Modern Wisdom - #1039 - Connor Beaton - Why Successful Men Always Self-Destruct

Episode Date: December 29, 2025

Connor Beaton is a men’s life coach, founder of ManTalks and an author focusing on men’s wellness and personal growth. Why do so many men struggle with their own inner world? Many grow up believi...ng they must handle life alone, stay tough, and hide their emotions. What helps men become emotionally stable, and how can they learn to work through challenges in healthier, more honest ways? Expect to learn why so many high-functioning men self-destruct in private, why so many men feel “emotionally safe” at work but not at home, the most misunderstood thing about men’s emotional life, what’s an addiction that doesn’t look like addiction, but absolutely behaves like one is, how men can build their self-worth, the traits of an emotionally safe man, why there is a trend to desexualise your brain and much more… Sponsors: See discounts for all the products I use and recommend: https://chriswillx.com/deals Get 35% off your first subscription on the best supplements from Momentous at https://livemomentous.com/modernwisdom Get a Free Sample Pack of LMNT’s most popular flavours with your first purchase at https://drinklmnt.com/modernwisdom New pricing since recording: Function is now just $365, plus get $25 off at https://functionhealth.com/modernwisdom Get a free bottle of D3K2, a Welcome Kit, Travel Packs, plus bonus gifts (US only) when you first subscribe at https://ag1.info/modernwisdom Extra Stuff: Get my free reading list of 100 books to read before you die: https://chriswillx.com/books Try my productivity energy drink Neutonic: https://neutonic.com/modernwisdom Episodes You Might Enjoy: #577 - David Goggins - This Is How To Master Your Life: https://tinyurl.com/43hv6y59 #712 - Dr Jordan Peterson - How To Destroy Your Negative Beliefs: https://tinyurl.com/2rtz7avf #700 - Dr Andrew Huberman - The Secret Tools To Hack Your Brain: https://tinyurl.com/3ccn5vkp - Get In Touch: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/modernwisdompodcast Email: https://chriswillx.com/contact - Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Why do so many high-functioning men self-destruct in private? It's like you're like describing my clients. Oh, boy. I think there's a number of different reasons. There's trying to maintain this image externally. And part of that image is the perfectionist. So there's never any room for downfall. There's never any room for weakness.
Starting point is 00:00:26 There's never any room for problems or issues. And so for a lot of men, that becomes, it becomes something that they start to medicate. And usually that has rooting in childhood, right, that they had to be a certain way in order to garner love, to garner attention. So for a lot of super high-performing men, they're, you know, they grew up in an environment where they kind of had to be perfect. And if they were perfect enough, then they would get affection. Then they would get love.
Starting point is 00:00:54 They'd get praise. They'd get validation. And so for a lot of young guys, it's like a lot of men. in general, it's if I can be perfect enough and I can perform well enough, then everything will be okay. But if that starts to falter just a little bit, then it says something about me personally. It means that something's wrong with me. And then shame starts to creep in and they don't want anybody to know that that's happening. And so slowly over time, because they can't admit that there's something wrong, they can't admit that there's an issue. They can't sort of vocalize it. They
Starting point is 00:01:28 start to medicate that shame or they start to medicate the perceived weakness, the insecurity, the anxiety with booze or weed or women or hookers, whatever it is, right? Whatever their sort of drug choices could be gambling or whatever. And slowly over time, that becomes the method that they need in order to just maintain homeostasis. And it's almost like there's a debt building in the background that's building over time, every little mess up, every little screw up is just sort of accruing this, this massive debt inside of them, and eventually it just craters. And so, you know, in a lot of ways, they need to be able to bring forward some of those weaknesses or insecurities or the anxieties or, you know, the trauma that they've just been holding on
Starting point is 00:02:20 for fucking decades, you know. So I think that's a huge part of it. And I think for a lot of And it's correlated to how, it's correlated to their sense of masculinity and their sense of manhood. So it's like, well, if I admit this weakness, if I admit that I'm struggling, then it means that there's something wrong with me as a man, that I'm less masculine. And I don't think that that's necessarily something that we think about top of mind. It's more performance at all costs. And so I don't want to admit that there's something going on behind the scenes. As you're saying that, I don't know why, but the word toxic masculinity came up,
Starting point is 00:03:00 this actually feels like a kind of place that it suits in a bizarre sort of way, that it's taking traits of masculinity and making them a performance, forcing yourself to perform, and it's a way, not that masculinity itself is toxic, which is what the current version of that is, that this is a way to turn your masculinity into something which becomes like a prison guard in a way that sort of locked you in jail for doing the non-masculine thing, and if you can't necessarily break out of that. So the high-functioning guys are what the world rewards them for in public. They struggle with in private.
Starting point is 00:03:41 Correct. High standards, hypervigilance, neuroticism, obsession, drive, desire for conquer and mastery, lots of competition, lots of comparison between myself and other people. That is a type of pressure. And that pressure causes them to set very high standards. And if they ever fall short of those standards, that causes pain. I am not enough because I have these high standards. These high standards are why I've managed to become so high functioning in the real world.
Starting point is 00:04:11 I'm a hard charging sort of dude. But as fears about not being able to keep up with this work rate that I've already established for myself, my comparison group is getting better and more successful I'm finding it hard like my physiology just can't keep up with the burnouts level that I'm requiring of myself all of these things build up build up build up
Starting point is 00:04:35 and there needs to be some sort of a release valve one of the release valves could be learning self-love, self-compassion having somebody that you can speak to about this, a supportive partner who makes you feel safe and secure in your like vulnerabilities but if you aren't prepared to do that or you don't have access to that
Starting point is 00:04:51 you turn to something else which is also like a pressure release valve is that a fair? That's a fair I think we could probably just summarize it by saying and that this is something that I wrote about in my book years ago which is that in male culture it's very common
Starting point is 00:05:07 that we teach strength through suppression and for high performing men that is way over indexed right so it's I need to develop competency capability strength, whether it's physical, emotional, mental, in the boardroom, whatever, but I'm going to do that by suppressing the unsavory parts of myself. I'm going to suppress, maybe it's empathy.
Starting point is 00:05:31 I'm going to suppress that I'm exhausted. I'm going to suppress these types of things. And there's a cost to that suppression. And so, you know, part of the hallmark of being a great man in society has always been your capacity and capability of suppressing certain things in certain moments so that you could go and do the thing that nobody else wanted to do. Right? It's like Navy SEALs need to suppress certain things in certain moments so that they can get a job done. Same with CEOs and executives and athletes and yada, yada, yada, right? So there's merit in that skill in being able to sort of say, I'm going to put this aside for right now so that I can get this done and execute on something. But for high performers, it's usually that that is
Starting point is 00:06:15 way over-diled. It's over-indexed. And the problem with that is that when some of those things that are being suppressed go undelt with, then, you know, it sort of amasses a ton of psychological energy, right? And so all of a sudden, you're having to keep down years of, I don't really like this fucking job, or I'm disappointed in this marriage, or, you know, this isn't really the way that I thought things would play out, or I feel ashamed of, you know, all of these little micro failures that aren't really a failure to external. people but for me it feels like this monstrous thing you know and so all of a sudden this accumulation of all these suppressed emotions and disappointments and perceived failures start to mass and that has a tremendous amount of energy which then needs to be dealt with and the problem is that how high-performing men have often been taught to deal with those things is that you know we've sort of had this normalized culture of you know drink it off or you know go rub one off and you'll feel
Starting point is 00:07:18 better. And so how we try and hit the reset button on some of those suppression, suppressed emotions is usually maladaptive behaviors. They're not supportive. You know, they don't help you feel better. It's like you go and hire the hooker or, you know, you go and watch the porn or you go and have a bender, you know, and take some molly and go to a rave. And then the next day you're like, fuck, I feel like shit now. You know? And so it kind of compounds things over time. So a lot of high performing men will go on this arc. I think the other thing, maybe I'll just add one more wrench into the mix here, is many high performing men have built high performance off of what I call shame-based motivation, dark motivation. And so part of their fuel source is they're trying to run away
Starting point is 00:08:07 from the man that their father said they'd probably become. They're trying to run away from the shame or the pain that they experienced growing up. And so it's like, I don't want to be a failure at all costs, right? Or I fucking hate myself. And so I'm going to turn myself into this absolute beast that is incredible in, you know, in many different ways. Or, you know, he was like an insecure teenager or something like that. And so what happens for a lot of high performing men is they're actually using shame
Starting point is 00:08:37 as a fuel source. And how they get to a place of excellence is through self. deprecation. And this is very different for women. Like, women don't generally use shame as a fuel source in the same way that we do or pain in the same way that we do. A lot of men will use pain that they're carrying internally to actually motivate themselves towards a goal. And I'm sure you've seen this with so many people that have sat across from you, right, where you start to hear about their story and you're like, holy shit. I mean, the stuff that you went through, the stuff you experience. And so for a lot of high-performing men, what we do is we take that pain, we take that
Starting point is 00:09:16 shame, we take that anger or that rage, and we use that as a fuel source for a period of time. And eventually what happens is it starts to have a net negative outcome. We sort of reach a tipping point where all of a sudden, you know, I've worked with musicians where they get all the accolades and the awards and, you know, they're like world famous rappers or whatever, uh, athletes that, you know, win the Super Bowl and then the crash comes, you know, and why is that? Well, they've been using shame for so long to drive themselves that they've never developed an internal architecture of self-recognition, of real self-recognition. And so they've just tried to motivate themselves to success through shame and self-deprecation.
