel good enough that I'm a decent person
in the world and like what I do matters
and I can have an impact on people and you know people can like me and care about me
it's there's a simplicity there that people want that when people don't have and there's certain
other factors maybe their temperamental factors or historical factors can lead to trying to
soothe that deficit right through envy and And I think it starts with that.
And it often starts in childhood, not always,
but it often starts in childhood
when the child's brain and psychology are so vulnerable.
And you see salient child abuse,
if you look at what was Hitler's background
and what was Stalin's background,
then you could look at almost anyone who's perpetrated evil
or their serial killers or whatever it may be.
The majority, not everyone,
but the majority had these lessons in childhood
that said, you're not good enough,
you can't keep yourself safe, no one cares about you.
And in a subset of people,
that's gonna generate envy,
and that seat of evil then gets planted and nurtured.
It's a fighter jet.
The sound of a fighter jet above us.
I think it might work as well.
If you get, you quickly forget the comfort of being in a peaceful place. That's one thing I saw in Ukraine.
It's, is, hey, you quickly get comfortable here.
The whole trip back, I was thinking, it's so damn good to be in America.
Just a whole, like, like a three-day trip back.
It's so good to be American.
We might take that for granted.
It's a population, but I do agree.
So the destruction never alleviates the envy.
Are all humans capable of envy?
I believe the answer is yes.
Do we all have the possibility of evil in us?
I think the answer to that is yes.
But we have free will. We have choice. We
can choose what we do with that, which is why, just because someone is a sociopath, for
example, doesn't mean that they're not responsible. Our medical legal jurisprudence has absolutely
borne that out, that legally, medically, we think,
okay, we're responsible, presuming we're healthy, we're not unhealthy in other ways that
eliminates our ability to be circumspect, but that we're responsible for what we do and
don't nurture inside of us. I mean, there are plenty of things we could decide to nurture
anger and hatred about. You know, I could think of slights, difficulties, whether it's something someone else has done
to me, or I could blame fate, or I could be mad at God, or the world.
We can all make those choices, and we're responsible for them, or for recognizing things in us,
and I said, oh, I, you know, I too have that in me, but I don't want to nurture that.
I don't want to foster that, or don't want to foster that or do I choose to nurture and foster that.
I think ultimately, you know, a subject of Hitler as evil, if Hitler had kept winning and winning,
I think ultimately he would have been the only person on earth.
I really do believe it. Ultimately, everyone, everything else would be killed because it's such destruction, destroy everything, right? And probably when that didn't work, then there's the destruction of the self, right? Because nothing
suits
envy that is stoked by the sort of flames of evil and
What you see is more and more anger and more and more frustration, which is why I really do believe someone
Like that who nurtured evil in themselves that way ultimately
would destroy.
There'd be like him and one other person and then he'd kill the other person.
I think that's really, powerfully said.
But even just to return to the jealousy versus envy, I still think that it's the same flame.
And these just the bigger version of it. So I think I just in my own personal life,
I've felt jealousy towards others, like he said, like, oh, this person has a, I don't know,
cooler thing, trinket, whatever trinket I cared about. And I early on like in my teens, I realized that just
empirically speaking, that jealousy over a period of a week just doesn't feel good. And it's not
productive. It doesn't help me build a better trinket. Or it does, if I turn it into jealousy
towards another person,
but into a love for building a better trinket.
It's like, oh, cool.
Almost, you know what?
Like, proactively speaking.
And later in life, like, people like Joe Rogan
actually have been really powerful in this, for me,
just as a fan of his
To celebrate other people so it's almost as opposed to ignoring that other person with a cool trinket It's like celebrating their awesomeness in my mind
Yeah, I just saying how awesome the humans are able to do that and actually just how awesome is that
Exact person at being able to do that
Yeah, and that somehow made me more capable
to build my own drinker better.
And it feels good also.
It makes me feel happy.
And now you're not jealous anymore.
You're not jealous anymore.
Right?
So that's why I think jealousy is different, right?
Because you're saying, there's a week of jealousy.
Like, I don't like this, right?
I don't like.
But if you take that in a way that says,
well, actually, this is awesome.
This is fabulous.
And this person did this.
That person's awesome, right?
Then, then, you're not raining on anyone's parade, right?
And in not doing that, even inside your own mind,
you gain a greater cognizance of your own capability, right?
Well, if he can do that or she can do that,
why can't I, too?
Like, I want to make the better drink it too, right?
Now you're thinking creatively, nowhere in there, nowhere in there was the emergence
of evil.
I just disagree with that.
I think there was a choice made where I looked at my, if my life was darker, more difficult.
I think it has nothing to do with the actual little flame of jealousy I felt.
I think it has to do a lot more with the other context.
If my life were more difficult,
there was more abuse, there was more challenges,
I think that decision, I could have made
that decision in a different direction.
Yes.
Maybe, I don't know, yeah,
you've written brilliantly about trauma.
If there's a bit more trauma as the background noise of my decision making, I'll flame, that flame has the capacity to engulf
the whole world. I guess the initial flame of jealousy, the little bit, like especially
the younger you are, it's almost like a habit that you get to build in either direction,
because I've early on built a habit of saying, I'm going to channel that jealousy
into productivity and into celebrating other people
and that jealousy disappears.
That was like a little discovery for me.
I discovered that.
I get that doesn't come, nobody tells that to you.
You kind of discovered that little thing.
I could have easily not discovered it.
I could have easily discovered that it kind of feels good
to like mess with that other person, I could have easily discovered that it kind of feels good to,
like, mess with that other person,
to, like, think shitty thoughts,
think negative thoughts, do negative things
to that other person, because that could also,
I just think the capacity in that initial feeling is there,
and I think it's a decision with me,
because, like, otherwise, I think it dissolves
as responsibility, like, well, surely I'm not Hitler, will make because like otherwise I think it dissolves as
responsibility like well surely I'm not Hitler. Therefore
this jealousy is normal. No, I just feel like every
jealous is the capacity to turn into maybe not Hitler, but
a toxicity that destroys it in a small way in your own
little private life, but it could destroy. I agree that
jealousy brings us can bring us dangerously
close to envy. I mean, maybe, maybe, let's see if, if, if, if, if, if he was sick, we could
agree on, right? Let's see. So, let's say, okay, if we look at the terrain of the mind
as geography, right? So if I'm feeling happy, satisfied, probably, I'm pretty far from from envy land, right?
But if I'm feeling jealousy now, I'm coming kind of closer to that border, right?
And I still, I think there's, it's a big thing to go over the border, right?
That the border isn't a gray area, right?
There's a border to go over.
And I think that you're, I agree completely
once certainly about trauma that the more trauma there is because then the more misunderstandings
there are about self and feelings that I'm not good enough and then that can be anger
about why and who might be oppressing me and, you know, I mean, I hate myself and everyone
else who seems to be better, like so trauma can drive us in these negative directions,
but we're still crossing over something.
So if you have the trinket and I think,
that's awesome, I want that, I want to work harder.
You know what I could do though,
is I could sneak in tonight when no one's around
and I could move something.
No, no way, I don't want to do that.
But it's like I came over the border a little bit
and I thought maybe that's a better way,
but then I came back.
And we're responsible for that. Because it is a choice to say, I don't want to work hard,
I'm already working how hard, I don't want to make my drink better, I want to think
mine's the best one, I could destroy yours.
Then we're letting our mind go over that border and do we say, run that forward, let's run
that forward and put people around us who feel the same way and start doing it so we think
less of ourselves and we debase ourselves.
Do we run headlong in or do we come over that boundary?
And that's maybe the capacity for evil in us that we come over that boundary, all of
us, right at times.
But do we come over it and then say, no, that's not my choice.
That's not my self definition.
Yeah.
I'm coming back.
But I'm trying to justify maybe there's certain other sociological forces that help us cross the border too. So in Nazi Germany, we've
been talking about Hitler, but then there's also the the German people. And so maybe when
there's a bit of a mass hysteria, so all these effects of like combination of propaganda
with the small jealousies and resentments of the people that
don't cross the border together they can with great charismatic leaders that sort of
really fuel that fire that we feel when we're part of the crowd.
So maybe those individual kind of psychological barriers we have to take that lead from jealousy
to envy those can be made easier.
The lead can be catalyzed through this massive...
100%, 100%, I think that to me is a massive point,
we're talking about layers of emergence, right?
So if there's individual consciousness,
then there's culture, right?
And we're products of the soup we swim in,
so to speak, people would say that
when I was growing up, right?
We're products of the soup we swim in.
So if the soup that we're swimming in is the soup of hatred, right? Then it's
going to foster all of those things. So then you think about just in a painting with
a very broad brush, the culture created in Germany prior to the Second World War, and
like what was the impact of the reparations after the First World War, right? Of the
punishing reparations and povrishment and, you know,
and basically humiliation, right?
That people were feeling, okay, like that's,
there were a whole bunch of decisions
that impacted that cultural perspective, right?
Then there must have been aspects just like,
I see in many ways parallels in America now
of what are our standards for what we're communicating
to others, right?
How is the media deciding like, what's real and what's not real for what we're communicating to others, right? How is the media deciding like what's real
and what's not real, what's true,
what's not true, what's hatred that is only gonna do
evil versus what's hatred that's okay
because I might sell something by putting it out there.
I mean, that was, we know that was going on
in Germany during the rise of the Nazis
and I think there's a parallel to, you know,
do we value truth?
Do can we stand together and say no matter how much I might
disagree with you politically, right?
We can still understand like that there's right
and there's wrong, right?
There's truth and there's lies, right?
So I think those are just two examples
of determinants of culture.
And then the culture is a determinant of, you know,
is someone like, marginalize, is like,
that's a crazy evil person.
Oh my goodness, like, whoa.
Right, or is that someone who gains a greater following
and more adherence, and then there starts to be a momentum
because why?
Because what the demagogues do.
I think they have a giant lasso and they harness
the envy of
thousands upon thousands upon thousands of people. That's right. You feel worse about yourself too. Doesn't matter what the reasons are. Maybe it's your childhood. Maybe it's not. Maybe it's job
failings. Maybe it's professional. Maybe it's personal. Doesn't matter. Like you have envy too.
Let's put it together and do some destruction because that'll make us feel better, which is a lie.
and do some destruction, because that'll make us feel better, which is a lie.
So we've talked about envy, where does, from the leader perspective,
things like narcissism or sociopathy, psychopathy come into play? What can you make of
the world we live in, maybe the leaders that run the world from the perspective, from the lens of narcissism. So I am struck 20 years of doing what I do now. I've been a psychiatrist for 20 years and I practice in so many different settings and
I consult in different settings.
I've been fortunate to have a very wide purview of what's going on in people and in the world
around us.
And I am struck with amazement of all the things I see that are say abnormal,
let's say, from the mental health perspective, this could be depression, panic attacks,
hearing voices, addiction, but there's so many things, we'll cover everything,
that narcissism is not frequent compared to a lot of other things.
So it's small in terms of narcissistic diagnosis, right?
It's much less than many other things,
but it causes the lion's share.
I don't just mean the most compared to anything else,
but I think more than 50%,
the majority of bad things, evil things,
destructive things that I see in the world around us
I think narcissists are wildly destructive because they are driven completely they are lodged completely in the lane of
envy
Can you try to sneak up and we don't want to be lost in definitions, but can you try to sneak up to a definition
Nonclinical definition and narcissism that we're talking about? So, narcissism is a deep, pervasive, and unquestioned sense of inadequacy in the self,
that comes along with anger and fear and vulnerability, fear of destruction, fear
of annihilation, that is compensated for by aggression, by the mechanics of envy, by trying
to make the Self seem better at the expense of others, by taking from others, by being completely cavalier
to the thoughts and feelings of others.
Narcissism is not arrogance.
Narcism is the opposite of arrogance.
There is such a deep sense of inadequacy and incompetence in the self that the defensive
structure around that becomes dominated by like rocket fueled envy.
So the machinery of narcissism is envy, but what do you make of the kind of more popularly
discussed kind of symptom of narcissism, which is a seeming not caring about other people?
which is a seeming, not caring about other people.
Sort of a very inward facing focus in terms of the calculation you make
when making decisions about the world.
Narcissistic people definitely care about other people.
It's people who are schizoid, right?
You say that don't necessarily register other people, right?
But narcissism, people care about other people,
but it's entirely vis-à-vis the same, the self, right?
If I'm schizoid, I don't really notice
or care much who you are, right?
But if I'm narcissistic, I absolutely care,
because I'm watching every last detail of you,
what might you have that's better than me, right?
It's an incredibly intense focus upon individuals and demographics of people, but the
priority, the goal is entirely about the self, which is why they can become easy to say,
I don't care if a million people die.
That's how different is that from going out and destroying one person or a million people.
It's in the same category of those people only,
because their existence is only meaningful
in how it relates to me.
But it's still meaningful.
It just seems like a very difficult leap to take
that I don't care that a million people die.
That seems to be, even with envy,
that seems to be even with envy,
that seems to be a big feeling and thought to have
if you at all care about them. Are other people, I guess,
tools for alleviation of your sense of inadequacy?
Right, I mean, I don't care about in that,
like, being caring at all.
I mean, caring about in that noticing that the person exists. Right. I mean, someone who wants money
and notices that there's a hundred dollar bill out cares about that. They don't care about
the hundred dollar bill and that this doesn't mean anything to them. There's a thoughts and
feelings, but it's going to attract attention. They care about it because it's something
that they want. Right. The same way people will care about others, but only from the perspective of, do you have
things that I want, or can I feel better about myself by taking something from you, by making
things worse for you?
People often talk about narcissism as like the opposite of empathy.
But sort of empathy, again, depends how you define it, but is a careful consideration of the mental space of another person, of how the other person sees the world.
And so you're kind of saying that narcissistic people would also be very good at that, in order to understand how maybe the other person can be manipulated or something to alleviate
your sense of inadequacy. Right, so there's a difference between the mechanics of empties. Let's
say again, we can define things different ways. Let's say empathic attunement is the ability to be
attuned and to think, okay, what's going on in you? What might you be thinking? What might you be
feeling? There's some people have a lot of empathic attunement, but that's, we could look at that as mechanistic, right?
It doesn't, it doesn't equate to care, right?
And empathic attunement can come along with empathy or not, right?
So yes, people who are narcissistic,
they can mentalize well.
So you mentalize meaning the ability to understand
or to consider thoughts, feelings, motivations, and other people, right?
So people who are narcissistic can have empathic attunement or mentalization depending upon how we want to describe those things,
but that has nothing to do with care, with actual empathy or kindness or consideration. So in that sense, empathy usually popularly used means that you care like your happiness is aligned.
There's this, I need to read this book. I've read so little science fiction.
There's been one of my goals for this year to catch up on some science fiction.
So Robert Highland from Stranger and a Strange Land has this quote about love,
which is love is that condition where another person's happiness is
Is essential to your own so that's a good definition. I guess of empathy where yeah, you're very sensitive
so mechanistically very sensitive to the state of another person's mind and
Your goal is to maximize their happiness. It's like essential to your own happiness
So the happiness is our aligned.
And when that's like elevated to its highest forms, you can call that love, romantic love,
friendship, and so on.
Okay.
Because one more thing about the narcissist is some people can be sort of benign narcissists
where they want great things for themselves, right?
But if they have enough great things, they can sort of tolerate
others being happy too. And these are people who sometimes are actually quite highly liked, right?
Because they have to have the most money, the most power, the most of anything, anything more than
anyone else could challenge. But as long as I have that, it's okay that you have some too, right?
And then that can make you happy and can make you like me, right? So, so benign narcissists can be can be well liked from that perspective, but it's still all about them,
and that can change, if for example, there's a scarcity of resources now, right? But, but they're
generally they're not people who are being overtly destructive, although that they're over the border
into the, you know, into the envy territory, right?
Millignant narcissists are very different where they then want to have everything.
So even if I have a thousand times more than you, do I still envy you what you have?
Because I don't think I can feel good enough about myself unless I have everything.
And once I have everything, I won't feel good enough about myself either, and I don't have
to have more, right?
It's like, that's malignant narcissism,
which we think of as sociopathy, right?
Is we can define these words in different ways,
but they're very, very negative concepts.
So that's profound sociopathy, malignant narcissism,
envy writ large.
So sociopathy is malignant narcissism.
That's a convenient way to think about it.
Because we can do sort of sociopathic things that but not be sociopathic, like, well,
we don't tell a white lie, it's like sort of sociopathy on steroids, right? Is then,
you know, envy writ large is malignant narcissism.
Well, just to give you saying, like, oh, there's empathic atonement, as you said.
So there's the mechanistic aspect of empathy and sociopathy.
And then there's the big label you get attached if you're just doing that thing regularly, I guess.
Living your life through that lens, right? Yeah. And is there a nice spectrum that's like
narcissism, sociopathy and psychopathy? Is it all the same kind of nice stroll through the woods
to off the cliff or not?
Not really, because the words don't have clear definitions,
like psychopathy and sociopathy.
There's no real definition of psychopath or psychopathy.
Does that mean someone's sociopathic but psychotic?
There's really not, we end up using those words colloquially,
which is why concepts that we can define,
like you like envy and pathic attunement, narcissism,
even though there might be nuances and definitions,
like we can define them in ways
that they're widely accepted,
including within psychology and psychiatry.
So it's nice to just think about this,
or brought on, brother of narcissism,
and the levels to which it's benign, or malignant,
and then also separating into the different mechanisms,
like interaction by interaction,
sometimes can be narcissistic,
but broadly speaking,
do you do everything through the lens of malignant narcissism?
That makes you a sociopath or a malignant narcissist.
Yes, and the thing I would add to that is the thought about culture.
Like, how does the culture is we're in? Whether it's the culture of a household,
right? The culture of a community, the culture of a nation, or the world. How does that impact?
What unfolds in that person? And then how does what unfolds in that person impact that culture?
Well, that's the question is what unfolds in that person? How does culture affect it, but how does your own psychological development unfold that?
Because narcissism in leaders is the most impactful thing, right?
Who are the most impactful individuals?
What is the most impact of individual psychology we have?
It's usually leaders of countries or leaders of major organizations and so on.
And one of the things you mentioned
with benign narcissism, that seems to be aligned with success, right? If you care about your own success
that's going to be, you're more likely to be, have narcissistic tendencies, I suppose.
And so my question is, when you follow that threat of narcissism to become the leader of a country,
now you have a lot of new interesting psychological complexities to deal with, like power.
I don't appreciate that power corrupts. Does that is possible for power to corp the human mind to where it pushes you farther and farther
into
Malignant narcissism into this destructive envy?
What are your thoughts on power like the effect of power in the human mind? Yeah, power is
So in accentuator right in intensifier, right? So I think it is true that there are people who can be, so in a gray area where there
are malignant narcissistic tendencies and behaviors, but there are also ways in which that person
can think outside of themselves and think in a broader way and think sort of kindly about
others.
And they're sort of trying to navigate,
whether they're aware or not,
that they're trying to navigate between one and the other.
And then the allure of power is well,
just look just exercise that power and you'll feel better,
right, you're gonna, it'll show you, right,
that you're good enough.
Look at the power you have.
And whatever may be going on in the person's mind,
that then power, yes, can corrupt, yes.
And I think that's why we have to have checks and balances, right?
Because we don't, you know, we are all inscrutable to ourselves,
let alone to others.
So we must have checks and balances,
and we should always have them on ourselves, as well as on others.
We should want that for the health of ourselves in the world around us.
So I think all of that is true,
but there are also people who don't necessarily become corrupted
by power. There can be an understanding and a grounding that there is a steward of power.
A shepherd, I mean, the ways people describe utilizing power and utilizing it in a benign way,
in a benign way, that then fosters the healthy aspects of self. Right? So like,
that gratitude and humility, right? If we could add a healthy dose of gratitude and humility
to everyone or to our society, there would be a sea change. Right? But how do you, how do you feel
gratitude? How do you feel humility? Those things are incompatible with narcissism envy, right?
With the really the bad pole of things
that we're talking about.
And part of the reason I'm so focused in my work
and really what runs through all of my thoughts about life
is that the impact of trauma, because trauma creates
these false lessons and it walls us off from truth.
And it starts to point towards the unhealthy ways
of trying to feel better about ourselves.
But we have the health in us too.
We have those seeds of health too that can grow into being a steward of power and sharing
power, being considerate and kind.
And we see a lot of that in the world too.
It's not all just the evil.
We see plenty of people who do good and who are
generous of spirit. And, you know, we have both in us, and it is, I think your term in our
culture and what the seeds that we sow and the climate that we set, including putting governors
and boundaries around like, how do we, how do we rein in or say that the more aggressive, the more
envious or destructive is unacceptable, right? How do we foster the part that's kind and considerate and reflective and slow to judge?
I'm like, hey, let's learn a little bit more.
How do we foster that?
And I think a lot of that comes back to early childhood education.
I mean, I think we don't do nearly enough to protect children.
And as a corollary to that, we don't do nearly enough to educate children.
I mean, I said, I want to write a book.
Second book I write is going to be everything I needed
to know about life.
I learned as a second year postgraduate psychiatry
residence.
I was like, why?
Why then did I learn so much about unconscious motivation,
about the impact of trauma, about how we can be envious,
and how we can act out, even about how our emotions
trump logic in us.
Like why don't we teach these things when we're young enough
to understand, like why is that other kid bullying me?
Or why, just because I'm a little bit bigger,
do I want to go thump that other kid on the head?
Like what's going on, that we don't we don't do those things, you
know, we're just we're tripping ahead of ourselves and we don't stop and think, how we using our
resources, how are we, how are we shepherding forward the next generation, which by the way,
is a generation that's going to determine our fates too, right, as we get older. But we don't,
do that. I often think of like in the Olympics, you know, you see like the great sprinters,
right, and they've got to come out of the blocks perfectly, right? So if they come out of the blocks a little
bit too fast, they're going to fall over, right? They're going to just fall forward. And I often see
that in my head about us as, you know, as humans and as a culture that we're rushing so far forward.
We don't stop and say, wait, let's keep the basics here, the basic techniques of like, how are we
navigating forward in life?
Or do we just throw all those away because I can get some benefit by saying that you're
bad even though what's being leveled against you is wrong, right?
Like why?
Do I take that?
Or do I say no?
There's something more important here that we want to shepherd forward in ourselves as
a culture.
And I think preventing childhood trauma and changing the ways that we educate children and adults
would, again, make a sea change and maybe set us on a course towards, you know, even towards a
greater likelihood of survival as a species. Yeah, so talking to like people in elementary school
about human nature and teaching them is so how people can be resentful and envious and how to deal with your emotions,
how to, yeah, so these basic interaction things about human relationships,
about friendships, about betrayal, about love, about all those things.
Like, it's actually strange that we don't,
we kind of hope the parents talk about that kind of stuff.
But then the parents often need therapy themselves.
The parents didn't learn it.
I'm not joking that I was mad.
Second year after medical school, how is it?
I think of things in my own life. And you know, how I, you know,
how much shame I felt after my brother's suicide.
Like I was already an adult, right?
It was a young adult, but I felt so much shame.
I didn't, like I had no understanding that,
that, oh look, it's a, it's a reflex to trauma, right?
To feel guilt and shame.
And then of course I was feeling that it didn't mean
it was true because I felt it
but I mapped the fact that I felt a shame to the fact that I should have felt guilty and ashamed
and it led to some very negative things in my life that I had to pull myself back from and recover
from and I didn't know that. I didn't know the auto-miticity of the reflex and how pervasive it
can be and how it can put blinders on us.
I mean, it's just one example, but it's example of something big that happens to people
that we don't learn about.
I find myself sometimes having conversations with a person.
I still do a lot of clinical care of having conversations with a person after a tragedy.
I'm saying, again, I'm saying the things that this person didn't learn in elementary school,
because like none of us did, right?
And then look at the misery and the suffering.
And then I think this is one person among how many millions among us who, you know, who try
and go about their way without knowing things that are easily knowable, because they don't
even know that they're knowable because we don't teach them to ourselves. So how to deal with trauma, the trauma happens, first of all,
that suffering can happen
and small trauma and big trauma,
all that can happen.
And there's natural ways to deal with it.
So in the case of trauma,
as you write about,
and we can also just talk about some more of the details
of that, but it's good to bring
into the surface to talk about it, to not be ashamed to hide it inside, to be some kind
of secret that it's actually...
I mean, there's a lot of positive things to say here, at least from my perspective, one
is it's discussing trauma and dealing with trauma together with other human beings by
talking about it as a path to deep friendship and intimacy with those people.
There's a dark aspect to trauma, to war,
that communicating it or sharing it bonds you.
So like the other side of trauma is like love.
You need that hardship, not you don't need it,
but hardship and trauma can often be a catalyst for a deep human connection.
If you bring it to the surface, it's supposed to kind of hide it on the inside.
If we can just linger on it because you've been through a few very traumatic events in
your life.
When you were 25 years old, as you mentioned, your brother committed suicide.
What did that event teach you about life, about death, and about the human mind?
It certainly brought me face to face with the truths of life and death, because I had
not had a major trauma before then.
So there wasn't a major trauma sort of in my developmental years
that what can carry forward is a sort of omnipotence defense.
I mean, the thought is that when we're toddlers,
we all have an omnipotence defense,
which is like, I can just try and get up and run and move.
And if I run into something, I'll get up and do it again.
That we kind of have to end partly the protection of the parent, et cetera,
but we think we can get out there in the world
and do things and we just do.
And if we don't have major traumas,
we can sort of carry through the,
oh, like bad things aren't gonna happen to me, you know?
Like they, I know that they're there
and I know they happen to people,
but they're not, they don't happen to me, right?
And sometimes what will happen is being confronted
with such a tragedy, wipes that away very, very quickly. And then the person feels extremely exposed. Like, Oh, I thought that I get so lucky for 25 years, nothing bad happened,
nothing but bad things are going to be happening. Am I cursed? Is my family cursed, right? And I
think that leads to you say what the learning about the human mind in retrospect. I think I understood
at the time to some degree, but not like I do now, I can put words to it now, right? I'm like, how
not like I do now, I can put words to it now, right? I'm like, how incredibly important, powerful,
powerfully important negative emotion is, right?
That how a sense of guilt and shame and vulnerability
can just pervade our entire life perspective.
So all of a sudden we're swimming in a very different soup.
And it's a frightening soup and it's a toxic
soup and I'm most struck by that and that goes along with the idea that we're not taught
that that emotion always beats logic. I think the idea of day card Daniel, the idea that
we're rational creatures, the kind of comes down to us through Western thought is like completely not true. Like we're rational creatures,
only if there is an emotion grabbing for our attention. Like, you know, we're attending to one
another, we're being very logical, right? What we're doing now, if we heard a frightening noise
right outside the door, like we'd be entirely different, right? The emotion would trump everything.
It's not paying attention to this, right? is at stake and we'd we'd think differently feel differently behave differently right and
This is what happens to us not just in situations where something drags us from
Yanks from one emotional state to another but it can be very very pervasive so my sense of anger
frustration
In adequacy and then soothing in unhealthy ways you know soothing by drinking too much and then hating myself
in the first place and hating the world around me and starting to think, well, who cares?
What happens? There's some very dark thoughts and choices that came from a changed perspective
of self in the world. So what are you doing that because because of trauma or again small or large, you find yourself
swimming or drowning in a soup of negative emotion. What do you do? What do you do with that emotion?
I mean, we don't have to even talk about trauma is I think the interesting thing is
talk about trauma is I think the interesting thing is, you know, any one of us throughout the day can find ourselves taking a bit of a dip in the pool of negative emotion.
What do we do with that?
The first thing is to separate how we feel from what's true.
We don't do a good job of that as humans.
If I feel bad about myself, it's very easy to,
then I conclude like, I'm bad, right?
If I feel ashamed of myself, I conclude
I'm a terrible person who's shameful, right?
This is the, you know, there's an old
psychodynamic concept of what these call it,
an observing ego.
Still gets called that.
It's not ego in the sense of arrogance, right?
See ability to step outside and to see ourselves.
So that's what lets us keep the difference
between our feelings and what we know to be true.
We can be very angry at someone.
So I think that person's terrible.
I think the person's stupid.
I think that right now because like
something negative just passed between us.
This inside of me, it's just because of how I feel
like when I can separate that.
How do I actually think about that person, right? And, you know, we get driven so, so frequently by how we feel,
because how we think, therefore what we believe, right, just kind of comes on its heels as if the
feeling is dragging it along. And I've been struck by that. So one of the things that has struck me so
long. And I've been struck by that. One of the things that has struck me so the most, right, among the very most in 20 years of working as a psychiatrist is how we are led by
our feelings, our emotions as if they are truth. And then they create truth because we embrace
what they're telling us as true. And that is, I think, incredibly. I think it's how people
learn prejudice. I think it's how people learn self-hatred. I think it's how people learn prejudice. I
think it's how people learn self hatred. I think it's how we learn so many destructive
behaviors. And then the the blinders on us come in more and more and more and more and
more. So separate, you know, we're driven by what we feel, unless we understand that
what we feel is different from what we know to be true or what we can decide on one way
or another.
And that requires realizing and catching the emotions themselves, realizing that it's an emotion.
A feeling comes into your mind, overtakes you, a feeling of anger,
dislike, hatred, all of that. It just comes in. Like, why did that person just
cut me off in traffic or something like that, that feeling?
So wait, you just kind of take it as a feeling and realize it's a feeling that doesn't represent
some deep reality about the world that's fundamental or you.
They just kind of watch it and let it pass, which is the natural way of things.
Yeah.
We decide if it means anything.
You know, if I mad or someone cut me off and I feel hatred and I want to destroy
them, right, to stop and think, look, I've got that in me.
I can, you know, other stressors running too high in my life.
Like, is it really good?
Should I be on this road?
10 minutes behind?
Schedule?
Like, what am I really doing?
So we can learn.
But yes, it's an observation skill, right?
And it's an observation skill that we can develop.
I often think of it, there was something called the tapestry theory, which I think initially
was a theodity of explaining, I believe this is true.
I'm not sure of this, but the idea was that, oh, we don't see God's plan because we're
up too close to it, right?
Like as if it was a beautiful tapestry on the wall,
and we're standing right up it, we're only going to see one part of it, we need to stand back from it.
And you remember learning that, a religion studies classmate, really fascinated with that at the time.