Starting point is 00:10:04 And so when the accolades come, they can't actually enjoy it. They're not able to, to actually recognize that they've accomplished and achieved something meaningful. And so the whole time that they've been working, that they've been driving themselves and killing themselves and working towards this big, illustrious goal, all of a sudden it comes, and they're not able to actually bask and they're like, wow, I actually did that.
Starting point is 00:10:26 And then the collapse happens, you know, and that's when you see them just fucking crash out, you know, and you see the TMZ stories and shit like that. Is it a bad thing to use your pain as fuel? no i don't think so i mean this is this is the kind of this is the kind of catch 22 about it feels like a paradox it is it is very paradoxical in the and i've sat with this for a long time because i i think my own journey this is very much the same thing you know i used my my own pain my own shame my own you sort of like um rage towards the world to motivate myself for a period of time
Starting point is 00:11:03 and i i don't think it's necessarily a bad thing it's if we don't build the counter tools to support ourselves, the generative tools, to be able to appreciate, acknowledge ourselves, to be able to recognize ourselves for actually doing good, to be able to receive goodness in the moments where we actually achieve, accomplish something. That's when it becomes problematic. So it's not necessarily a bad thing to allow pain or shame to drive us and to motivate us. I think for some people, for a period of time, that's actually maybe necessary because they need to do something to disprove the internal story of I'm a piece of shit. I'm never going to amount to anything.
Starting point is 00:11:47 I'm going to show that, I'm going to show dad, I'm going to show mom that, you know, whatever it is. And so it's not necessarily a bad thing. However, it has a shelf life. And if we don't develop the tools that are meant to go in tandem with it, it's always destined to fail. Always destined to end in some type of a collapse. I find this topic like endlessly fascinating. I think it's so interesting. I had this one insight I've been thinking about recently,
Starting point is 00:12:16 which is an infinite one-rep max. So the idea that most people reach a particular level of pain and that level of pain is maybe before a breakdown, Like the whole point of there being warning signs is that they warn you before the catastrophe occurs, right? You slow down before you get toward the cliff, not as you're going off the cliff and you hit the break as you're going off the edge. I mean, you could do that. It's pointless, right? Like the whole point of the warning signs was to stop you from needing to go off the cliff in the first place.
Starting point is 00:12:52 And one of the things that guys are praised for, and women as well, especially meritocratic capitalist society, blah, blah. if you're able to suppress, if you're able to outwork, out-suffer, be more conscientious, if you're able to put up with discomfort, basically, you're able to do things that most other people wouldn't want to do or couldn't do for longer than other people, society rewards you. So you are praised in public for this thing. But the problem is, that same skill in your private life causes you to be able to put up with the level of suffering that is maladaptive.
Starting point is 00:13:32 Yeah. Like, if you were able to say, I can work 16-hour days, six days a week for a year, for five years to build my startup to make my, congratulations. Can you switch that off when it comes to your current relationship, which is totally talks like in turning your brain inside out? And you go, no, no, no. I'm the David Goggins of suffering. Right.
Starting point is 00:13:55 Like, fuck carrying the boats. I'll carry the whole fleet. Yeah. Like, give me more. Load more of this on to me. And I think the interesting element here is that your capacity that you are praised for in public is toxic in private. And you don't get to compartmentalize it. And the issue with this conversation online a lot of the time is that people are conflating the place that the tool gets used.
Starting point is 00:14:22 Like the tool should be praised and is very useful in the real world. It's useful at your father's funeral. It's useful at the job interview. It's useful when the shit hits the founding. You need to find a new career or whatever. It is not useful when it comes to dealing with your health problems. Right. It is not useful when it comes to dealing with your intimate relationships or the way that you and your friends don't ever see each other or ever open up to each other or whatever.
Starting point is 00:14:53 And this again, why do high functioning men often self-destructural? in private because the same it's like having a sword and the sword having two edges and it being really great on the foreswing and in constantly fucking nicking you on the back swing
Starting point is 00:15:12 right does that make sense it makes total sense yeah I mean there's a I think about this a lot that I think we as modern men have become very unidimensional we become very single singular dimensional that there's a kind of over indexing on these very
Starting point is 00:15:28 specific skills and a letting go of other skill sets that could actually support us. And I think for a lot of high-performing men, that is a huge part of it. And it's challenging because I think one of the things that I remember working, you know, my wife and I have an office in Manhattan and I was working with this client years ago and he owned a hedge fund and massive hedge fund in the city and we started to talk about some stuff that, you know, his success was starting to be impaired because he was dealing with really high levels of anxiety. And his whole life has changed. He had had kids and blah, blah, blah. But he had found himself in this spot where he could cognitively see that the way he had done
Starting point is 00:16:19 things up until that point was no longer going to work. And he could also cognitively see that that he had been suppressing a whole bunch of stuff from his youth, stuff that he had gone through in childhood and decisions that he had made in the past, and he had never really dealt or confronted with any of them. And so he could cognitively see, I know that that's having a net negative impact on me, but I'm terrified to deal with this. And this is the other thing that most hyper-performing men have to deal with
Starting point is 00:16:50 is they're terrified to deal with the things that are actually starting to creator them because they are worried that it's going to hinder their performance to deal with them. So good. So good. Right. So it's like, well, how am I going to perform in my job running this hedge fund, running this venture capital firm, running this tech company, you know, in whatever it is, whatever it is that they're doing, whatever their careers, how am I supposed to perform to make money to provide for myself from my family if I start to dive into this emotional shit? If I'm deep in my feel as well, I'm trying to give a fucking pitch. And it's such a real thing.
Starting point is 00:17:27 It's like if I get cracked open and I start to talk about, you know, the neglect or my father's death or whatever it is, how am I going to function? And so there's this very real fear of if I started to deal with the thing that I know is bringing me down, it's going to bring me down even faster. And for a lot of men, that's the first hurdle. that's the very first hurdle is realizing that you can still function and you can still perform with your heart involved
Starting point is 00:18:00 I guess you could say with a kind of emotional deep dive that you go into stuff from your past being able to go into the things that you've been carrying and it will be different you know it does alter things
Starting point is 00:18:13 it does change things and you know there's a great Jungian psychologist named Dr. James Hawley And he wrote this book called The Middle Passage. And it's all about how we go through this kind of turning in midlife. And we've kind of demonized it in Western culture.
Starting point is 00:18:30 We talk about the midlife crisis, right? People have a midlife crisis. And, you know, dude buys a Porsche or, you know, they get divorced and he gets the, you know, the young woman. And he's like, oh, a midlife crisis. But the middle passage is really meant to be this period of time where all the things that weren't working that you've been ignoring come to the surface, and you're confronted in having to deal with them.