And I think that there are a lot of things we do that about, right? And in training ourselves to
have an observing ego, what we're saying is,
hey, like the just the busyness of life for my own impulses or the pool of emotions are
trying to pull me up right close to whatever tapestry there is there. And I want to sort
of resist that. I mean, I'm better off if I really stay further behind it. And then
I make a choice if I want to come close to it. If there's some really positive emotion
and it's friendship, it's love, it's nurturing, you know what? Let me come right up to this, right? But I want to choose
when I'm doing that. I don't want some drive. I didn't decide to like take me by the back of the
head and put me up against that tapestry. So the interesting exercise for, and I think for a lot of people in modern civilization,
is the internet with social media, that it's almost like going to the gym or something
like that, at least that's the way I see it, because there's a bunch of forces on social
media that are trying to make you feel things.
Most of it is kind of in the negative space of feelings because there is actually a strong
gravity pull to negative feelings for some reason.
And so the end of brain notices that more.
I don't know what that pull is, but it's there.
And you get to observe it on social media.
Like if you actually just scroll through social media, you feel the gravitational pull of
negative emotions. And I just see as
a kind of exercise of like, you feel the pull, just like when you go to the gym, there's
a resistance, and I practice like stepping a stepping way to look at the tapestry, right?
And there's different mechanisms, I think, all of us have to learn. For me, there's a kind of, you mentioned gratitude and humility. So, like if somebody,
if it's me personally, I've recently got an attack, if you place it here and there.
You know, if they're saying that they're much smarter than me, I practice kind of humility,
like you mentioned. And I kind of imagine that they are smarter than me. Those things like helped me to kind of like pull away, like, and then maybe they have a
lesson to teach me. Like, I don't take their sort of negative comments to heart, but I imagine
the human being and like that they might have a lesson to teach me. And in general, when it's more
amorphous kind of negative feeling, I'll think the other thing is the gratitude, just like
more of this kind of negative feeling. I think the other thing is the gratitude.
Just like different versions,
almost memeifiable versions of like,
oh, this is pretty cool.
Like we got a thing going here.
There's like human civilization like
bickering and having a little fun like lunch, food fight.
And it's kind of cool.
Like we get to interact in this way
and there's a bit of humor.
There's like like Thanksgiving dinner.
Like if you, like Thanksgiving dinner,
if you're arguing about politics,
you can feel like really intense.
Like I can't believe you said this,
but if you zoom out, it's like family.
This is like, this is amazing.
And so that kind of feeling really helps.
And but it's like, it really is like going to the gym.
It's like building up a muscle
to be able to pull away
from those emotions.
I don't think I get to practice that kind of emotion
regular day-to-day life,
because it's hard to get those reps on social media.
You can really get the reps in.
It's kind of cool.
Like that's the way I see social media
is a chance to sort of practice that stoicism
of gratitude, of humility, of loving other
people in the face of this negative emotion, all that.
Yes, and there's a certain kind of psychotherapy that talks a lot about this idea that like,
oh, everything is as it should be, right?
Which doesn't mean from some moral or justice point.
It's just that often if you look at things, one thing leads to another to another to another in a way that's actually very, very predictable, even though we might be surprised about it.
And so an example, so I would say that gratitude often does come along with a healthy pride, right? So you could say in the example you gave,
I'm being a sail down social media.
Okay, so you could say, well,
there was a time I sat at,
I set forth to impact people, right?
To be able to reach people and to impact them, right?
And look, I feel a sense of both gratitude and pride
that I've done that, right?
Because you did it because of your effort, right? Your work, your intelligence, your thoughts, like you're've done that, right? Because, look, you did it because of your effort, right?
Your work, your intelligence, your thoughts,
like you're responsible for it, right?
But also, you feel gratitude because any one of us
who's here and has any opportunity has reason
to feel immense gratitude, right?
So then you can say, okay, what's actually gone on here
is something successful.
I set out to do something and I'm doing it, right? And what it brings with
it absolutely includes being assailed. There's no surprise there, right? That because of, you know,
people who have anything good serve as lightning rods for envy. So then yes, there will be people who
want to make up lies or whatever they want to do because you become a lightning rod for envy by having succeeded at the thing you set out to do about which you can feel
a healthy pride and gratitude, right? And then I think that kind of puts it in its place. I mean,
you're still going to make decisions about it, but it makes sense then. Like you have a mechanism
of understanding it that not only makes sense to you, but reflects the truth of what
you actually have done and achieved and what's going on in the world around you.
Well, I wonder if we're all kind of a little bit unique in this because for me, maybe
it's useful to kind of talk to my own experience of it, is for me, I try to avoid, especially in those situations,
to feel pride because I'm just looking empirically.
I feel way happier if I focus on humility.
If I ever think of like, oh yeah,
when you do something meaningful
or you become more popular,
you're going to experience these kinds of,
I feel the attacks more,
and it's like me versus the world, that's the feeling that you start getting, and that does not
create a pleasant feeling. So to me, the pleasant feeling is like stepping away, like kind of laughing
at it all, like with a smile, and not like in a negative, like laughing at people, but just like
laughing at the theater of it, the circus of it, like this whole absurd existence
we've got going on.
And then just having a humility in like,
everybody has the lesson to teach me.
That just makes me feel good.
The pride thing, I do like feeling when,
in a positive pool of emotion.
So if I'm building a trinket and I finish it,
I'm like really happy with myself.
Like I finish this thing.
And I usually actually like to do that alone.
Like I don't need an audience for pride.
I like to sit there and just like,
ooh, this is cool, I did that, you know.
But I just, I find that in social interactions,
pride is just a danger, it's a dangerous drug for me
because it's such a small...
It's a small step away from then losing all the humility and then you start getting
very defensive and that's not going to...
It just starts on a spiral of negative emotion.
But I also...
I mean, with everybody you mentioned this, it will probably sneak up to it in different directions.
I do think there's different brains that we all have.
My brain is exceptionally self-critical, non-stop.
It's like an engine that's always there.
But at the same time, I'm able to zoom out
and have gratitude.
And it's just, there's like two brains.
And they're like cohabitating happily.
And I can, the better I get at this,
the more I can use the one that's self-critical
when I'm trying to be productive,
because naturally I'm super lazy.
So I'm trying not to be less lazy.
I'll be self-critical.
And then when I'm not being lazy, I just, there's a special moment. I want to enjoy that moment
I'll turn on the the gratitude engine
I feel like generic advice that people would give if your brain is self-critical. That's not a good thing
Like you should probably get rid of that. I don't know about that because it seems to be working
Yeah, like I kind of like it. I kind of like this grumpy old man that's in there that's like, like that thing
you did, that really sucked.
But I was like, and I kind of, you know, there's a movie grumpy old man.
Like I like that grumpy boy, the grumpy cat is in there.
And it's nice.
But yeah, I can have bad effects on relationships and on maybe my well-being, maybe you get older
and all that kind of stuff.
So you have to monitor all this kind of stuff.
But I don't know.
I don't know which one is like because you've kind of highlighted it's good to have gratitude
and humility.
It's also good to have a little bit of pride.
I wonder what that like set of ingredients for healthy life looks like for each of us.
Whether we have to customize and figure out what that is.
Because some of the cake is already baked is the problem.
And because of the trauma, if I was like eight years old,
maybe I could be a little more flexible.
But at this point, you got the thing you got,
and it's hard to fix it.
You could do a lot with it.
You could.
It may not be easy, but there's a lot of plasticity
and a lot of pliability there across all ages.
Again, people are different and there may be
idiosyncrasies of why one person is in a different place.
But as a general rule, I think the answer is absolutely asking.
And people have evolved and I've worked with people
who've really changed themselves and brought in their conception
and understanding, you know, they're in their 80s or, you know, I think we can do it at any stage of life. And I would
make a case for for intra-psychic. So not between people necessarily, right? But inside of oneself
for the feeling of pride. And maybe if we call it self-esteem, right? Like let's say we call it
self-esteem, right? Or we could call it healthy pride. We could put either word to it.
But if you think about what we're trying to avoid,
it's a sense of inadequacy, then it is good
to sort of own what's ours.
We can put ourselves a little bit out of balance,
either in terms of building up resentments,
or in terms of decreasing self-confidence,
if we're not owning everything, that's ours.
So a thought, thought I would have about, let's say about some pride or some self-esteem,
is it can work against vulnerability, which we know can also, in some situations, push
us towards jumping the boundary into NV and all of that.
So think about vulnerability. If you conceive, okay,
people are assailing me and you just go to a place of gratitude, it can send a message
that, okay, I'm just lucky and I hope I continue to get lucky as opposed to, that's not true,
there's ability inside of me and discernment inside of me that tells me I can have a greater
sense of confidence that I'll navigate what comes my way.
The pride of the self-esteem part is owning what we've contributed to the goodness we've
created, which, in a sense, helps us feel better about ourselves.
It also helps us feel armed, again, say, the slings and arrows of, you know,
whatever outrageous fortune may come next.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
Again, disagreeing with an expert here.
Yes, I think that's generally good advice,
but I think you mentioned vulnerability.
I think it's like, I've just been doing a lot of research
on rocket engines and fuel.
Speaking of fuel, I just think I get a lot
from being vulnerable because vulnerable leads
to intimacy in friendships and relationships.
I get a lot from being intimately close
with human beings, just on a friendship,
on an ideal level in conversations and so on.
And so I would rather err on the side of vulnerability.
Like to me pride is destructive. I think I already... I already have a pretty good engine that says like
life is awesome. I don't need help for that. That's fine. That one is working.
Life is awesome. I don't need help for that.
That's fine.
That one is working.
I just feel like the way to face the world, that's full of uncertainty, that could be
full of cruelty is with humility and gratitude.
I don't know.
This pride thing, it feels like, I know that for a lot of people, it's really important
to really work on pride to make
sure they don't crumble under the pressure of like they don't give into the sense of security
that this was them.
But I just, for me, empirically speaking, I seem to be happier facing the world with humility
and just being grateful.
The pride I'm really worried about. It feels more destructive
than anything. See what I think as you're telling me that, I don't want to be presumptuous,
but I make some thoughts or some conclusions that tell me, hey, you're in a pretty healthy place.
Right. And the reason I say that is because I agree completely about vulnerability. I mean,
think about humility and gratitude. Make us vulnerable. Right. I feel like, wow, I'm grateful. Thank you. I'm grateful for you. You know, we could
get shot down or something, you know, something bad could happen. Something could make us feel
bad. So, so yes, we, we need vulnerability. If we, if we try and eliminate vulnerability,
we're living miles into the envy, you know, land, right? So you're describing a healthy
vulnerability, but then my brain says that's because on the other
side of the the sea salt, so to speak, has to be a healthy sense of self, whether we call it self
a steam or healthy pride. And then I'll cite what I think is the evidence for that is you describe
the negative voice, right, as like the grumpy cat, right? But that's a good negative voice to have,
right? Because it's telling you like,
hey, that wasn't your best. Like, come on, do better or, right? You can do better. Like, there's,
you know, there's this a negative voice in some ways, but it believes in you. It's right. It's,
where that voice could be, it could be a negative voice that says, you didn't do that well because
you suck. You don't deserve anything good, right? Why should you even be alive, right?
I mean, that's the negative voice that can gain so much force
if there isn't a balance of healthy self-esteem.
So I think because you're well-balanced,
you have what you need and then having more of it seems
like, oh, that's not so good,
but there are people whose negative voice
isn't the grumpy cat,'s it's hateful right and then that's a person who needs to to bring that into integrator balance. Yeah, I think my
My negative voice is like a grumpy cat. That's like a French existentialist. Maybe a little bit of an analyst
But it's just kind of is the Sartre's cat. Yeah, yeah Sartre's cat. So it doesn't get hateful. It's not like a Hitler cat So it's a little it's just kind of, it's the Sartres cat. Yeah, Sartres cats, it doesn't get hateful, it's not like a Hitler cat.
So it's a little more, yeah, I guess there is kind of like this line that we've come across
a couple of times between the benign and the malignant.
Right.
But of course you have to monitor that line.
I just, I think you have to be careful when you face really difficult situations of
as you go on through life more and more difficult. You face a lot of loss and suffering, especially later in life.
You have to be careful with that voice
that that grumpy cat can get awfully confident and then if you don't have any source of
positive emotions in your life, you can become too heavy of a burden.
Yes.
Which I think this leads us to a, well, I think it's a really important fact, right?
That there are some people, like a significant subset of people who get happier as they
get older.
They have more contentment, a stronger sense of self.
We might think, how could that ever happen?
Right?
Like we're getting closer to death.
We're accumulating insults, right? Looking at everything hurts a little bit more and we have less energy and we accumulate
losses and traumas. Why would anyone be healthier across time, if we're happier across time?
What we see is it's linked to the things that we're talking about. It's linked to say,
let's say vulnerability versus pride, there's a good balance there. There's a lot of humility.
There's a lot of self-esteem.
The person is spending a lot of time standing back
from the tapestry and looking at it, right?
And what can come into people
is in sort of a sense of equanimity.
Like I sort of understand, you know,
I'm being the best person I can be.
I'm, you know, and that's not always even great.
And there are things that I don't feel great about
even while I'm trying to do that
But look I'm I'm being who I'm choosing to be right and that does have to be in some big way
I'm not saying that means any one specific thing, you know
That can mean the person who's taking care of their cat and tending their garden like that's enough
We have to have that you know love the ability to put good things out in the world right and to put our
Our ability to work and be to make things different out into the world
and make things better.
And if we're doing that, we get happier across time become, because we come to a sense of peace with ourselves.
I'm not supposed to be everything.
I'm not supposed to do everything.
I'm not supposed to fix everything, right?
I'm also not supposed to suffer all the time for the things I haven't gotten right.
You know what?
I guess I'm kind of, and it leads back to Winnecott, right? I'm also not supposed to suffer all the time for the things I haven't gotten, right? You know what? I guess I'm kind of, and it leads back to Winnecott, right? The British physician, I'm good enough. And that seems to help people feel happy, you know,
contentment and be generative and productive into later life. It's like, that's what we
all should be wanting. But it's even, it kind of an afterthought that was some people are like that as opposed to wait a second. Right?
Like what's going on with them and let's do all of that?
Al-Berak Kamu writes in mythicist quote, there's only one real serious philosophical problem and
that is suicide. Deciding whether or not life is worth living is to answer the fundamental question in philosophy.
All other questions follow from that. So basically to be or not to be.
Do you think there's a truth to that statement? This question of why live at all?
Do you think there's truth to that statement being a really, really important question for us to answer?
Yes. Yes. And what's the answer? I think the answer is yes. And I think K. Moo answered it. Yes,
too. No, I love his writing. And I think there was a streak of nihilism that I think grew in his writing over the years and the
thought is, I think that came out by suicide. I think we're not sure of that because it was a car
accident. But I've always read that as the primary scholarly opinion. And I think it's interesting
that after his death, a book called The First Man was published, which I don't know if he had
intended to publish. I don't remember the specifics about it,
but it's about him as a child, right?
And it's interesting, the first man,
even he was the first man in his existence, right?
The most, you know, the one that felt
and experienced everything.
And there's sadness and distress and all in that book,
but there's a beauty of life and living and experience.
And then I think to compare that beauty, but there's a beauty of life and living and experience. And then I think
to compare that beauty, like that's life, even if something's difficult and scary and sad,
like there's something beautiful around the corner and here's a kind person and a new discovery.