Starting point is 00:18:54 And it's an incredibly important part of maturation psychologically. But we try and bypass that in our culture. We try and get around dealing with the real unsavory parts of our life that we've just suppressed or repressed or ignored or pretend, you know, aren't really there. And it's incredibly important to go through that phase because otherwise maturation can't take place. there's a very interesting correlation between your ability to confront the unsavory truths of your life and maturation. Those two things go hand in hand. The more that you can look at things that are true that you dislike about yourself and your life, the more that you're going to be
Starting point is 00:19:38 able to mature. And for us in Western civilization and Western culture, we don't like the dissent, right? Stock market goes up. And we treat ourselves psychologically in the the same way as the stock market. We should always be growing. And so any type of descent, any type of collapse, any type of falling apart, there's a, there's not only a demonization of that, but we have devalued that period of time because it's brutal. It's hard. And when you hear people talk about it, usually what you'll hear is people have really found a deeper, truer sense of who they are by going through these almost catastrophic periods of time in their life where things completely fall apart everything the business falls apart their sense of self falls
Starting point is 00:20:27 apart their health falls apart the relationship that they thought was so steady falls apart and all of a sudden they're left with now i have to face the truth of what's always been there that i haven't wanted to admit so i think that's a very important part and for high performers they're just better at pushing it down. You know, they're just better at ignoring it for a longer period of time and being very high functional while doing it and then eventually it catches up to them
Starting point is 00:20:54 and usually it's in a moment where everything's come to fruition. You know, it's like everything has happened and everything's great and they're like, yes, and then the collapse, you know? And then in alchemy it's called the Negredo, right? It's called the decay, the blackening, the falling apart.
Starting point is 00:21:10 And so that's the period where we you know things decay and fall apart so that we can you know like a phoenix rise from the ashes again and and be risen anew and a certain sort of like a new way so i feel like maybe maybe you've gone through a little bit of that recently with the health stuff and permanently yeah yeah but like what's that been like because it i mean kind of we're sort of talking about you in a way always this entire podcast is a thinly veiled autobiography um every episode dude fucking thousand and something and it's all just me talking to me. A quick aside, you've probably heard experts like Dr. Ronda Patrick talk about the benefits of
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Starting point is 00:22:57 Certainly has been humbling. Certainly made me realize that the game that I'm playing even if I can win it is not necessarily. the one that I was designed for, and that is tamping down sensitivity, that is not giving myself the level of self-care that I probably need or deserve just because I'm able to outwork my own systems, red lights.
Starting point is 00:23:30 I just take a mallet to all of the warning signs, and I go, like, you know, the classic, like, old car and all of the engine lights are on, but you know that if you whack the dashboard hard enough, the connection drops out for a little bit. singing like whack a mole. Do you guys have that in the UK with like the little moles that pop up? Yeah, yeah. Yeah. Just like, no, no, no. I'm not listening to you. I'm not listening to you. I'm not listening to you. I'm not listening to you. Um, but I think the toxic fuel thing and that being, uh, the concern of, well, if I face this thing, I'm going to be less effective. Maybe the world's going to abandon me. The whole reason that I started using the fuel was to get the world to accept me and want me. And now it kind of does.
Starting point is 00:24:07 So you're telling me that I've got to let go of the thing that I worked to go. to face the thing that I tried to run away from. It seems like a cosmic joke. Yep. It seems so unfair. Yeah. Yeah. Well, I think in many ways it's a reminder that, like, we can't, we just can't run from
Starting point is 00:24:30 the things that we know we need to address and deal with, you know. There's always a toll. There's always a price. And I think in a big way, part of the dilemma that we all have to face as human beings is am I willing to pay the price to get that? Am I willing to pay the price to ignore that? You know, it's like I probably could be more successful in my career, but I'd have to sacrifice my kids. And I'm away from them a lot, as it is. You know, I'm away from them right now to be here.
Starting point is 00:25:05 And every time I leave, it's a conscious choice. And I do believe that, you know, as fathers, we need to venture out into the world and sort of show that for our kids. But there is this sort of trade-off that happens. I'm curious for you as you've kind of gone through that, like, I mean, everything's blown up. Everything's like, I can't imagine how different your life is now from the first time that we had our conversation two years ago. And I know you went through health issues. And so what's it been like for you to have this sort of like meteoric rise and then have something just sort of like stop you dead in your tracks and have to deal with something that
Starting point is 00:25:42 was unexpected it feels a little bit like being a fraud in some ways because you have this perspective of yourself um you have this expectation which you've put on you you have this expectation that you think the world is putting on you too um and you don't really know no one no one actually knows why people like them like no one knows from a content created perspective they don't like your friends will say stuff like dude i i i love how fucking good of a listener you are and like you just always make me feel safe regulate rah rah rah but there's the bit rate of feedback is too low for us to actually be able to understand so you go well maybe it's because like he kept going maybe it's because he showed the consistency or the resilience and yeah to
Starting point is 00:26:27 be completely flatlined and kicked in the nuts by something that you didn't choose to do by something that was, you know, out of your control, it felt scary. It feels like, wow, the thing that I worked my entire life for is just about to be taken away from me. It's through no choice of my own. And I've worked very hard for a long time to make myself into someone that I'm proud of
Starting point is 00:26:49 and my better self slipping through my fingers, through no action of my own. And, again, it feels like a cosmic joke. I think, what would you say to the guy, who looks at the inner child work, the mother wound, the past patterns that haven't yet been dealt with, the accumulation of sort of psychological discomfort like that. And say, I think that's sort of woo bullshit, dude.
Starting point is 00:27:23 Like that doesn't resonate with me. I understand that if you break an arm, you need to put it in a cast, but this is just a question of overcoming suffering. It's noble to do that. It's like the sort of life that I want to live is someone who is stoic who does like just get on with stuff. This, yeah, maybe I've hit some sort of a wall. Maybe I'm sort of broken in pieces on the ground. But the answer to that is to just like David Goggins it and stay hard, as opposed to Eckhart Tolley it and like remind myself that I'm enough already.
Starting point is 00:27:54 Yeah, I mean, I do think that it's a bit of both, you know. I do think that part of the challenge that a lot of. lot of men have with therapy and therapy cultures that has become hyperfeminized and so I think when men look at that oftentimes it's like it doesn't resonate it feels too woo-woo it feels to sort of like soft skills but I think it really is about a quest of knowing thyself and you know for for every man they're going to have a journey and an inflection point where they have to decide am I going to learn about who I am through trial and error and external experiences, or am I going to put on this, you know, the psychological scuba diving mask and go in
Starting point is 00:28:42 and actually see who the fuck I am. And I think it's easier for men to say, I'll just go out in the world, right? I'll just go build some shit. Because the truth is that the scariest place to be is inside of yourself. That's the truth. Most men know that, you know, barring some extreme situations and wars zones and stuff like that. But for the majority of men, for a lot of the men that I've worked with, I've worked with Navy SEALs, I've worked with executives, I've worked with artists and
Starting point is 00:29:11 athletes, and every single man that I've ever worked with, the most terrifying thing for them is the truth of who they are. Because there's parts of them that they do not understand. And that's scary. There's parts of themselves that are out of control, and that's terrifying. And so I think for what I would say to those men is it sounds like you're not really willing to get in the arena with yourself, period. And you can find a medium that works for you, right? Gagin's found a medium that seems to work for him, which is, that's not my medium, right? I don't want to get up at 5 a.m. or 4 a.m. every single day and run until my knees are grinding bones against each other. This is just not it for me. I want to push myself physically for sure, and I want to big.
Starting point is 00:29:58 things and pushed myself from an entrepreneurial standpoint for sure. But there is something to be said for the courage and the bravery that it takes to go in to who you actually are as a human being and start to discover the unsavory parts of yourself. You know, you only had this great saying that the real work of a man is, the real work of men is to discover their own shadow. and if they can do that, they've done something meaningful for the world. And what he meant by that was if you don't understand your own
Starting point is 00:30:34 maladaptive behaviors, your own sabotage mechanisms, if you don't understand how you are harming other people, then you are, you're essentially passing on harm out into the world, onto other people, inadvertently to your kids or your family members or your friends. and that's not really what I don't know how else to say but it's like that's not really where
Starting point is 00:31:01 men find a sense of meaning and purpose like in many ways the archetypes of great kings and great men they are the men that are servants to others and how they go about doing that is by deeply understanding who they are and so I think for a lot of men when I hear that I'm like you're scared to know who you really are you're actually just afraid and that's okay, but don't fucking lie to me that you're just not afraid of who you actually are because so many times I've sat with men and I'll say, close your eyes.
Starting point is 00:31:32 And the challenge that that man will have, he'll be a killer in the boardroom. He will be a killer on the football field. And I'll say, sit down, close your eyes, take a breath, tell me what's happening inside of you. An immediate confrontation. So we as men are sculpting. it through confrontation.
Starting point is 00:31:53 Masculinity in some ways requires confrontation. And I think change requires confrontation. Any type of psychological change requires confrontation. I think the challenge is that some men are afraid of the confrontation with themselves. What do you thoughts on that? I think it's superbly accurate. I think it makes for a very interesting redefinition of the word bravery, especially for men. uh that emotionality uh tapping into yourself being in touch with who you really are uh is
Starting point is 00:32:32 seen as a kind of weakness and yet so much of that that i see among guys is like a sex-based gaslighting um i think i think is i think that's one of the things that's made you very successful It's those little sex-based... Where did they even come from, Chris? I don't know. Sex-based gaslighting. Try and tell me it doesn't fit, though.
Starting point is 00:32:57 It's fucking perfect. It is because you're scared of what's inside of you. As a man, you're terrified of looking inside of yourself. You're terrified of being in touch with your emotions. You're terrified of your heart.
Starting point is 00:33:09 Don't pretend like you're not. And don't pretend like the guys who are prepared to face it are somehow lesser. Right. Right. It's like, you know, I do martialites.
Starting point is 00:33:20 I do Muay Thai a couple times a week. I absolutely love it. I love knowing that I can, like, you know, kick some dude in the side of the head. That's like six, you know, six foot two. But I also am not afraid of how I'm feeling. And I do think that, I think this is what I was talking about before,
Starting point is 00:33:36 which is that we've become so one-dimensional. We've over-indexed on, like, one specific thing. And that hasn't been, that hasn't been the truth for men throughout human history. I mean, when you look at, when you look at, when you look at, men from different walks of life and, you know, like the Spartans, right? They do hand-to-hand combat, sword training, fighting in groups, and then in the afternoon they would learn how to
Starting point is 00:34:00 write poetry and dance and play music. So it's always been a part of our development as men. It's just recently in the last 100 plus years that we've sort of condensed men down into this one dimension. And it's great if you want to pop out factory workers. It's great if you want to produce armies of people, armies of men, that their sole job for 10 hours a day is to put a fucking handle on an ice cream bucket. You know, it's like you don't want a human being that's thinking about, how do I feel about doing this? You don't want that, right?
Starting point is 00:34:37 Because that's not useful, because then that person's not going to be useful. So again, I think we're entering into this territory. And I think this is what is causing a lot of part of what's causing a lot of the challenges in modern dating is that women have become much broader in the sense that, you know, they still have network, they still have community, but they've learned how to compete with men. And I think that largely we as men have not adapted and figured out how to compete with women. I think that we are terrible at competing with women, because women compete far different. They compete way differently than we do as men. We as men, we compete through competition, through competency.
Starting point is 00:35:19 It's like, I'm going to outwork you. I'm going to be more competent than you. I'm going to be more capable than you. I'm going to figure out the systems and get better at it than you. And women have figured out how to do that as well, but they also have this whole other skill set of emotional intelligence, of being able to create network, of being able to socialize. And along with that, character assassinate, right?
Starting point is 00:35:42 Like, to take you out in ways that we just don't. You didn't even see coming. You didn't even see coming. All of a sudden, you're like, why is Becky from HR, pulling me in and like reprimanding me, like, what the hell just happened? And so I think that's very intimidating for some men. I think it's very confusing because we've kind of been sold this bill of goods that if you just prioritize competency and capability, then you should rise through the ladder of culture and society. And you should be able to be successful with women.
Starting point is 00:36:12 And I think that that is really in jeopardy right now. I think there's this big kind of tug-a-war for whether or not that's going to be true or not. And you still have men that are outliers, that that is true, that because they're so successful, because they have high status and yada, yada, yada, that still works. But I think for the average guy that's becoming harder and harder. Have you seen the new stats, you know, hypogamy, the word hypergamy, favorite of the romantic pill. I call the red pill the romantic pill. That's great.
Starting point is 00:36:42 That's great. I like that. The romantic pill. Because everyone that's in the red pill is a romantic. Everybody, every single guy that's in the red pill is a romantic. Some are failed, some are successful, but fundamentally they want to find and be loved by a woman. Yeah, it's the romantic bill. That's great.
Starting point is 00:37:00 Hypergamy. The bottom two quintiles of men in terms of earning and the top quintile in terms of women for earning have the female as the primary breadwinner in the household now. That's in the U.S. So the bottom 40% of guys who earn are dating up socioeconomically and the top 20% of women earners are dating down socioeconomically. So that is getting squeezed a lot. And how long have I been fucking screaming about this tall girl problem thing? Again, another great meme. If women are socioeconomically successful soon enough, they're going to stand on the top of their own competence hierarchy, look across and find very few men.
Starting point is 00:37:46 the men that are there have a wealth of opportunity, so they're going to use and discard women. So, yeah, we are at this interesting tug of war, but I think it's not really even a tug anymore. It's like it's happened. It's happened and it's happening. We're fully in it. Correct. Yeah. And we're just trying to sort of pick up the pieces. And for women, what it's felt like objectively is a lot of gain, lots of gains, right? I've now got degrees. There's more women getting like, I think it's creeping up. up into master's and doctorate degrees now as well. So it's not just that they're getting it at
Starting point is 00:38:20 undergrad. More degrees, they earn more than guys up to the age of 30, 31. Now that's continuing to creep up as well. And you go, that just seems like a boon. Now there are prices that women are going to pay. And those are going to be ones that are much harder to quantify quality of life, eight out of ten women that don't have kids and breach their reproductive window, don't say that they didn't intend to not have children. Yeah. So, or say that they didn't intend to not have children, sorry. What this means is the prices that women and, like, the feminism problem or the femininity
Starting point is 00:38:56 problem, suppose to the masculinity problem, are going to be felt later further down the line and they're going to be more subtle and they're going to be much more psychological, or at least much more hidden, I think. But objectively, guys are already in it. Yeah. They're in it right now. In other news, you've probably heard me talk about element before, and that's because I am frankly dependent on it. And it's how I've started my day every single morning. This is the
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Starting point is 00:40:18 I'm heading to drinklmnt.com slash modern wisdom. That's drinklmnt.com slash modern wisdom. Yeah, we're in it. I mean, the decline of men is staggering. You know, when you look at the stats and the data of, you know, there's less men going to college than ever before. You know, by 2030, you're going to have two women
Starting point is 00:40:40 graduating with degrees for every one man, right? And when you look at the women that graduate from college, they statistically want men with college degrees. They want to date men with college degrees, right? So we're creating a population of men that a lot of women don't, that they say they don't necessarily want to date on paper, right? So you have less men going to college, you have less men in the workforce. I mean, there's a huge amount of men. It's something like six or seven million American men are not in the workforce right now. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So you have this massive exodus from the workforce.
Starting point is 00:41:15 You have more young men that are 30 living at home than ever before. You have more young men not dating, right? So, like, I feel like Scott Galler right now. I can hear Scott just like listing off the stats, right? It's like, you know, 40% of men of the age of 30 haven't approached a woman in the last year and haven't had sex with women in the last year. And so I think that when you look socially and economically, young men really are in decline. And I think the problem with that is that when we go to talk about young men
Starting point is 00:41:46 men's problems and how we can alter society or create social programs for men to actually support them, it all hell breaks loose. You know, it just turns into a kind of, you know, misandry fest. It's like man hate just becomes very apparent when you start to talk about men's problems and men's issues. But it feels like it's taking resources away from some other more deserving group. That's why. It's a zero-sum view of empathy and resources. Totally.
Starting point is 00:42:15 Yeah. Yeah. And I think that hierarchies have just shifted, right? And so there's the power distribution is not going towards men anymore. And I think that that is very hard for a lot of people to come the terms with. I think it's also detrimental for our society and our culture. And I do think that young men have, I think they have a hard time. I think that as a culture, we've,
Starting point is 00:42:40 forgotten how hard it is to to take a young boy and turn him into a man and to get him through that period of going through puberty having testosterone wanting to basically like you know fight fucking feed crash out entirely and and get him into manhood in a functional way and so i think we almost have like a type of amnesia with how hard it is to turn a young boy into a man i think I think it's very, very challenging. And so, and then when we look at the social programs for young men and boys, they're few and far between, right? So you have young boys that don't have father figures at home, you know, one in four kids in America don't have a father figure in the household. You have young boys that are going to go into an education system that is female
Starting point is 00:43:28 dominated, so they're not going to have role models at home, not going to have role models in the school system. If they go through a therapeutic vein because they're having problems, that's dominated by women as well. And so there's a kind of vacancy. There's like a male role model vacancy. And for a lot of young boys, there's that what they're looking for is a type of transmission from men around how do I get through this process. How do I go from being this boy or being this adolescence into being somebody who can regulate, who can deal with the intensity of his anger, who can deal with, you know, the fear of the rejection of talking to a woman in a coffee shop or at the grocery store. And so I think that that absence is really crushing for a lot of young men.