You know, more what was in him as a child, and I think that we can get jaded as we could,
as you and I were just talking about a few minutes ago, we can accentuate the negative and foster the negative and come to a place where we're looking for some in-depth philosophical answer,
you know, some thick book, you know, that's going to explain all that to us instead of the
simplicity that we've been talking about. I think humility, gratitude helps us have just
simple, positive experiences, feelings of contentment, feelings of connection
with another person, learning discovery.
And I think the answer to came to his question is yes, and I think it lies in his writing
about when he was a child, which I think he saw as less important than his later writings
and the intellectual heaviness when I think maybe he had lost his way a little bit from
the things he understood
when he was younger. So another way to talk about it, I'd love to hear what you think, is about
these broad categories, let me be started with Kierkegaard, of existentialism, absurdism, and
nihilism. And I think Camus considered himself anervative, not actually an existentialist.
It's kind of a middle ground where I think existentialist, I don't want to characterize it in the
wrong way and there's a lot of different definitions, but I think existentialists ultimately
do think that there is meaning in sort of pursuing the passion of life, like pursuing
the moat,, in living life. That's where
you discover the meaning at that individual level of fully embracing life. And I think
nihilism is, again, it's kind of like a spectrum, but nihilism basically says, there's no meaning.
And it doesn't matter, nothing matters.
I don't even know, but somehow that lands you
in a place that's totally uninspired.
Maybe Nileist would disagree with that.
Maybe there's a way to live a creative life
in a Nileistic mindset.
And I think absurdism is somewhere in the middle where pursuing meaning at all is not a good idea.
So kind of I think existentialists say you should be looking for meaning and it's to be discovered in your own actions, in your own life, in the moment.
And absurdism says life is absurd, nothing makes sense.
Don't look for the meaning. Just live, just be. I think that's kind of the the the later
come will kind of philosophy. I don't know if you can sort of comment on these kind of
nuance ideas here. If there is no religious guide to your life.
What do you think about this kind of search for meaning?
Do you see that there's some wisdom
in the existentialist perspective of discovering it
in your own life, in this passion,
in this kind of day-to-day existence in the moments
of your life that bring you joy, that kind of thing?
You're bringing different sort of perspectives
and trying to tease apart, look,
well, what are the differences
in those perspectives?
I think what it points out is that, okay, we tend to conflate things as human beings,
and to take two different things and try and make them into one.
But we also, I think, on the other end of the spectrum, get very overly reductionist.
And I think that when we get to overly reductionist, we lose the ability to learn from anything,
or to generate meaning,
right? I mean, the thing about Sartre, who is the thought of existentialism is so consistent
with him, right? Who on the one hand, you know, wrote about, you know, very clear terms,
like, this is what it is, and this is what it isn't. And here's how you're going to make
your meaning in a very like academically proscribed way. But he also wrote short stories
like the wall, right, where there's something totally absurd
happens, as part of the story.
So I think what ends up happening is people either reduce themselves or get associated
with something by being overly reductionist takes us away from meaning.
The idea that we don't know if there is an overarching religious meaning or you know what we call a religious
meaning or purpose. Like we don't know that, right? So okay if we take that as a
given that people who say that they know are having faith. Like I'll spinoza
describe faith, right? Faith is that you don't know, but you believe anyway, right?
It's not because you have faith now you know something, right? Because I think
that's a slippery slope to
the persecution of others, right? So if we say, okay, we don't know, then we're left either deciding,
okay, well then the hell with everything, you know, like, there's that movie, a strange brew,
right? The Bob and Doug McKenzie were like, the breaks don't work on the car, and one of them says,
oh, why bother steering? Right? So if we don't know that there's meaning, like, why bother steering? Let's just give
up the ghost, right? And I don't think that's even what the nihilist said. I mean, I think
the Kunins that we should get rid of everything that we've ever created except Beethoven's
ninth symphony and start over from there. But so even people who are very nihilistic
or associated with that, a lot of them were just not liking what we had built, right? So
if we accept that a lot of what we have built as humans inside of us and outside of
us is really counterproductive and doesn't help us, and that absurd things happen in the
world, right?
And that often the way social structures and systems build up, you build themselves up
is absurd.
I think our healthcare system operates in a way that's absurd, right?
So if we accept that there are absurdities that we don't know if there's truth,
then what are we left with?
But like, well, let's try and make meaning, right?
Or take it, you got set, said, um, Yo, yo, Amy, circumsensia, right?
I'm myself and my circumstances, right?
I was just like, look, we're, we're, we're, we can't control everything.
We, we live in circumstances around us.
But within those circumstances,
we can make decisions and define ourselves. And I think the brilliance of that, and I think tying
it all together, right, in a way that's not trying to be, in a sense, it ties it all together by not
trying to answer everything concisely. That yes, we can make meaning. Like, we see that. If someone
trips in front of me, I could walk around
them or I could help them up. I mean, no one can tell me that it doesn't matter what I do. I absolutely
reject the idea that, oh, I could step over them or on them, or I could help them up and it doesn't
matter. Oh yeah, try being the person on the ground, right? So we create meaning, but we live in our
circumstances and there are absurdities both within us
and outside of us in our social structures.
And there are a lot of things that pretend
to have meaning that don't, and there's the shades
of nihilism, but ultimately there's something going on here
that's doing the best we can in the context
of just not knowing.
Yeah, I tend to see, I don't know if it's genetic,
I think that's the thing just observing the internet, the number of memes there are.
I think many other people are like me.
I tend to see the humor in the absurdity.
I tend to enjoy it from that kind of angle.
I see the Kafka-esque nature of society, different aspects of society, and just kind of notice
the magic with a smile.
And just laugh at the circus of it all. Because it is magical that the circus all comes together.
It's like a little bit out of sync
and then there's a guy playing tremble,
but overall it's pretty good.
It's pretty good.
And we can look at that and just kind of marvel,
and go, oh, which I think is a relation to at least
a lot of what we in the Western world think of as Eastern, right?
It's like as non-attachment, right? Because then if there's something absurd and it's like not good for me, you know, right?
Then I accept that too instead of getting angry about it and railing about it or seeing some cosmic meaning in it, right?
I think there's also a healthy non-attachment in what you're saying too.
non-attachment in what you're saying too. So there's, I mean, you mentioned Eastern thought, there's, just the outskineetia, but also Buddha, have kind of spoke of life
as suffering. Do you think there's truth to that? That suffering is a fundamental part
of life. I think it is a fundamental part of life. I don't think that means that life
is suffering, right? If we say, well, life is suffering, then what am I doing?
I'm trying to erase from my mind the birth of my children,
things that were filled with joy.
Life is not entirely suffering, but life brings a lot of suffering.
For some people it brings such disproportionate suffering
and the people don't survive the suffering.
I think when people are conscientious and empathic, that really bothers us, right?
The suffering in our own lives and the fact that others at times could seem to be so overwhelmed
by suffering, that they don't even get a chance to see good.
And I think there's, I do think there's truth to that and there's sadness and distress
to that.
But to say, therefore, life is, I think is just completely untrue.
And it ignores the fact that someone even made a trombone,
right, let alone that there's a little bit out of sync
and someone's playing the trombone.
Like, that's cool.
There's elements of the absurd that you said are neat
and interesting.
And if we start accepting that we can't understand
or control everything, then we can accept
and I think really love and foster the beauty in our lives.
Yeah, I think the word suffering is doing a little bit too much work because I think it's
probably referring to the philosophical concept of that, yeah, this absurdity. That stuff just happens randomly.
Evil people succeed.
Good people fail.
There's a seeming random injustice on occasion.
Right.
And occasion, there's justice in, yeah, all of it that feels like, and maybe because
it, often there's a lot of loss and then there's a kind of matching
complementary aspect to any good feeling that all comes crashing down like every
hello from a physics perspective ends in a goodbye. Like, that's a really sad thing.
Like, all the amazing people I get to meet in my life,
all the amazing experiences eventually,
they have to end.
And that's part of what makes them amazing.
But why is that sad?
Is it because we're taught to think?
Then I tell it, look, at some point,
you and I are going to say goodbye today.
Like, I hope we're rich or for it. And then we take that goodness off with us.
Like, I want to celebrate that because it's all part of the goodness. I think we're taught to
think, oh, that's so bad. It's, it equates to death and misery and I think it's often not that way.
I think there is a sadness too, but I also don't think that sadness is a negative thing. It's a different
way to celebrate a beautiful thing. So there's a melancholic nature to it, or something passing
of it leaving. I mean, it's that old Louis CK thing that I go back to over and over from
his show, Louis, where he was all hard-broken that he just broke up with somebody he loved and he told about
that to an old man and the old man said, you're a fool, that's the best part.
I miss that part where you sort of are lingering in that loss, you're feeling the pain of that
loss because that lasts the longer, it's the most intense, it's the most reliable, and
it's the kind of celebration of the love you had.
Like losing the love is still a celebration of the love.
I think you don't want to over romanticize that, but there's some aspect of truth to that.
Like that melancholic feeling of remembering a beautiful time that's no longer there
is a kind of celebration of it and is a kind of joyful experience even though
It's very easy to experience it as a negative emotion. I think it's just like you said
I mean it's up to our mind to determine how that emotion is really felt
But it's a tricky one because it's like heartbreak to experience that as a positive thing.
People can reminisce at funos, right?
And left, because people can be very, very, very sad and perceive that this person has
died and perceive the sadness of it.
But in perceiving that and really living in it, then you can have people who want to remember
that person by telling a funny story.
Why?
Because each of those people carries that with them.
So I think what you're saying is consistent with healthy function as human beings because
we're going to encounter sadness and loss.
Like what do we do with that?
Right?
And do we do things that ultimately create some redemption or even reparation inside of
us?
And like reparations, a big word in psychology, right?
It's how we repair damage and loss.
So if we lose someone and we're sad, can we by telling funny stories about that person
remind ourselves that hey, they're still inside of us, whether they're out there looking
me, I don't know, but I can call that person in mind inside of us.
And then we have something that's good and beautiful that comes of that too.
In the introduction to your book on trauma, Lady Gaga wrote it, she wrote
the forward the intro. She said this about you, quote, I can now say with certainty that this man saved
my life, he made life worth living. This goes to our discussion about the mythicist, Kamu,
about why live.
So I think at least to me, she's one of the most brilliant
and unique artists ever.
So it's a difficult question, but a question of creativity.
What role does trauma play in somebody like that
in this artist that has created some incredible things. What positive, constructive role does trauma serve and what limiting role does
it serve in preventing that person from flourishing more. Trauma can certainly drive us to creativity, right?
Even to push against, to protest against what the trauma tells us.
Trauma tells us lessons like nothing matters and you don't matter.
And nothing will ever be good and nothing is beautiful.
And we can push against trauma.
They know there is life in me.
There's something there's goodness for me to spread in the world, to express and spread.
So I think trauma fuels creativity in many, many, many ways.
Trauma also shuts down creativity, right?
Are people who are, for, it's one example, trauma
that escalates to the point where now the person
is soothing it with alcohol, one example.
And now the impact of the alcohol shuts down any creativity. So can people be creative and outward thinking without trauma? I think
sometimes if I remember correctly, people will use a manual Contas in example someone
I think hadn't traveled much and didn't have trauma and like, look at what he knew. So,
okay, they're going to be exceptions, right? But a lot of our creativity is in some ways fueled
by our suffering. although it's complicated
because it comes from generative places in us, right? So those places are there, they're
not created by suffering, but maybe suffering makes an incentive or a passion inside of
us. And a person, you know, Stephanie, who you referred to is just such an incredible astounding
creative force. And sure, some of that comes from trauma,
some of it comes from trauma fueling the generative creative places in her. But what I helped her to do,
she's very generous with her words, but what I helped her to do was to see all that she is,
and all that the creativity in her is, and all that there is to create through love
and caring and compassion and to again see that.
I mean, a lot of time that's what I'm doing.
Clinical, I think it's what's good psychiatrist
or mental health professionals do is we help people
see the beauty that is there, right?
Because oftentimes we're way too close up to that tapestry
and what brings us close is often the sad thing.
So we're up close and all we see is the negative.
I mean, it's easy then to get classically nihilistic,
but by helping someone take a step back
and to see who they are and what's in them,
that's how people get better
and to tell people we engage in life.
It's such a difficult thing because if you were to
from studying human beings, it seems like the optimal trajectory is having some trauma that
doesn't destroy you, that forces you early in life to really struggle with the intricacies of the human condition. And then later
in life, as you form and like you build an expertise around in mastery, start to do exactly what you
said, which is step back and look at the tapestry. So if you, if, if you don't have the trauma, it seems
like just empirically speaking, there's of course just a huge amount of data and all kinds of anecdotal evidence. But it and I'm going to be careful here because
maybe I'm romanticizing a hardship, but it does seem that hardship and childhood, if
it doesn't break, you can be constructive. It's like you said said having that trauma one of the ways to fight it is to say I am worth something
Right. I am and this is you know
David Gog is talks about this is like this is
I am somebody I am I can't be somebody special and I'm gonna prove it to you. I'm gonna do this
I'm gonna do this big thing. It's this engine that drives you forward
Yeah, comment on that because like from a like a parents perspective, you want a child to have an
easy life, right? You want them to not have hardship, certainly not have trauma. But that's
such a difficult dance because in some ways, a little bit of hardship and gradually increasing
a mod of hardship that doesn't break you
can really develop you into a really interesting,
complicated person and it helps you flourish
as a creative being.
I don't know what to, I don't know if there's a question
that I just keep writing it saying random things.
No, it makes, look, I think it makes good sense to me.
I think you're trying to get at like,
look, we need trauma and like,
and how are we defining it, right?
Because we say trauma, hardship, difficulties.
I mean, we could set aside, we could set apart, say,
and differentiate things that are difficult,
but that are overcomable, right?
Versus things that we could use trauma, the word
trauma this way, if we chose to, that are just like entirely negative. Like someone saying,
oh, you can't do that and you'll never succeed because, what, and then they tell you something
about yourself, like because you're from here or you're this race religion, whatever it
is, right? We think, well, you know, it could, that could make someone say, hey, I'm going
to show you, I'm going to overcome, right? But then they're overcoming something bad, right? Like it's just like,
like there's nothing good or helpful about that, right? If someone's saying that, so the person has
to overcome it, that's different than something that is placed in front of a person where, where
the whole conception of it is something positive that you can make through effort, right?
So, I remember, I don't think I was 15 years old,
there was some rule where you could then go,
I don't think it was picking raspberries or blueberries,
right, and I think, and my parents wanted me to see,
like, hey, go see how that work is you,
and now you got 50 cents at the end of it, right?
And then you think about that when,
you wanna buy baseball cards, or you think about it,
and you work hard.
And I could remember like it was hard
and I was sweating and I was tired.
But I learned from it.
I mean, the reason I remember it today.
So yes, parents might want the kids to have like a good life,
but not necessarily an easy life.
And I think that was done.
They took me to do that.
So I had a greater sense of responsibility
in a sense of like hard work is meaningful and it's important.
And I think that that kind of thing is good, but if we separate that from something that's just denigrating prejudicial, like I think those things aren't good, but they're unavoidable.
So it's not necessarily that, oh, is some trauma good.
I would look at it more that some trauma is unavoidable. I mean, you know, it's hard to go, how do you go through life and not have any losses
or anything negative or anything sad?
And then people are people.
There may be people who have not a lot of that
and then there's a sort of complacency
and they don't do as much as they could
or feel as good as they could.
You know, then there's other people
who have a highly attuned emotional,
as if people with very highly attuned emotional compasses
for which a little bit of trauma becomes so intrusive.
So, it's so much of it is person driven, but I do want to distinguish between things that
are just purely bad that we might overcome or find some fire in our belly about or whatever
the case may be, and things that may be boundaries or barriers either directly, purposely placed
or not, that in a sense invite us or inform us
of the possibility of striving and overcoming.
Finally, in tuned emotional compasses, that's so true that there is, that's the component
of it too.
It's almost genetic.
How sensitive you are to a particular trauma.
So little things can have a huge impact or gigantic things, serious abuse and childhood
can be by some people overcome more easily.
That's so interesting.
It's not just what's the trauma.
It's a what's the trauma that makes certain problems.
You have to match the trauma to the person.
And a big part of what you're matching to
is that genetically based characteristic
of how finely attuned is that empathic attunement
to that compass.
So when you think about, just return to childhood, when you think about trauma and childhood,
what can we say about the impact of child abuse on the development of a human being.
I think the impact of it is so disproportionately
bad, hurtful compared to things that happen
when we're not children.
And I wanna be very careful about how I'm saying that
because people can through their strength and resilience and human interconnectedness, can overcome that.
I don't mean to say that anyone who's experienced those things can't make it through it or over it. That part is not true.
But it is true that the impact is so disproportionate to anything else that can happen because the brain is
formulating, right? So both theosecology, if we say psychology is like applied neurobiology, right?
And we look at both of those as as as different ends, right? Even though there's a lot of gray in the
middle, you know, the neurobiology is changed. So just just one example of a much greater salience of
vigilance mechanisms of mechanisms of self-protection mechanisms that can make a person feel
more fear and more insecurity and hide themselves away from the world and not trust the world.
And I mean, I mean, not trust the world even enough that, oh, I, you know, I'd like to have a better job. And there's, and you know, another one is here that I could take,
but maybe it could be worse, you know, and then being afraid of that, right? Like,
there are all sorts of ways in which, in which the changes to those pathways impact someone.
And, and that's just one of, you know, we could bring trauma experts together that could talk about
that for days, right? Like, what is the impact upon the brain biology?
So, that then gets changed inside the person.
And from the perspective of those changes, the psychology on top of it changes.
Like, what do I think about myself?
Do I think that I'm worthwhile?
You know, even in my mid-twenties after, you know, without formative traumas,
and a pretty strong sense of self and some achievements,
there was a big trauma then with the death of my brother.
And I start questioning, am I cursed, am I worth anything?
I mean, it's 20-something years old and doing reasonably well at the time.
You know, how does this impact a child of six, seven, ten, twelve years old, right?
We're sending such powerful messages
that then change conception of self
and that negatively changed conception
sits upon the negatively changed neurobiology.
And I think if we really thought,
hey, let's do the best we can just for humans in general,
for the human race, our species in general,
is we would handle children and caring for children
so much differently in terms of
protection mechanisms, intervention mechanisms. How many times do you see where like there's now
there's been some tragedy and the child gets a little bit of support and they had some therapy
that was provided by some insurance carrier, they got once a week for 16 weeks or whatever. I mean, we should be wrapping our societal resources around children, but we don't use our
resources well.
I was just reading, it's a little bit of an aside, but about $300 and something billion
dollars a year in cost to the US economy just from schizophrenia.
And you think, it costs a fraction,
what do we actually put into caring for people
who have schizophrenia?
So first, there's a moral imperative,
but let's say we put that aside,
and we only care about the economy,
because there are mechanisms of thinking
that look at it,
how could we not amend that?
But we are so reckless
with our resources
and we're tripping ahead of ourselves
that we don't think, oh my goodness, there is no better place on God's earth for prevention than
here, prevention in terms of human suffering and also where do people like that go? I mean,
more often, people like that go to place of increased suffering, inability to take care of themselves
or to be in supportive relations.
It's okay, we know there's a higher prevalence of that, but we're also creating the pull
of people through which the envy, the narcissism, the sociopathy, the destruction arises.
So again, if we care about people, we would be so focused on that.
If we don't care about other people and just ourselves or just economic costs, we would still be so focused. But, you know, we're not and we tend to just kind
of call it good because we don't see anything disastrous happening at the moment. And
I think there's a societal negligence there to the shame really of all of us. When child
abuse and the impact neurobiologically and psychologically is
potentially the greatest cause of suffering directly and indirectly on the
face of the planet. How much does trauma of that kind and later in life
affect your ability to love another human being, say inside of relationship?
Connect with another human being.
It can impact it a lot.
And I want to say, can people overcome and be as loving to a partner or a child or anyone
else?
Yes.
But we're talking across society.
How are we setting the odds?
We're setting the odds towards a higher sense of vigilance, a decreased sense of self-confidence,
an increased sense of vulnerability, a decreased sense of self-confidence, an increased sense of vulnerability, right?
Decreased comfort interacting with others, right?
What we're doing is we're pushing towards isolation and misery and depression and resentment.
I mean, those factors push towards that.
We know that the research is so strong that adverse childhood experiences, that these things
that happen, the more the worse, the more prolonged,
the more that person is up against as they try and navigate life.
And I suppose one of the elements of intimacy, like we were talking about is vulnerability.
And maybe there's a, is there fear of vulnerable, of being hurt again?
Is that ultimately the barrier to intimacy?
Yeah, if you're taught a lesson that says,
the world is not safe,
and you're not good enough for someone to keep safe,
and you're not strong enough to keep yourself safe.
That's a final common pathway of the vast majority
of child abuse, where I say,
is telling those lessons to be
able to then, how can that not change the lay of the land against openness, against the
ability to rationally consider trust and mutuality and to protect oneself, but also take chances
and do the things that we have to do to create the greatest happiness in our lives.
We set the odd so much
against that. There's another pathway which I think is really interesting because of
seeing it in people is this kind of ability to detach yourself from feeling any emotions
to protect yourself. It's almost like you're not quite there.
It is a word.
It's called isolation of affect.
This is defense mechanism.
Yeah.
Is that a common way, another common way to deal with trauma?
Well, isolation of affect can cut both ways.
So if there's been a major trauma, I'll say someone has seen something terrible, and
they're isolated from their affect. At one time, it was thought, well, maybe that's good,
right? They're not hysterical, they're not distraught, but we see that is not good, right?
Because what needs to be held, processed, we need to get our arms around in some way,
shape, or form has just been separated off, right? So we know that is not good, right?
But isolation of affect can also serve us very well.
When I think back to being an intern,
a medical intern in the hospital,
and you might have to go and pronounce someone dead
with hysterical family members,
and then 10 minutes later,
five minutes later, maybe two minutes later,
really, you have to go to another room,
and you've got to maybe do some procedure
that involves having your focus on a certain thing,
and making sure your hand movements are the right way,
or talking to a person in a way
that's very different than where you just came from,
that's very hopeful. And so then came from. That's very hopeful.
And so then you have to isolate the affect of what's going on around you.
And it happens not just in, it's just one example, but we have to do it in life so that we
can put affect aside to process later or not feel the full weight of affect where we know
the meaning.
Like I knew the meaning of the tragedy of the person I just pronounced dead, but I want to separate that for myself because I'm also aware that it's not my tragedy so that I can
then, okay, put that affect aside and go do the next thing that I have to do. So that I think can cut
both ways. Right, but then you have to like reattach it, understand that it's good to be close
with emotion, even painful emotion, Right like because that's the human experience
Right, it's it's I feel like if you if you build up a skill that you can detach yourself from emotion I
Think that can become its own kind of yeah
It becomes too easy to do it. Yeah, right and to reinforce that's when people are suffering too much
over too long a period of time, then, you know, we're creatures of habit, right? And even though our brains are, you know,
our brains are sitting on the shoulders of the giant of the maybe thousand levels of emergence
that come underneath of them, our brains are also working very simple habit-based ways. Like,
if you and I chose a word right now and said it 500 times, we would know, it's just a silly
experiment, but we'd both be saying it tonight, right?
Because our brains are also creatures of habit.
So if you over and over and over have to isolate yourself from affect and you develop those
mechanisms, well, you develop those mechanisms and they don't go away any easier than if we said the word
500 times and decided to forget. We won't forget no matter what we decided.
So how do we find our way back?
How do we overcome
trauma? What are the different pathways? The first thing, the very first thing is to acknowledge
The first thing, the very first thing is to acknowledge to ourselves and often to others, which might be one other person, it might be in words, spoken, it might be written, what the trauma has been.
Because the lessons of trauma, the evil lessons of trauma, and I'll use the example of my own
life, the lesson that told me that I was shameful, cursed,
and hopeless.
Right?
It's a very evil lesson, right?
But my brain will say it over and did say it over and over and over to me.
And if that just sits inside, that's how trauma festers, that's how trauma hijacks our
thoughts, our emotions.
So being able to say to ourselves and to another,
like this is what's happened, right?
Okay, this is what's happened.
We're built to massage words
and to create meaning through words, right?
Like we don't massage pictures, right?
Images, we talk in massage meaning with words.
So when I finally went to see a therapist
and I could say, you know, my brother,
whatever words I would have said, like he killed himself and I can't accept it, I can't
imagine it. And like, I let it happen. Like, it's like I have to say those things, right?
So then I could begin to bring some sense of truth to it, you know, and I think it was
a long time ago, but the therapist probably said of truth to it, you know, and I think it was a long
time ago, but the therapist probably said something like, okay, probably season, you let it
happen.
It's your fault, right?
Because you got to get it those things so that one can begin to bring into focus what
does the trauma mean and what does it not mean?
I mean, a classic example is that is that what would you say to someone else example, you
know, real say, well, I know how many times
have I, it's just, I could cry if I stop and think about it. I feel it's just stop and talk to
someone who is sexually assaulted through no fault of their own, who comes in and tells the story.
They've been telling themselves about how it's their fault. They should have walked home a
different way. They should address differently. They should have left earlier, right, I wrote about
it in the book over and over and over. Now you have a person who
Let's say you take a person who's intelligent
Engage in the world who's like capable of understanding lots and lots and lots of things
But doesn't understand that right if it were someone else that person would understand in a moment
That's not that person's fault, right?
So so what you want to do is overcome the fact that the negative emotions that the the high-jacked emotion systems of trauma are
the fact that the negative emotions, the hijacked emotion systems of trauma, are telling that person a lie, and they're telling them so strongly and so awfully, so meanly that the
person just takes it inside and starts to see it as true.
So you begin to hold that up to the light of day, and again, one example could be, okay,
so someone, my person who's coming in next has actually been through something similar, right? And can you, might, can you stay and just tell her how it's her fault,
right? And like, oh my God, no, no, I could never, like, then they see, right? I mean, get
them out. This is not always how you do it, but sometimes you can get a person to see, like,
well, that would be the most horrible. How could you do that? Right? And the person can maybe come
out there doing it to themselves. So you know, you begin
You begin to put words in a structure and say, okay, look let's look at what's going on inside of you
You don't have to be scared of anything you're thinking and feeling. In fact the fear is in not
Exposing it to the light to the light of day. That's where it gets the best of us and now like everything is different and whether that involves
Use of medications for intrusive thoughts and depression, or there's
no medicines needed, but it's all reframing.
Like, whatever it may be that comes next, the whole world has changed when the person
has acknowledged what's happened, exposed it to themselves and to trusted others around
them, and begun to look at it in some way other than the stuff in an evil
box place that the trauma initially puts us through our reflux is it creates in us.
It's interesting that there's powers that you're saying it out loud, right?
So first saying your perception of it out loud, then in that case that might be your fault. And then working through out loud,
working through that it may not be.
Any experienced therapist will tell you this,
that every now and then it will happen
that someone will come and they'll say something.
Usually it's very early on in the process,
they'll say something they've never said before
and they immediately are in an entirely different place and they may have been for decades.
I can remember a person saying that the coach had raped him and just saying it.
This was decades before and everything was different.
I'm not saying everything is now perfect but his life was in a different way.
As soon as he said it, he could see how daily he thought that person did that to this child. The child was me. He never thought
it until he said it out loud because his mind was going over and over with why it was
his fault. What he did to deserve it. How he kept going back. So it must be his fault.
It was in as soon as he put words to it, he saw the truth of it. And it was a bifurcation
in the path of life then. And any therapist has had stories like that, which is shows the immense power that it can
even be that just uttering the words makes just a cascade of change all at once.
Just saying those words to another human being, it makes you wonder what that compulsive
loop that happens in our heads, until it's brought
to the surface.
That's so interesting.
Entirely non-productive the loops.
And sometimes even if we put, what would I say to another?
Let me write it down.
It can get rid of those loops in our brains.
Any even thought of outward expression is the enemy of those internal, persecutory, negative
thought loops.
How do you find a good therapist? I tend to think of, listen, I'm a fan of podcasts,
I'm a fan of conversations. It feels like a, you know, it's like finding a good friend.
It feels like a difficult journey. Maybe I'm wrong in that, but it just feels like such a, it feels like a partnership, a
journey together versus like some very simple clinical procedure.
The first thing I would say is to change the entire paradigm.
Like most people, like, okay, I need a therapist.
So, so people feel often like they're in a weakened position because they need, you know, quote unquote, a therapist. Then therapists are rationed, right?
I mean, how many insurance panels have lists of mile long of qualified therapists who could
be on that insurance panel, but there's a certification process like this is making their sense, right?
The states already certified the person, right? But there's so many barriers to entry that now we're rationing
this resource, which we should all stop and pause for a second and think like, we're
okay with that as a society. And by the way, everything else is like that too when we're
trying to get help for our health. So let's step back from that for a second. Now it's a resource
that's not in great supply. and then a person begins to think,
essentially, I'll take what I can get.
I just gotta get somebody,
and I don't know enough to know anyway.
And those are very disempowering thoughts,
as opposed to saying, look, I'm gonna be an empowered consumer,
and I need to choose someone who gets over,
some just some basic hurdles of what I think
are reasonable human interaction.
So is a person making eye contact? Do they seem interested? These are basic think are reasonable human interaction. So like, is the person making eye contact?
Do they seem interested?
Right?
Like, these are basic points about any human interaction,
including a therapist, right?
Then you can say, okay, is there word of mouth?
Anyone else has something good?
Nothing better than a word of mouth recommendation from someone you trust, right?
Or anybody can have a good website, but you say, let me look at the website.
What is it saying if there is one?
Right?
Does it resonate
with me or not, right? But after all of that, then you go to see the person with the idea
that you're interviewing them, right? The idea that, yeah, I hope this person can help
me. And if so, great, I'm with the program. But I'm thinking about it. Do I want this
person? Do I feel heard? Do I feel cared for? Which doesn't mean is it easy, right?
It might mean is it hard. And I leave and I feel like like emotional for a couple of
days. But I see that I'm facing new things. No, this process of assessment so that one
isn't settling for something that is formulaic over package. And I'm not trying to be overly
critical of therapists. I mean, there are people everywhere who do their jobs well and people who don't do their jobs well. But
most therapists are working in systems that push against doing the job well, right? Because
they're rationing care. And there's a lot of number of sessions. And there's enough
in such time before a person can return. And so often it's an uphill battle because we're
trying to be helped with in systems we've created and tolerate that are pushing
against helping us.