Starting point is 00:44:16 And then I think when you couple that with the parenting style that we've gone through in the last couple of decades, which is like the helicopter parent, it has completely debilitated a lot of young men. There's two simple things that the parenting data that basically shows when it comes to raising a healthy child, whether it's a boy or girl, is that you need high standards and high support. You need those two things. You need really good, solid standards of here's what I expect from you. I want to help you develop, I want you to develop competency in these different areas, and then high support. I'm also going to help you to do those things. What a lot of young boys grow up with is extremely high standards with very high standards with very.
Starting point is 00:44:59 very little support, right? It's like, I expect you to get the high grades. I expect you to be exceptional at hockey or lacrosse or basketball, whatever it is, but I'm not actually going to teach you how to do those things. I'm not going to support you to do that. Or in the last couple decades, we've had the inverse, right, where it's been like, it's okay, honey, you got 10th place. It's all right. No worries. No standards, no expectations, no nothing. And for that young man, he's like, well, fuck, is this it then? Am I just supposed to, okay, I guess I'll just play video games and jerk off watching Pornhub, you know? Like, nobody expects anything from me,
Starting point is 00:45:31 and culture is telling me that I'm the problem. So I'm just going to check out. So I think that you have this intersection of problems that are creating a shitstorm for young men. What are some of the traits of an emotionally safe man? Well, first, I think you need to have the ability to regulate your own nervous system. So you need to have some,
Starting point is 00:45:57 level of competency over your own emotional awareness. You need to have an understanding of what's happening inside of you. If you don't know or you're not able to identify what's happening inside of yourself emotionally when you're angry, when you feel shamed, when you feel anxious, when you feel sad, when you feel embarrassed, if you don't, if you can't differentiate between those things or identify them and then be able to regulate yourself through them so that you don't lash out and get reactive and get defensive all the time or, you know, you get rejected for a phone number or at the coffee shop or whatever and you dissolve into a puddle of like, oh my God, I'm such a piece of shit, which I understand. I've been there. I actually have been there. You know,
Starting point is 00:46:40 I like was that guy when I was a teenager. Rejection was brutal. But if you aren't able to understand what's happening inside of you and move yourself through it, it's going to be very, very challenging to do that for anybody else. So that's kind of like the, first place, the first step. And then secondly, I think you need to have the capacity to draw out emotional content. And this is a skill set that far few men learn. I think what we learn as men is get the content logistically, get the logistical content. Like what happened? When did it happen? What did it look like? You know, like we get all those details. But what we don't ask is, what was that actually like for you?
Starting point is 00:47:25 You know, what was it like for you when your boss was pissed off or when you fucked up the presentation? What was that like for you? What happened inside of you? And so that's another skill set that I think a lot of young men need is to be able to draw out emotional content. Tell me what that was like. What happened?
Starting point is 00:47:42 How did you feel in that moment? You know, when she said that, when he did that, what was that like? And those simple things are going to create a connection, a bridge for the other person to say, oh, this person is interested in how I'm feeling. And so I think for a lot of men, just showing I have interest in what's happening inside of you is also the next step. And then being to respond and not react, a lot of the times we personalize the shit out of,
Starting point is 00:48:16 especially women's, the women that we're dating, but we personalize what other people are saying. And so you might have your girlfriend or your wife talking about something and, you know, she's talking about how she was disappointed in her mom or some argument with you. And all of a sudden it's like, well, did I do something wrong? And how could I have done that better? And what's wrong with me? And so a lot of men collapse in to a type of defensiveness or reactivity to go on the attack, to character assassinate, to, you know, sort of just defend themselves in that moment. And so we need to be able to regulate and then respond. versus just reacting from whatever emotion comes up inside of us when somebody else is talking.
Starting point is 00:48:58 And sometimes that means that we have to be able to hear what somebody is saying to us and about us without becoming defensive, without becoming reactive. How do you do that? Your breath is a big part of it. Like, I think this is just a very simple thing. Like, your breath is a huge piece of regulating your nervous system. And so, you know, for a lot of guys that I work with, when they, there's this moment, Victor Franco has this beautiful phrase, which is between stimulus and response, there is a pause.
Starting point is 00:49:31 And we have to be able to feel that pause. So for a lot of guys, as soon as they hear hard content, you know, it's like you forgot something and your partner's upset. And she's like, how could you have forgotten to do that? I asked you. I texted you. And all of a sudden, the shame and the guilt and that, you know, the heaviness. It's like, fuck.
Starting point is 00:49:48 Oh, fuck I fucked up. or like the defensiveness that happens, being able to literally take some breaths so that the emotional intensity and the charge that has happened inside of you can subside a little bit instead of immediately reacting from that place. What most of us do as men
Starting point is 00:50:07 is immediately react from that place. So we're reacting from the shame. We're reacting from the anger. We're reacting from the defensiveness and the embarrassment. And so what I teach a lot of men is just like take three breaths before you respond. I know it sounds super simple and super,
Starting point is 00:50:24 it's like so simple that it sounds dumb. But if you can just start to interrupt the pattern of reacting immediately from an emotion, you can create a new pathway of being able to take some breaths so that you can quote unquote downregulate your system. Or at the very least, you can get some awareness of what is happening inside of me.
Starting point is 00:50:45 So take a breath, understand what's happening. inside of yourself and then you can either choose to set that aside or you can voice it right it's like oh i hear you and i feel really defensive so i'm going to pause you know or i get what you're saying and you're right i totally forgot to do that i'll take care of it so you you don't personalize what's happening and you're able to actually stay with your experience the mindfulness gap is what my meditation teacher referred to it out yes space uh i certainly know the periods in my life where i've had that the most there's a few incidents that were really
Starting point is 00:51:24 really funny where somebody um got very agitated like this guy in a nandoes i was in in the u k i was with my friends always use this as an example it's so funny and this guy sort of always nandoes had him i know i know scum uh i'm very working class which is why Nando's for me is a huge treat. I walked past his table. He kicked off at me because he thought that I got too close. And this was like deep, deep, deep meditation mode me. Like this was the peak monk mode, three hour morning routine, like gratitude.
Starting point is 00:52:00 This is when I was doing, I think, a thousand days sober and 500 days without caffeine at the same time. Oh. The alcohol thing's great. The caffeine thing's fucking miserable and pointless. but was a good lesson to learn anyway this guy kicks off and because i don't know he was obviously having a bad day like he was obviously on the edge he was having a bad day and i remember like watching this thing unfold and i just turned around and said oh and kept on walking and he'd made this big sort of explosion oh let me give you this you're gonna fucking love this you got
Starting point is 00:52:33 new joe hudson yet have i got you into joe art of accomplishment guy yeah yeah he stinks of you so idea called vagal authority. You already know what it means, right? Like you're in a room, somebody's nervous system is dysregulated, somebody's is regulated, which way does the rest of the room go? And which way do you go? That guy there, I held the vagal authority. Now, I'm not sure if he was able to take my regulation and go back to his family and be like, I don't think I should have blown up that much. That guy just warped near my table. Yeah, maybe not. But the idea that I am so regulated that not only can I keep myself where I want to be while you are doing something else, but also I maybe have so much surplus that you can kind of borrow from it.
Starting point is 00:53:22 Like my cup is so full that the saucer that overflows around it can fill yours up. Yes. And yeah, when I think about emotional safety, that regulation piece is a huge part. But I guess a lot of guys will worry, of fear, how do I build emotional safety? range without losing my grounding or my strength or my attractiveness, my admiration from my partner and from people around me. We'll get back to talking in just one second, but first, if you have been feeling a bit sluggish, your testosterone levels might be the problem. They play a huge role in your energy, your focus and your performance. But most people have no idea where there's
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Starting point is 00:54:38 bucks, get the exact same blood panels that I get, and save that $100 by going to the link in the description below or heading to functionhealth.com slash modern wisdom. That's functionhealth.com slash modern wisdom. Well, I think that that's when you, what I'm really talking about is a type of emotional containment, but is containment not through suppression? It's not by cutting yourself off from what you feel. It's not about, you know, beheading your emotions or numbing yourself out from them. It's actually by gaining a mastery through deeply understanding and feeling what you're feeling in any given moment to the degree that they do not control you. For the average man, what happens is that they feel something and they become something. They feel anger and they become
Starting point is 00:55:25 angry. They feel shame and they're shameful. Right. And so the emotion comes up and then they become that emotion. And then they respond from that emotion. They react from that emotion versus, oh, there's that emotion. I know that I'm feeling that emotion. And I can feel that emotion, but I can still have enough space from that emotion that I can still respond in a grounded way. And this, this type of emotional containment, this type of emotional regulation is really what when you look at people like Marcus Aurelius, when you look at really great leaders, when you look at Aragon, I did this video about, you know, the masculinity of Aragorn from Lord of the Rings, which is super fucking nerdy, but I'm kind of a nerd, so I thought I would do it.
Starting point is 00:56:10 It's becoming a man who is capable of dealing with the intensity and the charge within himself so that he can learn to deal with the intensity and the charge of others. That is a gift, right? That is a gift that we as men can provide the world, can provide our children, can provide our friends, can provide our family, the women in our life. and for a lot of women, that is what they're saying when they say, I want safety, I want emotional attunement. Now, it's not your job to make all women safe. That's kind of impossible. It's not your job to do that. It's also not your job to, you know, help the woman that you're dating feel better all
Starting point is 00:56:53 the time. That's people pleasing and codependency and all that other type of stuff. But what you can bring is containment. And sometimes that containment can look different ways. It can be, be, you know, your partner, your girlfriend, or your wife saying something that's crossing a line that's like a little bit of a jab or an edge. And you saying, I didn't like that. Don't do that again. I love you. I don't like when you talk to me like that. And it's not a threat. It's not angry. You're not blowing up. Oh, why are you fucking do this to me all the time? Oh, I hate when you talk to me like that. It's just clear, grounded boundaries. And but you need to have emotional connection to be able to attune to the information of oh that wasn't okay that pissed me off
Starting point is 00:57:41 that made me feel embarrassed that made me feel shame and so emotions are just data they're just data and we as men the i think the men that become the real leaders of the future i think the men that become really successful in the future, whether it's with women or in the business world, are going to be men that are exceptionally emotionally attuned, that are able to read the data that's happening inside of them and not be numbed out or completely disconnected, but be able to understand that there's a very real intensity inside of them. And the interesting thing is that when you look at something like
Starting point is 00:58:23 the neurology and the data around emotions between men and women, It's generally that women will feel more emotions more often, and men will feel singular emotions more intensely. And so men generally will stay in an emotion for a longer period of time, and they'll stay in an intensity of that emotion. This is why you have guys that are like, you know, they'll stay in their depression for ages and ages and ages, right? They'll stay in their anxiety or their anger. They'll stay angry and frustrated. You know, days on end and they're holding grudges and they're not talking to anybody. for days and they're cutting people off they're just in that intensity of that emotions so i think
Starting point is 00:59:05 the more that we as men can learn how to deal with the charge inside of ourselves through the breath through awareness of like what is actually happening inside of me without saying something's fucking wrong with me because i have emotions or you know i'm like it's emotional competency that's what it really is it's being able to have emotional competency and say like oh you know I felt angry when you said that. I don't like when you did that. That wasn't okay with me. Or I really loved when you did X, Y, and Z.
Starting point is 00:59:38 And that type of emotional attunement to ourselves and then to others is like a superpower for men. And I think that for a lot of women, it's really what they're asking for. And I'm not saying that we as men should do that to give them that. I think that we should do that because it allows us a certain level of meaning and depth that I think most men are deeply craving, you know, deeply craving. And how are you supposed to walk through life with a sense of purpose and meaning if you're disconnected from the data of your own emotions? It's so hard.
Starting point is 01:00:21 And we need those things to set boundaries, to know when things are okay and not okay. We need those things for relationships and trust and safety, but we also need those things for leadership. Like the men that are going to be leaders of the future will have an exceptional level of emotional literacy, and they will have a very high capacity to regulate their nervous system. When you look at today's culture and society, people are fucked. Their nervous systems are fucked. And so who are people turning to? They're turning to people who have said, I'm able to navigate the shitstorm of the chaos of our times, the chaos of our social media and our culture and the uncertainty of whether AI is going to destroy us all and climate's going to kill everything and da-da-da-da, most people's nervous systems are so hijacked. And so if you're a man who's able to regulate your nervous system in your relationship and in a work setting in a genuine meaningful way without needing to numb yourself out constantly and chronically through booze or weed or porn or whatever it is, and you can do it in a genuine way that is aligned with your values, you're going to be unstoppable.
Starting point is 01:01:36 You're going to be unstoppable because you will be signaling to women. I have done something that most men haven't done. Because most women know that for the majority of men, it's extremely hard to put on the scuba diving mask and go inside and confront the dragon within, the beast inside of ourselves. Most women know that that's something that we as men are afraid of. And so women are largely in our culture, I think, saying,
Starting point is 01:02:05 I really am craving a man that has met himself, that's confronted himself, that's met his own demons and his own darkness, and knows his violence, and knows what makes him dangerous. That is, I think, what men are really being asked to do. And I feel bad for a lot of the young men, because so many of them are either finding the sort of like false gods of masculinity, or there's just a vacancy entirely. You know, there's just a they can see. The choice is between extreme and void. Yeah. Yeah. And you're going to take extreme every single time. Yeah. Because it's better to be given some advice that sounds right but may not be than no advice at all, because that sounds like, that feels like being lost. It's,
Starting point is 01:02:52 it's my biggest problem with progressive liberal, um, talking points around masculinity and men is that there's, there's no target. There's no aim. It's a, it's a, it's a, it's a, It's a continuous laundry list of the things that you should not do. So there's no actual aim or definition. There's no trajectory that you can point yourself towards and say, I want to become that. I want to move in that direction. That is something that I can ascend towards.
Starting point is 01:03:27 The vagal decapitation that you were talking about, that like, you know, person who only lives above the neck. Yeah. I'm going to keep going. I've had Mnutonic today, dude. I'm going to keep naming shit that you're going to start taking those. I'm going to keep naming shit that you came up with. Hey, do you want one for your The Turning or whatever it was, the Narrow Path
Starting point is 01:03:46 The Turning thing? Yes, yes. Manopause. Oh, manopause. Yeah. That's good. Yeah, yeah, yeah. That's true.
Starting point is 01:03:52 Works on many levels. It's true. The thing that comes to mind and what I'm particularly fascinated about is almost objection handling some of the stuff that comes up, that will come up for guys that I've seen online a loss. I think one of the first objections earlier on is, well, that toxic fuel has helped me to be successful. Also, I turned that toxic fuel. I alchemized that bad thing into something good. Is that not something I should be proud of? Another element might be, in order for me to delve into this, I feel like my real
Starting point is 01:04:26 world performance is going to dip, and it very well may do. Tiger Woods had this issue with his swing that he developed as a young golfer that he needed to. purposefully go back and fix. So he needed to adjust his hand position, adjust his back swing, because there's too many variables in that. Why are you going in? You said Tiger Wedd had a problem. I was like with Swedish bikini models. Yeah, yeah, yeah. He had many problems. This is before that. This was before that. This was in the confines of his sport. He had to basically unlearn, which is a hundred times harder than learning. Yes. He had to unlearn and then relearn in order to get to the next level. But that required
Starting point is 01:05:00 a false peak. He got to as good as he was going to be with this. He had to, to go back and then come back up. So I think even if you do go, well, look, you might, real world effectiveness might be reduced if you crack yourself open in this sort of a way. For a period of time, yeah. Correct. Yeah. And in my experience, that's true. That's true. I just need to put it out there. I know that you said, you know, you can show up in an open-hearted way, in a blah, blah, blah. The first couple of years of trying to feel feelings fucking blow, dude, I'm just going to be upfront about it. I got it. But another one of the objections is the world to me seems to be split largely into two groups.