Yeah, but you know, that interview process is tricky.
I mean, if you're in a rough place mentally, just like with
within you kind of interview, it's hard not to think that a
failed interaction failed interview.
There's something wrong with you. Sure, right. There isn't authority to a therapist, I think,
where you think like they've got it all figured out. Right. And I'm a mess. And therefore,
if there's something off, it's all my fault. Right, so it's a very tricky and it's easy to then give up and then, because it's
like that's step to try to get a therapist, the first step to get help, forget therapist,
like any kind of help, that's a big leap to take.
I agree with you in a rough place.
I agree completely.
We should not make people swim again such a strong current to get their needs met. I mean, we see this in such obvious places where you have an elderly homebound person who
can't get their medicine because there's been some change in they didn't put the new
number into the form or Lord knows what.
I mean, it's incredible how we force people to swim against strong currents to get things
that are just basic at times for their survival.
And with that in mind, I don't have a lot of respect
for where health care is at,
or where mental health is at.
The field that I work in has accepted
all sorts of aspects of how things go.
Someone else controlling how long the interaction can go on,
how the interaction is bounded, what can be said and done,
what medicines can be prescribed,
there's so many external controls in the systems we work in
that we, and I say, me included, like all of us in the field,
have let it get to a place where it's obscenely difficult
to get help, obscenely difficult.
And we should say that's not okay.
I think psychiatrist and therapist and master's level social workers, psychologists, and you
name it.
I think we should all say this is not okay.
And then we as a society should be saying this is not okay.
Otherwise what you're saying, which is, I think, completely true, will only become
worse as there's more and more barriers to getting the help a person needs.
And each time a person isn't helped, it sets the odds against them getting more help.
I should say here that, you know, when I started working, there were times I would send people
to an emergency room, right?
If there was some emergency, you know, emergency in their mental health and they were at risk.
And there were times I'd send somebody to an emergency room where if you stopped and looked,
it would have been malpractice not to do that, right?
Now, it's not just me who has an incredibly high threshold for sending someone to an emergency room
because you send someone who's in a lot of distress and often times
They're sitting on a gurney in a hallway or they're locked in a small white room and all they had was depression
You know they're scared when they go in and 36 hours later
Oh, they're feeling a little better wags are desperate to get out of there and someone sends them home
I mean so our systems have shifted so much that we tolerate now on mass, what is egregious to the individual?
So you are a psychiatrist in terms of doing therapy, psychotherapy. What is the success of
interaction? Look like, perhaps a fun question, perhaps not. What do you think of the psychiatrist
Sean and Goodwill hunting played by Robin Williams? So what is the full range of interesting
interactions? Can there be an intimacy, a friendship, a kind of varied
interaction that kind of blends the lines of, you know, 30 minutes session once a
week or whatever versus versus like a really kind of deliberate long term project that cares about
the well-being of a person across the months and years.
Or is the what can you say about a successful interaction between therapist and patient?
I think we're much better served by the latter, right?
And again, it doesn't have to be over years.
Maybe a person doesn't, a person might need that over weeks. They might need it over months. They might need it
over years. But if I'm understanding correctly, you're describing something that is like a real
human engagement. And like I work in a field that for years and years and years, the patient
didn't get to see the therapist was sitting in a place, sitting
behind the person, right?
So that's not, of course, the only tradition and their aspects of that tradition that can
be very humanized.
But the idea that we're supposed to not be human, I mean, this medicine is shut through
with this, right?
That the doctor's supposed to be God and it protects the doctor.
And that makes its way into therapy and the idea of the superiority,
the therapist knows more.
I mean, in some ways, yes, but the idea is to know more about mechanical things, to know
more about facts and knowledge, not as a human being.
If we approach therapy as a collaborative human endeavor, where if we're going to do it
together,
of course I'm gonna learn from you too, right?
I mean, we're two human beings
and we're talking about things that are deep
and personal and intimate
and I'm not gonna participate in a way
that makes it like about me as much as it's about you,
but we're two humans and what's gone on in me
may have relevance and sharing it may have relevance.
And at times, you doing something back for me may
have relevance. I'll give you an example of a person who would not let me help him. It was a
young man. So when I was in training, who was very, very sick and needed to change certain choices
in habits, or he was not going to survive. And I had no ability to help him whatsoever. And I went
and I saw a supervisor who was
an exoscentually trained. We're here. It's different from existentialism in the
classic sense, but it's about really human connection. And the guy was always
wanting to teach me something, right? Because I can get by in Spanish, but he was
fluent in Spanish. And he wanted to eat, he'd, oh, you traveled here and he'd say,
you know, a word to see if I knew. And I was always directing back to what I was supposed to do, right?
And the supervisor, I've never figured he said, let him teach you Spanish.
Like, okay, come on.
So we had a couple sessions where if you look from the outside,
you say, what is going on there?
Like, right?
Like it was, it was they were Spanish lessons.
Yeah.
To me, right?
Yeah.
And then at some point he brought in his mother and it was, he hadn't brought
her in yet.
And he was in part showing off that he taught me something, right?
And I said a couple of things and he felt more powerful.
Like he was younger than me and he felt sick and disempowered.
But he didn't feel that way once he taught me something and we showed it off to his mother, right?
And his behavior started to change.
He started taking better care of himself.
He could see a little more what I was saying.
I was like, you're a wonderful person.
Like, you love your mother and your aunt,
and they love you.
And like, well, you could start seeing that about himself.
But that came from humanness.
And I think that's the way we help people.
I don't understand why we don't do everything that way.
It's like, we're two humans.
But if you're doing something for me,
then there's something you have an expertise
and I don't, that's why you're doing it for me.
The reverse could be true, but it doesn't mean we're not just two humans doing something
together.
And the healthcare system and the legal system should not get in the way of that.
I mean, there's liability in all these kinds of things that can get in the way of the
humaneness.
I mean, some of that is justified.
You have to be careful.
You have to make sure there's a force responsible, but a little too much can destroy the
humanness.
I'll use it where I don't usually say something is insane.
Like it's not consistent with sanity.
And the presence of the legal system, look, I'm all four.
Of course, physicians have to be held, but to be responsible and everybody makes mistakes
and people to be accountable for their mistakes.
I understand all of that, but what we see now, it's so
absurd that everyone is frightened. Everyone is frightened, and then just looking to like, how do I slot into the box, check the boxes of what I'm supposed to do and not get in trouble. You know, people get sued because someone was at that hospital and that doctor
touched their care. It happens in the VA system. It happens in other systems too.
So you might have touched their care and no one's even saying you did anything wrong
but they say the next person did, oh someone settled on your behalf and now
you have a malpractice. Ding and maybe you can't get a license somewhere else.
Like doctors are terrified and they're license somewhere else. Doctors are terrified for good reason, because the same society that has given doctors
in many ways too much power over time and treated doctors maybe too much like gods, now
is I think enacting some of society's anger and envy out on the physicians.
Even the idea that a person would know what medicine, like I saw a couple TV commercials
give me this.
Like it's interesting, right?
Because even if, let's say I take myself out of it, I doesn't feel good, obviously, but
it takes a while.
It's like, wow, I went to school for eight years for this and you don't even want to hear
my opinion, right?
You're not taking good care of yourself, right?
It doesn't mean you should think my opinion is gospel because I said it, but people then don't have an understanding of like,
what is expertise? What do people learn? How can people help us understand and make better
decisions? It kind of goes out with the wash and then the position of the expert, I mean,
it's a lot of been written about this, right? It gets diminished over time very much to our own peril. And then often with aggression in the medical world coming back towards the alleged expert.
Yeah, expertise is a tricky one, such a tricky thing because
couple with expertise, the attention is this arrogance that can come with expertise.
The arrogance can make the expert feel like they're more of an expert and it's a vicious
cycle.
And then the arrogance in the current in the 21st century, especially with the internet,
the arrogance can completely force the public to distrust the expert because they had all
these seeds that get arrogance versus the expertise.
So ultimately, you have to have, I think, the greatest experts and masters I know are the ones that
have complete humility and gratitude. And gratitude is this back, which is usually a really good sign
that somebody is at the top of their field.
And the little acknowledge that they don't know everything, which is hilarious.
So the best experts I know are the ones that will say that they don't know,
not call themselves an expert.
It's very confusing.
We know that they know a lot but don't know the answer to this.
You see that a lot in medicine.
That person knows they're an expert surgeon,
but they also acknowledge they don't know if this is the right time to operate.
That's how you get to the best answer instead of someone who
is an expert and always knows the answer.
Yeah. If we actually rewind to the beginning of our conversation,
we talked about you mentioned something I wanted to return to.
So there's
layers that are, there's an emergent novelty. And you mentioned that we assume beings that
we introspect on our own mind, we really can't know most of it. Which of course, makes me think
of this, the unconscious mind, subconscious mind, and Carl Jung.
How much is hiding there in the shadows?
You've investigated a lot of trauma.
How much is there in our mind that's not directly accessible to us?
Like, what can you say maybe philosophically about how much is there lurking in the young
in the shadow?
I think there's a tremendous amount there. But I wouldn't,
I don't immediately go to an ominous perspective, right? Because if it's lurking there,
right, it can come get us, right? And to some extent, that's true, right? Exited the sea.
Divivol are there if we want to plant and nurture them. You think good things can't lurk?
I guess. I'm a spring poetic. Yeah. But you're right. You think good things can't lurk? I guess it's a spring poetic.
Yeah, but you're right, you're absolutely right.
And the young and shadow is supposed to not just be dark things,
it's supposed to be everything.
It's supposed to be a lot of positive things as well.
Right, which I think brings us to self-knowledge,
to truth, where I think the opposite of envy, narcissism,
sociopathy, I do think is all rooted in truth. It's both the truth
of the good things about us or the ways we're not, we're not blameable for the blame
worthy for the things we're blaming ourselves for, etc. But the self-knowledge and the truth
and getting away from the reflex of anger, frustration, envy, shame, what I think happens
then is all of that underneath the surface.
If we look at like the consciousness is the top of the iceberg, you know, outside the top.
Say, well, outside the water. So is what's underneath like shifting and it can pull the top
under right or is it supporting the top? And really, I believe is honesty, truth, self-knowledge,
humility, gratitude, all this simple stuff. Good mental health is always consistent with simplicity.
You know, humility, gratitude, or easy things to say, like, we know what that is, right? We understand what that is.
Seething envy by having immense power and subjugating others is getting very, very complicated, right?
What that is and how that plays out. So if we are in touch with
ourselves, if we're honest with ourselves, if we own what's ours, we don't try to
own what's not ours, right? What happens then is something isn't waiting inside of us
to sort of jump us with some new fact of self or challenge of self, right? Then I think
what what happens are phenomena like intrinsic learning, like the way that so much happens inside of us automatically, right?
How people who have high levels of expertise know the answer to complex questions more rapidly, right?
It doesn't take them longer to think through it, but they have more knowledge to think through.
It's that more happens rapidly and unconsciously, so they know the more complex answer more quickly and readily.
And we can build that in ourselves, not just in terms of factual knowledge, but in terms of
how we respond to things. If I make a mistake, do I respond with reflexive shame? If I see someone
has something I'd like, how do I respond? We're more in accord with ourselves, and then the automaticity in us is serving us better. So that's in the
positive. Do you think, do you draw some wisdom from the
early pioneers of psychotherapy like Freud and Jung, that
there's some repressed, there's some stuff to work through.
That is in the unconscious mind.
Yes, I think there's always like 100% of the time.
You have a living human, you have things to work through in the unconscious mind.
There's too much that goes on around us that we might find unacceptable and suppressed.
There can be smaller but important examples. Someone who
feels that they're not a good enough parent and they, I don't know, they drop the child's plate
and there's a feeling about that of badness in them, that the person that can't tolerate and
pushes away, right?
And maybe they become a little bit less confident, a little bit less assertive.
Like, those small examples are important because they may be low valence, but there can be
many, many, many, many, many of them, right?
Then you can look at the opposite end of the spectrum where someone, for example, feels
or that they're repressing their sexuality, right, unconsciously.
Something that is so important, say, to help person,
feels about themselves, to whether they can seek fulfillment,
to how they feel about their ability to interact
and engage with others in ways that are loving
and generative over time.
So from smaller things that accumulate often at rapid pace
to really big things, we are pushing things
into the unconscious because they're not acceptable. And we need to explore, things, we are pushing things into the unconscious
because they're not acceptable and we need to explore.
Like, well, why is that not acceptable?
Maybe there's an unacceptable urge
because it's really not acceptable to me, right?
Like a violent urge.
Maybe there's an unacceptable urge
because I'm actually listening to the lie societies
telling me about what's okay and what's not okay, right?
So in exploring those things, yes, we become
happier and healthier. And that could mean if we're already happier and healthy, happy and healthy,
it gets better. We get more insulated against the negative. Or it can mean the person who's
really nurturing some of those seeds of evil and envy does that less or steps away from it. So
whether it's good or it's bad, it's in there inside of us. And we benefit from
understanding that idea of the observing ego, right? Like you said, the part that can stop and say,
Hey, this is what's this is what I see what's going on in me.
What have you learned about exploring the human mind about the art of conversation?
There's ultimately therapy is conversation. Yeah. Is there something you can put into words?
Yeah, like what? What makes a good conversation? I think language is among the most amazing dicks we have. It's also one of the most clunky routes
to misunderstanding. There's a concept of facticity, things that are like a necessary
evils and from the religious perspective, I think is where the words started.
But of language being like a facticity, right?
That we need to communicate with one another,
we wanna communicate, so we develop words
and we have these amazing brains that can have language.
And that's all well and good, but our fantasy
would be more like Mr. Spock, right?
You know, the Vulcan Mind Mel was like,
I communicate with you because we put our hands
on one another and we know,
you know, by doing this, what we're thinking and what we're feeling and we won't have misunderstanding.
So, because I think we can approximate that, we can come kind of close with language, right?
Or we can be so far away from it that we can say the same word and of opposite meanings and have it generate immediate animosity.
Right?
That we need to be very, very careful with language, with communication, with conversations.
And I've come to understand that much, much more as I've gotten older, both in terms
of how hurtful, you know, reckless speeches, which is why I'm horrified by so much of what
we see in our political discourse,
right? The slurs, the negativity that's attached to something, to some word, you know, how one can
utter something and it can go into another person just into the ear, but then goes through so many parts
of the meaning of the brain that that person feels a pervasive sense of shame or beleaguredness,
right? So yes, reckless language absolutely hurts people. And we see that
all the time in ways that I think are just atrocious. And also how bad miscommunication harmed us. I
mean, I really learned that through a lot of different ways, but in the work as a therapist,
of like really wanting to make sure that I'm really understanding you and you're really understanding
me. And a lot of work goes into that communication.
I think people, we can get into a rhythm of it and then it happens more easily.
But I think it's like, it's a life and death difference at times, you know,
lots of times, right, in the world around us between clear and accurate communication.
And just so I said a word because I think you know what I mean, something like that.
Yeah, so to that, I mean, there's the, the Camus quote that I like is much unhappiness
has come into the world because of things left unsaid.
So that has to do with the clear communication.
But there's also a dance
to a conversation, a poetry to it.