Starting point is 01:05:41 People who know that they should be feeling emotions and either are or are not. And people who just don't feel emotions that deeply or are so good at repressing them that functionally it's the same thing. And these two groups constantly argue between each other. The second group, the group that doesn't necessarily feel emotions quite so deeply, the Tim Kennedys of the world, for instance. I actually think that David Goggins is a bad example of this because I think he does feel things very deeply, which is what's caused him to go and do something so extreme as a mechanism for him to be able to alchemize it. Tim Kennedy would be an example of somebody who, at least in my experience, slightly less so. If you're a sniper, a green beret, all that
Starting point is 01:06:24 stuff, that tends to not be your archetype. For them, when they start to talk about, well, the opening up of emotions, I don't even know what you're talking about, tapping into inner child wounds, doing the shadow work, alchemy, things falling apart, the phoenix, all this stuff. It doesn't resonate that much with me. And also on the female side of this are the sort of women who would see a man opening up in that way and think less of him, who would see a man that wants to try and have a deeply connected, heartfelt, emotionally aware, emotionally mature relationship that not only experiences emotions, but talks about them and works on them together to transcend and include them.
Starting point is 01:07:03 that group of people who are would be wonderful for them all to just get together but unfortunately sometimes they cross over and you have the guys that don't feel with the girls that do and the guys who do feel with the girls that don't or don't take it in the manner that they want it to and I think just identifying
Starting point is 01:07:24 hey if you're a dude who has the horrible affliction of actually feeling things as far as I can see you have two choices the first one is to actually open the bank account of this emotional inheritance
Starting point is 01:07:45 and have a look at what's inside of it and do the work on it the second one is to be floating above your life like a hovercraft for the rest of time like you're never like being a poltergeist you're like haunting your own existence you never actually come into contact
Starting point is 01:08:01 with your own life fully that advice is not for the group of guys that don't feel stuff quite so deeply and it's that group I think that often tends to throw shit well maybe it's not maybe it is the I don't want to have to feel the thing that I know I should feel perhaps it comes from both directions
Starting point is 01:08:22 but this is like trying to speak Arabic to a dog or something a dog that doesn't speak Arabic as well it's just never going to work on that second group but I think what I'm trying to say is if you are the sort of guy who really feels things very deeply I think that you have a beautiful
Starting point is 01:08:40 adventure ahead of you but it's fucking terrifying and you have a almost like a burden or a cost to pay or a demon to slay that some of the guys might not and they've got other ones but your one is to put the scuba mask on
Starting point is 01:08:54 and go diving yeah if you're the guy that and I really do it feels like a curse, you know, at first, um, to have such a soft heart. You know, it does. When like when I was a, when I was a boy, I mean, I, I had such a soft heart, you know, I was just, you know, my parents got divorced when I was three. I remember so many nights just crying because my dad was gone. And I look back and I was like, man, I was a really big feeling kid, you know? And,
Starting point is 01:09:30 life had a way of hardening me up. But I think for a lot of men, we look at that, we look at that and we say, oh, if I'm a big feeler, either there's something wrong with me or that's a curse that I have to deal with, so let me numb it out.
Starting point is 01:09:46 And numbness is not a sign of emotional vacancy for the majority of men. Numbness is a sign of emotional fullness, that you are overcapacity. Numbness is not emotional vacancy. It is emotional fullness. It's that your system, has become overridden with too much emotions.
Starting point is 01:10:04 And so your brain's only way to deal with that is to say, let me just turn off the sensor. Let me shut down the like inflow of information of everything that's going on down there. Hit the dashboard, get the warning light off, right? So I think you have to start to look at it as whether or not you're going to choose to go on that journey and confront
Starting point is 01:10:30 that truth about yourself and learn how to deal with this gift that exists inside of you. It really is a beautiful gift. How do you think about guys who have that disposition, where do you think they find their self-worth from? Because it seems to me, especially in the modern world, the group that doesn't feel is able to trade on their masculinity publicly in a different way. It's much more observable. it's much more obvious it's more classic accomplishment doing
Starting point is 01:11:03 yeah archetypal again the objection of well not only is it going to maybe make me worse for a little while and I've got to feel all of these things and it's going to be really hard and I've managed to survive so long without doing it and the stuff that I alchemized was for me avoiding it not me diving into it and now you're going to say that maybe the world's going to laugh at me a little bit too
Starting point is 01:11:22 how do you think about building self-esteem as holding on to self-esteem holding on to things to be proud of in a world that doesn't especially in the messy middle bit which is where presumably most guys get stuck before you've got to Marcus Aurelius level
Starting point is 01:11:42 where everyone goes oh my God the vagal authority in the guy he's so fucking I don't know what it is he just makes me feel like calm and secure when I'm around him I don't really know what's going on but there's something before you get to that you're this dude that's like trying to decode the fucking like da Vinci project here yeah how how should guys think about finding that self-esteem and that sort of pride on the journey there's a very
Starting point is 01:12:11 simple truth and equation around developing worth which is confronting and doing hard things that you know are hard that you know you need to do always develop a sense of worth and value. And so if you are a man that has, you're just a big feeler, you know, you're a big softy inside, and you have this, you know, beautiful treasure trove of emotions
Starting point is 01:12:40 that no one's really ever ushered you into understanding. No one's really ever taught you what to do with them, how to handle them, how to deal with that intensity that lives inside of you, you have to choose whether or not you're going to address them. And I think what you said is accurate, that if you don't, you'll always kind of be a ghost floating around in your own body.
Starting point is 01:13:03 You know, because you will be cutting yourself off from a part of who you actually are. You'll literally be disassociating from a part of who you are. You'll feel like you got shunted to the side of the road of your own life. Correct. And a basic psychological principle is that when we fracture off from something that is true, it creates mental suffering. So. That's interesting. Tell me more about that.
Starting point is 01:13:28 Well, if you're in, if you're in great shape and you look in the mirror and you look at your body and you think, fuck, I look like shit. But objectively and even subjectively, there's a part of yourself that knows, like, actually I'm in great shape, you start to suffer because you are fractured off from a sense of truth. If anxiety is another version of this, right, all of a sudden in a moment where you're just like, your body's pinging off the alarm bells. are going off inside of your body and you're like sitting at home watching Netflix. And you're like, I should be safe.
Starting point is 01:13:59 I am objectively safe. But my body is telling me that I'm not. So you're fractured off from the truth of your reality. So coherence and congruency. Yeah, I love that one. Coherence and congruency are mental well-being. The more you can align yourself objectively and subjectively,
Starting point is 01:14:22 with what is true, the more that you actually develop mental wellness. So if you have a lot of emotions inside of you and you are ignoring those emotions, how you feel about things and the intensity with which you feel about those things, you are going to create more and more suffering by ignoring those. It's just, that's a fundamental truth of our psychological well-being and our emotional well-being. And you're going to have to deploy a disproportionate amount of energy to try and ignore what you're feeling internally. So you're going to you're going to cut yourself off of the knees in some way, shape, or form. Whether you will, you know, chronically be confused. This is a case that I see for a lot of men. They have big emotions. They ignore
Starting point is 01:15:08 their emotions, but then they're chronically confused about whether or not a relationship was right for them, whether or not the career is right for them, whether or not they're moving in the right direction. They're just generally lost, and there's like an ambiguity and a haze that shows up for them psychologically. Why? Well, because they've cut themselves off from a huge amount of data and information of what is true in themselves and in their life. So they can never find clarity because they don't have any emotional clarity. So they're just lost because they're trying to find the truth of their life purely through rationale and logic, completely ignoring emotional truth and data. So they can never find truth.
Starting point is 01:15:48 find a path forward. They can never find meaning and purpose because they're, they've over-indexed on rationality. So we have to move more towards coherence and congruency. And as we do that, as we get more in alignment with what is true, then we produce more psychological well-being. That's the outcome. So if what's true is that you have a lot of emotions and you feel incompetent at dealing with those emotions, then, or you are just ignoring those emotions and pretending like they're not there, you're going to create emotional dis-ease and discomfort
Starting point is 01:16:26 and suffering within yourself. But if you acknowledge and you say, you know what, I have all these emotions. They're super intense. Sometimes I'm anxious, sometimes angry, sometimes in this. But I have really intense emotions. And what's true is I fucking suck at dealing with them. And what I was taught growing up was just to disassociate from them.
Starting point is 01:16:47 Well, now you have a truth. The truth is, I need to become more competent at feeling my feelings and moving through them so that they don't take charge of my life because there's something important there. And then you have a pathway forward. And that is a form of confrontation, but it's a form of aligning yourself with the truth. For the other guys that don't have the big emotions, you know, they probably land on the scale of being, likely having higher levels of the dark triad, higher levels of psychopathy, lower levels of empathy,
Starting point is 01:17:21 lower levels of agreeableness, extremely disagreeable. And, you know, we could talk about why that may or may not have happened. It may be a psychological disposition, predisposition. Or it could just be that that's neurologically how they were designed and their nervous system was designed and there's just not a real connection between what's happening in their bodies and their emotional bodies and their mind.