There is ambiguity to language.
And if you have a kind of awareness of that ambiguity
and you play with it, that's where wit and humor come in.
That's allows you to sneak up to difficult topics
without sort of trampling on them.
I don't know.
There's an art to it as well. There's an art to the
silence, you know, just allowing both human beings one of the most intimate things you can share with
the human being is silence. That's communication. It's a different communication but it ties
more powerful. Yeah, giving a person space to accumulate, to integrate, to make sense of their thoughts
enough to say a word, maybe a memory sparks so they can think about that memory and process
that memory.
So it's not just words, it's not just words, right?
Because now you're talking about communication as its body language, its expressions of empathy,
its movements, its pauses, right? Like the communication process is very, very complicated
and deep.
Yeah, and some of that is building trust,
but also challenging a person.
I wonder about that whole process with strangers, for example.
How you do that successfully.
Like you and I just met today,
but I think a lot of our interaction
is very free. We can get to know each other in any way we want. There's a few conversations
I have coming up in general where there's a lot of other pressures and constraints on those
conversations. There's a there's a danger to it. There's risks. There's the political forces involved
like what what what it what it from
not from my perspective, but probably from my as well of how do you say this thing?
What are the words that are going to offend?
Right.
And you're learning that about a stranger at the same time, you know, and you don't.
It's a it's an interesting dance because you have to walk carefully, but deliberately,
right? Carefully because I've learned this about myself,
about others.
There's certain words that can trigger a person,
that can make a person feel poorly,
like shitty about themselves.
So you can push, you can challenge a person about something and they're all totally okay
with it, but if you use a certain word to do it, it's going to, it's, it's, it's maybe
it's a map stitch, some childhood thing that their father, mother used to say or something
like this. And I mean, part of the art of conversation is actually being a little bit
free and using those words, but being extremely sensitive in detecting
when a person reacts to a particular word,
and like storing that away,
is like, okay, we might want to return to that later,
because there might be an interesting,
that could be a tip of an iceberg
that's actually representing something beautiful,
or you might want to just,
it's a nothing word that you just want to avoid
because it's a distraction.
And so all of that kind of has to be integrated into the dance of language. It's a nothing word they just want to avoid because it's a distraction. So, all of that kind of has to be integrated into the dance of language.
It's really interesting, especially when the stakes are really high.
When you get one conversation, when you sit down, you have one conversation and it makes
the difference between, like, say you had one conversation with a patient.
This is the only conversation you get to help sometimes.
It is the case.
Yeah. This is pretty only conversation you get to help. Sometimes it is the case, yeah. And this is pretty high stakes.
Yeah.
Oh man.
Yeah, it's tough.
I guess you get over, and like over time,
I guess you get used to the high stakes nature of it.
We develop an ability and all that on the scale
is processing, right?
Right, right.
All that part of the iceberg that's underneath the surface that on the scale processing, right? Right. Right.
All that part of the iceberg that's underneath the surface is doing all of that, right?
It's reading, you know, behavioral cues, verbal cues and recognizing the primacy of
emotion over logic, right?
If we're all logic, it'd be different.
Okay, we're going to talk about this thing.
I'll say things, you say things back, even if it's politically contentious, say, so
go, where's going to talk logically?
But you know, and that's not the case, right?
There could be a word that raises a certain emotion and you know, you don't want to tread
there because the emotion will color the person's ability to engage.
And so you're aware of all of this.
And then I think from the perspective of all of that, it's like standing on the shoulders
of your own internal giant, right?
That understands, you know,
language and emotions and body language and attunement and history and triggering and all of that.
And then on top of that, as you're standing up on those shoulders, you're trying to be effective,
right? And then I think that's where, you know, effectiveness can be unilateral,
or it can be together. I mean, I think some of what emerged from Victor
Frankl's writing after the Second World War was how much shared humaneness means to us,
how much of that can be an incentive for survival beyond all others. So the idea of, are we
doing something for communicating unilateral? Like, want information from you, or I want you to do a certain
thing when we're done talking, right?
Right?
Don't communicate.
That's a very unilateral type of effectiveness, which can make sense.
Sometimes I want information out of a patient because I want to know what to do next, right?
So it doesn't have to always be negative, but it can also be a tool of manipulation, right?
If someone would say, coming from envy or narcissism, I want to communicate with you in a way that makes you do what I want you to do, right? If someone would say, coming from envy or narcissism, I want to communicate in a, with you in a way that makes you do what I want you to do, right? Different from that is where
it's a shared communication where, you know, there's like an umbrella, so to speak over us,
and we're doing something that we can, oh, that can only happen together because we're us, we're,
the each person, right? And we come together to do something that's a shared effectiveness. Like,
I think we're doing
now of like elucidating and pursuing thoughts and getting ideas out. And I think the best situations
are shared effectiveness situations because you call upon the resourcefulness and the internal
resources of both people. But you, especially with strangers, especially when it's not labeled a therapy session, you kind of actually stumble
into that cooperative state.
Like, you have to organically develop a trust together and almost lose yourself.
Ultimately, I do, I think you put it really nice.
I think successful conversations,
even when it's with like, even if it's like with world leaders or
logicians, people that operate in the space of reason, the most successful conversation will ultimately be
in the layer and the landscape of emotion. That's where the interesting stuff will happen. That's
where you discover anything and that's where the interesting stuff will happen. That's where you'll discover
anything. And that's where you get to actually meet to start getting understanding of each other.
Will you actually mean even by the statements that are supposed to be kind of rationally based?
It's it's it's like you lose yourself. You lose yourself in the way you do when you're
when you're children and you're just not shooting the shit about whatever topic and you just forget yourself.
Forget the least of the context, right? Yeah, well, you kind of plug into the unconscious mind a little bit and you get to speak
maybe indirectly, but to the things that really drive you to the thing that really to the things to the emotions, I suppose, that
the thing that really, to the things, to the emotions, I suppose, that underlie your worldview, I feel like that, that's where productive conversations can happen, whether
it's a patient or just a stranger you're talking to at a bar about geopolitics.
You mentioned Victor Frankl. What would he make of his work, Manstarch, for meaning?
What are the lessons you draw from his work?
A famous psychologist, but also from that very powerful work that reflects on his experience
in a Nazi concentration camp. I think that it was almost a profound reinvention of
reinvention of humaneness, right, after something so awful, so bleak and so despairing, to speak a new about shared humaneness, human connection, meaning,
compassion, that I think it was an intellectual direction that was adorned with all the emotions that we need to adorn the logic with in order to make real change in the world.
And I think that his work has fueled so many branches have come from his work, the existential psychotherapy and its place in helping human
activities today, right?
A trend away from the idea that we're all quite isolated and that what's going on between
us is all very transactional, right?
I'm putting something out and you take it in, you put something out, I take it in, right?
They either know, there's a difference there.
There's a shared humanist that creates a meaning beyond the transaction. Kind of like you were just saying, the logical
stuff isn't really that interesting because you know, the logic is there's an answer to
whatever logic is. We can do math, right? It's where does the surprises come in, right?
Either in terms of wonderful behavior or destructive behavior, right? They're coming from people's emotions. So that's what we want to understand. And that occurs in the context of a person
and other humans, you know, even if it's the conception of someone and other humans as
enemy, you know, or it's the conception of two people sitting together, the idea that
there's a shared humanist and it's not all transactional and that he could take that out of
You know the
a pinnacle of of human tragedy and
Utilize it in a way that informs us
Being better as a species going forward. I think is really monumental. What do you think?
Is the role of emotion in the human mind?
In the human condition?
Because we've talked several times in different ways
that emotion matters, and it's a big part of who we are.
But why is it there?
Why is it useful?
What's good about it?
I, it, it, we've almost said it's almost like a negative thing
that we just have to live with.
But why is it also maybe a beautiful thing?
Yeah. Why do you say, what's the role of emotion?
Emotion is the king if we want to use that analogy.
It's the CEO if you want to use that analogy.
Emotion rules all.
We're taught that we're logical creatures,
but we have innumerable pieces of
data, even over the course of just a day, let alone a human experience to tell us that
is not the truth. Is it ever logical to run into a burning building? No, right? I mean,
the logic's never going to tell one to do that. Okay, so many love is in the building.
The person's already sprinted halfway to the building, right? Emotion rules us. And so the thought, a thought, is some
of that is evolutionary, that strong negative emotion stays with us very, very profoundly.
So, example I'll give is if we're hunter-gatherers and I find a new berry and it tastes good and
it seems nutritious, and it is. It'd be good to remember that, right?
But if I find a new berry and it tastes good
and it seems nutritious and we both eat it
and almost die of sickness, we better remember that, right?
So the, so the primacy of emotion is in us for reasons
that are about survival, that the emotion of it's my child
in that building or my loved one is why I don't give a damn about logic and run into the building, right?
The emotion of, I thought that was good and I got really sick and I better never forget,
it is also about survival.
And the same applies to humans.
If we're from different tribes back then, and in my tribe, when you put your handout,
it's a greeting.
In your tribe, if someone puts their handout, it means, hey, I'm going to attack you and take your stuff.
But then I put my hand out and you slug me, right?
Then it's like, I better remember that, right?
But you see how that can lead into,
you know, our, our, the constructs around that.
I say, oh, people in your tribe are violent, right?
They're, right?
We start then to make stories around that.
But the primacy of emotion, whether it's berries or it's humans in your tribe are violent, right? Do we start then to make stories around that?
But the primacy of emotion, whether it's berries or it's humans who might threaten us or
it's humans we love, I think it's hard to even look at that anthropological, psychological
literature to look at what's out there and I think the face validity, that's part of survival.
Right?
It's part of survival.
It's so cool that you get also things like love,
which you're not often rational or grounded in logic
and so on.
If you look like sort of from a transactional perspective,
a lot of times falling in love,
or whether it's with friends or friendship
or romantic love, it doesn't really make sense.
I'm still not sure what the hell it is.
Because I mean, it's the thing that is one of the things or love for your kids when they're born.
Right. That love, the parental love. What is that? That's so cool that we get to have,
like if you're looking for the, in the menu of
items, the give life meaning, that seems like a pretty good one.
Yeah, so my response, you just said that gives life meaning, my response initially was
going to be, it's the meaning of life, right?
Because saying, okay, emotion is about survival.
That's one part, right?
That's, and it's a very important part, right?
If we don't survive, then we're not there to have emotions, right?
So, yes, it's about survival, but as important as that is, that's the small part of it, right?
I think it is about the meaning of life, because it's about the beyond self.
And I think it relates back to what we talked about at the very beginning and the levels of emergence, right?
And when we feel love, we feel happiness
because that person feels happiness.
There's something that's so generative,
so creative about that.
We wanna bring order to things
and we have happiness that's consistent with simplicity.
If we're healthy, there's nothing negative to say
about our health.
If we have health problems, there's a lot to say.
And it's emotion that pushes us towards the goodness that I think makes all the
meaning for us. I mean, it's interesting. I actually was wondering your thoughts
about this as a scientist, right? Because we accept it by and large that we have
free will, right? We think we have free will. But then we get upset that there's
not justice, right? So, but how is it like if we have free will, I could act in
an unjust way, and then you're surprised, or you know, vice versa, justice, right? So, but how is it, like, if we have free will, I could act in an unjust way,
and then you're surprised, or vice versa is like, why, right?
We have these thoughts because I think,
because we're rooted, we want logic to rule.
Like, there's a way, which I can understand logic,
I can manage it, I can manipulate it.
We sort of want it to be that way.
So then we glorify logic,
and then we misapply it like ideas like, oh, I know we have free will,
but I'm now, you know, shaking my fist at the heavens because there's no justice, right? And I think
maybe what we're looking for is we should go back and look at the givens like, why is there
there's only goodness if there's justice? I mean, that doesn't make I think the goodness, why is
the goodness have to be tied to that, right? Maybe it goes back to the counter entropy
and the fact that when there is something,
there is not nothing, right?
And where there is something, there can be awareness,
there can be goodness, there can be compassion, right?
Is it that what's really going on
is not about justice.
Yes, we have free will, but it's that goodness,
creating, shoring up, making
better, that is the meaning, that is the good, right? And that the evil is the destruction
as evidenced by the fact that it's over determined, probably a million times that we're in this
eddy current of counter entropy. and we could destroy that quite readily,
right? And then we're nothingness, like everything else that we know of that's not us, that
doesn't have the ability to do something that's creative or constructive. I mean, I think
that that's the answer and I think that our science really tells us that that's the answer.
And I think it backends us with ideas like,
we know that things happen outside of space and time, right?
They're, I mean, their physics experiments, right?
Like, we know this from the science of it.
Yet we don't stop and look and say, wait, is that the magic
and the idea, I and science said,
God doesn't play dice with the universe.
I think, okay, maybe God doesn't play dice with the universe
that quantum and determinacy and all of that is not just a flip with the universe, that quantum indeterminacy and all
of that is not just a flip of the coin, so to speak.
But maybe it's in that indeterminacy that we're given the opportunity to assert ourselves,
to make something one way or another.
Maybe it's not God playing dice with the universe, but it's God loading the dice in our favor
if we'll only listen to
truth, the truth that being destructive doesn't help or sue anything, even in the person
who thinks it will for themselves, and that creativity and generativeness and kindness
and compassion.
Like, this is, it doesn't that seems so analogous to the eddy current of counter entropy that
has us here in the first place.
And I think that's where I pin meaning, and that meaning
then going back to the initial question, right, is generated in us through emotion, through
what we feel that leads us to feel something that is mysterious.
I don't know why I feel it.
Yeah, in some sense, the motion is the kind of the fuel that creative imperative we have.
But if you step back and look at the tapestry a little bit, it does seem that the
destruction, the creation of the destruction are the yanging yang of life. That it all works only if
the main engine is towards creativity, but destruction also makes way for new things.
So that's the, this kind of struggle. It seems like life is
struggle between the different forces that make up the individual human, they make up society,
all these tensions are necessary for growth for development. This kind of inner conflict and
outer conflict are necessary for growth. It's not just, I mean, in some sense, it's from the logic aspect,
you kind of want everything to be perfect and just for nobody to suffer for everything to be
perfect. But just like we talked about with trauma, it just seems like it's such a big giant mess.
What does it Bukowski said, fine, would you love and let it kill you? There's some aspect of
let it kill you. There's some aspect of the negative aspect of passion and pursuit and obsession and the turmoil of the pursuit of happiness of the
creative pursuits and all of that. I mean that's part of life as well. I don't
know what to do with that. from an individual perspective in terms of figuring
out how to live a good life, how to you live a healthy life, because it does seem a bit
of hardship or sometimes a lot of hardship, okay, make a pretty interesting life.
I think it brings us back to the discussion that we're having before about what is the
challenges of trauma, and overcoming?
And I think here we gotta be,
and careful with the language,
because I would then say,
let's take destruction,
and separate it into two things.
One is, you say destruction is like,
the breaking down, the tearing down of something,
versus a process that has malice in it, right?
So just like when we were talking about a trauma
and setbacks, things to overcome.
And we'd say, okay, if you say,
hey, you have it harder than the next person
and you have more to overcome,
or someone put a barrier in front of you
for you to overcome,
that there can be a lot of growth in that,
including the times when you don't know,
if you gosh, can I do this, can I get over it?
We're saying that's challenge and something to overcome.
It's very positive, but we're saying,
but there's no benefit of throwing a racial slur in there.
We're saying, because that's all bad.
Even the princess, I'm angry about that.
I'm gonna overcome that.
That didn't need to be.
That didn't make anything better.
If the person sees that and says, I'm going to overcome that, it makes things less worse.
Right?
Right?
But there's no good to something that's created as destructive.
We were like, a forest fire is like, look, controlled burns.
And so there's a forest burning down.
But that's, okay, there's some weakest destruction there.
There's a tearing down there.
But it's in the service of the next fire
not running through the community,
the town that's on the other side of it.
That's very different than a forest fire
as they started by arson.
So you might say they're both a tearing down,
they're a tearing down of the forest,
but one is in the service of goodness,
even though it's hurting the animals and the plants,
it's not all good, right?
But it's in the service of something,
as opposed to something else that's wantonly destructive. I think there's no good to the racial
slur, there's no good to the arson, right? That's destruction in a way that's incorporating,
I think, the malice of envy, you know, something that's really purely, if there's a heen and yang,
that's the destructive, that's the destructive, that's the badness end. So racial slurs is a surface wave of a deeper thing.
And so, I mean, the reason I bring that up is like,
all right, well, like, you have these discussions
of censorship, like, what good does allowing racial slurs
in public communication do, right?
And it's like, our communication would surely be better
if we don't say bad things to each other. But it's like, it seems like the truth is our communication will be
better if the amount of bad things is a small fraction of communication. That seems to be more
true because another aspect of human nature with power, the moment you start censoring and removing bad words
that everyone agrees are bad words, then the people on the at the top, they're doing
the censoring, start getting greedy.
They start, it starts expanding.
And this is the giant mess of human civilization where we can't, the, the, the nice piles you
created are kind of overlapping.
Oh, I, that's the gray area.
Yeah, I agree.
No, I agree.
No, I agree completely.
The control of language, there's slippery slopes there.
I think there's a very big problem there.
So I agree.
I think, again, parsing out the language,
I'm not saying, hey, we shouldn't have racial slurs
as if like, let's stop saying the words.
I mean, the idea is the premise behind it, right?
Like, the prejudices, if we could is the premise behind it, right? Like, you know,
the prejudices, if we could eliminate the prejudice behind it, you know, I was struck,
it said, I do not almost nothing about medicine. I get to medical school and start with anatomy,
right? And it's remarkable as, you know, to see, as the bodies are being dissected, that like
we're all humans. Like, doesn't matter, it doesn't matter
any of these things on the outside.
Like and that's true, not just like in our bodies,
but in our minds, the part of the person that's not there,
because now we're trying to learn from the body.
And it shows how ridiculous it is.
If you think that we're 99 point, how many minds,
percent all alike genetically.
And by the way, it's the only like take another 10th off and we're all orang How many nines, you know, percent all alike genetically. And by the way, it's only like taking another 10th off
and we're all orangutans, right?
So, but somehow we have to see these differences between us,
right? And where does that come from?
And I think that I believe that all comes from envy
in that classical sense that if I don't feel good enough,
I'm gonna want someone to feel better about.
And so there can be visual things that that person looks different, right? Or you think about the, you know,
the, I spent some time in Great Britain and when there's a lot of conflict in between Northern
Ireland and Ireland, right? And you thought, wow, there's not, there's not even a look
difference, right? It's the same general religious umbrella, same ethnicity, but now there's some religious difference.
And I thought, it's not me trying to be denigrating around the Irish complex.
That's human of, oh, there's no actual difference between us.
If I don't feel good about myself, I'm going to find one.
It's that that I believe could go away.
It's driven by maybe the trauma of just being alive in the world and things can happen to us
but we certainly promote in the human created trauma people feeling not good enough finding differences.
There's a place for the envy to attach and we're off to the races of you know wars.
I mean we're talking about the second world war and we think what whether we learned since then we'll take us a day to map out all the wars since then, right?
Let alone for goodness' sake, everything that's sailing right now.
So we're not pretty, we're not good at learning from what seemed to be some very sailing lessons.
I should mention one thing is that I also know that you're interested in Russian culture
a little bit. Churchill said,
I cannot forecast to you the action of Russia. It is a riddle wrapped in a
mystery inside an enigma. So what do you or some interesting differences
between, so the Eastern part of the world of Russia, Ukraine, the Slavic
country, the former Soviet Union, all of that versus sort of the US culture.
What stands out to you from the literature, from the music, from the science, all that kind of stuff?
I think there's so much intensity, intensity, and I guess I would say fearlessness of expression
say fearlessness of expression that I see in the Islamic culture, maybe it's across cultures, because there's a different way that expression occurs. We say, like, oh, it's different, and the
French than the Spanish, or it's different than in parts of Africa. And I think when you take that
part of the world for whatever reason, and maybe it's just totally random, or maybe it's, you know,
it's aspects of geography and experience and migration, but there's such an intensity, and maybe it's just totally random, or maybe it's aspects of geography
and experience and migration, but there's such an intensity.
And I remember listening to Chikovsky very early on, maybe not for the very first time,
early on in my life, or reading Dostoevsky, and feeling like, oh, Dostoevy's willingness, his ability and his willingness to express and create such powerful
aberrant states of human experience, Chikovsky in his music, the depths of suffering that
it expresses, has always stood out to me as a way that like if that's like the brightest
light, so to speak, communicating information information that that's a place to look and it's also a place
that resonated with me so strongly because I think for some people who are
informative years and having very difficult feelings right of like a depth of
feeling of like fear and how's the world going to be am I going to be annihilated
am I what do I even want what do do I feel inside of me to encounter that being expressed so intensely?
I found to be very, very moving.
So I don't know if that's a good answer or not, but I think there's an intensity of expression
and a fearlessness.
You know, Dostoyevsky wrote about terrible things.
You know, what happens in the person?
Is there a person who is brilliant intellectually and
very persuasive and very capable of being effective, who also just chooses to be a child
rapist? He wrote about that. He wrote about the truth of, this is what we can be as humans.
I think there's so many lessons including the truth like people will tend to think
oh evil is not very bright or not very intelligent that's a way to let evil propagate right evil can
be effective and attractive and very compelling but evil nonetheless and I just think there's a
fearless willingness to look at that and to describe it. That I see primarily I've studied in Russian culture.
Yeah, the fearless exploration of this whole human drama, definitely just the
yes-gain other sense in the 20th century and the 19th century have done an incredible job of that.
Some of that, just like you said, is the language of the culture. I think that intense romanticism Tense Romanticism is there that is almost an over dramatic
exploration of human nature.
It can err on the side or falter when it goes into a kind of cynical view of life.
Life is suffering. I think that also has to do with the way you deal with the trauma of the world wars. And so on, this is something
the different nations throughout Europe had to deal with that in different ways. Some
of them have channeled into envy and resentment. Some of them channeled into a kind of nihilism
or cynicism. And ultimately, the intensity of feeling is there, which is sort of interesting
to see and interesting how that manifests itself in the kind of in the kind of governments it builds up.
You know, there's there's more authoritarianism in that part of the world, right, versus
the Western world that's more focused on the individual versus the collective.
And when more focused on the individual, you have a propensity to value individual
rights with democracy and so on. It's interesting to watch and yeah, to reconstruct how that all came
to be. Is it, is it in the blood? Is it in the mind? Is it in some kind of thing that more ethereal,
collective set of ideas that we pass from generation generation between each other. So the collective of it.
Yeah, it's fascinating to see.
But now reinvigorated because there's conflict in that part of the world.
You've also thought about the Cold War.
What lessons about the human mind about psychiatry,, and about looking at the Cold War.
Can we take forward in the 21st century so that we can avoid World War III?
Right.
A major cold or hot war in the 21st century.
Yeah.
Well, I think unspoken animosities are very, very, very dangerous. I mean, right? It was a cold war. There was fighting through proxies.
Right? The superpowers were fighting surrogate wars through proxies, which, of course, in and of itself
causes immense suffering. But it becomes the opposite of an exchange of ideas or an exchange of thought.
You know, I mean, even the Christchurch, right?
Not believing that the kitchen could look like it did at the
world's fair, right?
And, you know, and some of the misconceptions here of like,
what things were like in Russia, right?
It was an utter, it was a thought that those other people are
not actually people, right?
There's an enemy society of evil, which then paints with a broad brush in a way that makes
it easy too easy for the cold war to go from being cold, right, to have a boiling over
into utter destruction.
And I wrote, it was really a true story that when I was in, it was still the Soviet Union,
but it was right around the time of the Soviet Union coming to an end,
and had gone on a trip for students from England.
And we got to go places that people like,
hadn't gone, foreigners hadn't gone in many, many years.
It was just kind of the right timing to experience that.
And it really is true that someone set on short notice
to these poor kids that
that like these group of Americans were coming. And I have a picture somewhere of the to the kid
in a gas mask. Like they went under their desks and put on a gas mask and they thought, right,
that's what I mean, that's what they're taught to think about us and we're taught to think about them. And now we're back in an us of them, right?
When we're all trying to survive and we're all such, human life is so delicate, right?
Let alone human happiness and we make these divisions and we create this aggression and
late integration.
We do the cold world.
We developed the ability to destroy the earth, right? And then just sat looking at one another, you know, with
further growing misunderstanding in the opportunity for the proxy fights, like we're
going to say the Cuban Missile Crisis, which I know was a war, but it's an aspect of that,
right? Where we just have ourselves wildly at risk of destruction without any mutual understanding.
And again, I would argue that that is the opposite
of the counter entropy.
Like we are setting everything up,
but less lack of communication, lack of understanding.
How do those feelings of love and shared humanists happen?
They don't, right?
If you separate people and then we push ourselves more
and more and more towards
reinstating the state of entropy that's present in the rest of the universe. What advice would you give
to young people that are fighting entropy with all their might? So young people and people that are
wondering how to find their way in life. What advice would you give?
How to have a career?
How to have a life that can be proud of?
I think starting off with sort of first principles,
look at what are my values?
How do I want to live life?
Because you know, I'm in my early 50s and when I was a kid,
you know, we waited for the newspaper came in the afternoon
And then you know, and then we'd see something okay. What's going on in the world? We'd learn something
I'd get the West Coast baseball scores, right?
and and learn about oh here's what happened in different parts of the world and
By and large eye and everyone else there adult or child were like living in
Reality that was largely our conception was largely what was around us.
Right?
And now in many ways, it is, I'm not saying it's entirely negative, of course, that we
have more information.
We can sort of think globally, so to speak, right?
But the other side of that is so much of the world's problems are on us all the time.
Right?
Like here's this awful thing that happened, how many awful things happen each day
and they're right in front of us
and there's such an immediacy to it all
that I think it can like paralyze us with terror, right?
And for someone who's young and trying to make their ways,
like how do you figure your way out in this world
that your word isn't even gonna exist, right?
And then you see how profligate the generations
before you are, right? In
so many ways, and there can become, I think, a push towards extremes, either nihilism,
or I'm going to change everything, right? And so how about let's start from, how do I
want to behave in my own community, right? Which starts with like, how do I want to behave
in my household, right? What kind of neighborhood do I want to be? I mean it might seem like things like that are
Silly or small in comparison to the big things, but I don't think they are. I think that's how you know
That's how we start building foundations that let us tackle the big things
And then I do find myself saying when I'm working with sometimes doing therapy with younger people of helping them
kind of bring back their
thoughts their strivings, their decisions, more to themselves and living with and around themselves more instead of
in something that becomes very theoretical and therefore very threatening and unnerving.
So focusing on the people around them, taking one small step at a time to form deeper connections
to build something locally.
How do I want to be today?
If I go into the grocery store and the person in front of me drops something, I can
fucking escalate because I'm in a rush.
I can be like that.
I can be like that.
I've been there way many, many times in my life.
It's never done anyone a damn bit of good, including me.
Or I can realize, like, the 10 seconds
aren't gonna matter.
Can I help pick that thing up?
Or just smile like, these are the seemingly small things
that I think make the tenor of our lives.
Yeah, I moved, I think I mentioned to you offline,
one of the really the main reason I moved to Austin, Texas.
I just remembered deciding it when I went to Walmart and a lady said,
you look handsome in that tie or in that suit and tie, whatever.
Like, I don't think anyone's ever said older ladies, she was very sweet, there's kindness in her eyes.
She said that I don't think anyone ever said anything like that to me in my entire life.
And it was just, I don't know, it was like,
wow, there's kindness in this world.
I know it sounds ridiculous, but like,
it does not sound ridiculous.
And it's like, those, you could be that for somebody.
You go, go walk around and walk them hearts.
Right.
Think that you remember that?
Yeah.
And it's pivotal.
You're citing it as, hey, that was a big part of me moving here.
So think with the branch point in your your life that comes from the simple kindness,
right, of a person who had goodness to give, right?
And wasn't scared that you're going to be upset by it, right?
Right.
Right.
Right.
Right.
She probably didn't have the thought that you could be assailing, right?
Probably she looks at you.
She's got goodness to give.
It's simple to give it.
It's that simple and it's beautiful and it's worth more to you than like how many studies would be on where's it right to live or this
And that matters. It mattered was just that the freedom to be kind and that's emotion. That's not logic at all
That's purely just human emotion and a little bit of humanist that little bit of connection and then
That's what makes life great.
Which is why it's not a bad idea, right?
That you moved here that way.
Instead of one could say, well, I can't believe you did that
instead of looking at all the data and hiring consultants
of what's the best place to live.
But that would be wrong, right?
Like you made a good decision, right?
Like that was good data, it was impactful data,
even in your thoughts about how you're happy living here, right? It's was good data. It was impactful data, even in your thoughts
about how you're happy living here, right? It's not that, oh, you discount, you should change
yourself by not relying on all the logic, right? You felt something about the place and you felt
it as symbolized in a person, and that made the choice for you. It's a balance, of course,
but you also have to know yourself a little bit. Sometimes you can find stability and comfort in kind of
reasoning things out a little bit.
Maybe as people close to me have
sometimes criticized in that I'm a little bit too romantic where I'll just follow the feeling.
And you know life, you know, there's physics. There's a reality to this world.
You know, there's physics. There's a reality to this world. Sometimes
Reality doesn't allow you to flourish if you just follow your feelings, but there's a dance there and
It's happiness is ultimately falling in that landscape of feeling and emotion versus
facts and Reason and logic. Did you say have their place? Right, everything.
Yeah, they have their place.
I do.
I do.
But they're not the be all and end all.
You're an incredible person.
Andrew Hewerman is a friend of yours.
He said, you absolutely must talk, uh,
I call it Dicerati.
The number of people you know,
they're just incredible people.
There's just this group of folks that somehow helped each other flourish and grew together.
And I'm just, I'm so happy you exist.
I'm so happy you're doing the work you're doing.
And can't wait for your second book.
Thank you.
And thank you for talking to me today.
This is really cool.
Thank you so much.
I'm proud to be among the group of people that you cited.
I'm proud to be their friend and proud that you've had me on today. Thank you so much. Thank you Paul. Thanks for listening to this conversation with Paul
Conti. To support this podcast, please check out our sponsors in the description.
And now, let me leave you with some words from Victor Franco.
Everything can be taken from a man, but the last of the human freedoms,
to choose one's attitude in any given set of circumstances.
Thank you for listening and hope to see you next time.
you