Starting point is 01:17:46 Those men will either get to a place in their life where they realize that the void of empathy is so catastrophic that they have to address it and then go about the journey of understanding how to develop a different sense of empathy, a different sense of compassion,
Starting point is 01:18:10 and maybe they don't feel the full spectrum of emotions that are there. But I think that these cases are fewer and far between. I think that generally speaking, more men have more intense emotions inside of them that they just are ill-equipped to deal with, and they don't want to admit that, because admitting a lack of competency as a man, especially a high-performing man, is like the worst fucking thing that we could do.
Starting point is 01:18:37 And so we don't want to do that. but I think that for for the other men that genuinely are just like I don't feel a lot and I don't believe that it's because of childhood trauma or you know something that caused this this maladaptive way of of moving through and I just have higher levels of I don't give a shit and I just go forward it's not to say that that's bad or wrong or that it's worse or anything else it's just that at some point in your life you will likely have to develop and work hard on developing. empathy and compassion and either you can proactively do it or you will systematically destroy enough relationships and opportunities in your life that you will come to the point where you will be forced into a kind of submission into a kind of like knee lock or an arm bar where you're like oh look at the wake of destruction that I have left I'm four marriages deep shit I wonder why or like I've destroyed five business relationships and imploded two companies and all All of my former employees fucking hate me.
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Starting point is 01:21:08 like them. Yeah. Yeah, yeah. They are. But up front, the guy who is incessantly using alcohol on a nighttime, for instance, would be one that's pretty obvious, even if they can't necessarily see it themselves eventually, they probably will. For instance, a switchout for that, which I think people kid themselves over sleeping pills. I think using an RX to go to sleep. If you need a stimulant to get you up in the morning and an RX to get you to sleep at night, that's probably the closest or the earliest warning sign that burnout is on route
Starting point is 01:21:44 because you you literally can't start without assistance and you can't stop without assistance either you're having to use a fucking firework to get you up in the morning
Starting point is 01:21:54 and a hammer to get to sleep but it's the sort of thing everybody uses caffeine you know everybody you know like fucking okay I use a bit of adderol dude like fucking whatever like yeah but if you're slamming like
Starting point is 01:22:05 you know eight nine milligram nicotine pouches every single day. I mean, that's become a common one, right? I mean, I've seen all the videos of the guys like flipping the nicotine pouches in and sooo-it. Have you seen those? No, what's that?
Starting point is 01:22:20 Okay, somebody in the comments section will have my back. All right, go, go, go. There's a bunch of guys that have, like, they take the nicotine pouches and they toss it in in like a really magical way, and they're like, sui, and they'll do this thing, and there's a whole culture around it. Okay. So, but, yeah, I mean, you know, nicotine pouches.
Starting point is 01:22:37 which is, are a big one. Screens, video games? Screams, video games, work, you know, I think is a very socially acceptable one, right? It's like the more that you work that's sort of like this addiction that's socially acceptable. And I think just being busy, just being like the chronically busy person, you know, it's like, how are you? Oh, I'm so busy. Let me, let me stroke myself while I tell you how busy I am, you know, and like all the things. But that's part of our culture, right?
Starting point is 01:23:09 It's very socially acceptable. It doesn't look like an addiction, but I think that many of us are addicted to being busy. You know, sometimes I'll give my clients an assignment of doing nothing for a day. I'll say, put your phone at home and go do nothing. No plan, no agenda, no tasks, no outcome, nothing for you to do, go and do nothing. And the first question that most guys say is, but what am I supposed to do? And I'm like, that's it, right?
Starting point is 01:23:38 Literally, I want you to go and do nothing. But they're so addicted to wake up in the morning, emails, notifications, starting, you know, getting the days, you know, they're working all day long and crushing it, accomplishing, that there's no off switch for that. Justin, my friend, worked with a coach who got him to, he had to start a hobby that he promised he wouldn't try to get better at. Which, it sticks with my mind.
Starting point is 01:24:05 He told me my birthday, like three years ago, it still sticks in my mind now. It's such an insanely difficult thing to think about doing. And he said, what did he take up? It was that water coloring, I think. So I used to be a musician. I'd like to, I'd like to, you know,
Starting point is 01:24:20 learn to make paintings. Wouldn't that be cool? Yeah. And as soon as he does it and he thinks, well, that was, you know, that was all right. He wants to go on YouTube and look at tutorials. He wants to research what's the best water coloring set. He wants to start optimizing the canvas.
Starting point is 01:24:32 How do I master this? Exactly. And his coach said to him, no, you're not allowed to try and get better. You just have to do it for the enjoyment of doing it. And is it telic and exotelic? The difference between done for its own sake and done because of the reward that you get externally for having done it.
Starting point is 01:24:54 Right. And I think that the desire for progress a lot of the time is you sacrificing the telic for the exotelic. Yeah. Right. It's like, well, if I get better at this, then people will be real impressed. Well, I think that this speaks to, again, I mean, one of the things that I've been talking about lately is that how we as men versus women develop a sense of identity. And we as men are so culturally and socially conditioned to develop identity through competition-based efforts, activities, through doing things that are about achievements and accomplishments and competency.
Starting point is 01:25:31 And that's largely there because we, as men, will usually coordinate ourselves in a hierarchical way. And we're okay with doing that. You know, that's part of the equation for the majority of men is that there's this either spoken or unspoken hierarchy that starts to form within friend groups, within high schools and colleges and on the sports team, there's like this jockeying for position that naturally happens. And even in friend groups today, usually for a lot of men, it's like, you know, how successful you are, how much you're doing, how much you're accomplishing,
Starting point is 01:26:05 you know, that kind of stuff. I've been in rooms with guys who are super successful, and one of the subtle ways that this happens is everybody always turns their chairs to angle slightly toward the person who's like the head of the table. Even on a circular or a rectangular table, everybody slightly does that. Or when that person starts speaking, more people shut up. Most people, all of them shut up. I've been in rooms with certain guys where if they fart, the rest of the room will decide
Starting point is 01:26:30 to be quiet. It's like, well, we, no, no, no, he wasn't talking. It's okay. And that's this kind of respect that guys want from other men. And rightly so, like, wow, I'm the top of the tree. Like, isn't this great? I've spare resources. I've got assistance when I need that women are going to see me because I'm at the top of my competence hierarchy.
Starting point is 01:26:49 Yeah, yeah, yeah. Well, that's true. But I think that largely women coordinate in a different way. They coordinate through network, you know, through community, through relationships. And it's almost... Way harder. It's almost full... Way harder.
Starting point is 01:27:01 dude fucking so not cool so not fucking easy to understand uh this is why the goal the movie mean girls was made that's right that is how women compete yeah and it's totally foreign underdog is how men compete yeah but punching each other in the face and working out who won and then being friends after totally yeah but i think i think that part of being a girl dude part of the challenge that I think a lot of men are having is that, you know, we are used to competing in hierarchies. We're used to that system. But now our culture and society has moved towards a network-based form of competition. And I think for a lot of men, they don't know how to compete in that environment because it's completely different rules. And what is, what is that, is that
Starting point is 01:27:51 who you know, friendships, allegiances? You almost never want to profess that you are better than anybody else. It's this female minimization of competency. That's right. They come out of the exam and they go, you're going to have done so well. No, no, no, me. You did it.
Starting point is 01:28:13 You know, it's like the women hanging out and it's like, you know, Becky clearly doesn't look great and she's put on a low way. But it's like, you're so beautiful. You're the most beautiful one, Becky. It's like you can't admit any type of hierarchy. It's a faux paw within the network organization. and I think for for men that's not how we operate you know we it's like dude what's happened
Starting point is 01:28:34 you're like you've put on some pounds hey you know like what's going on I thought you said you're going to hit the gym like what's happening so I think for a lot of guys it's there's in the workplace that's showing up but I also think in relationships that's showing up because there's just like these these skill sets that we don't that are not sort of like second nature to us that we're having to learn. And I think in a lot of ways, like the school systems are not teaching us that. So, you know, there's like a, again, there's like a vacancy there. How many men have mommy issues? I don't know a percentage, but I mean, I think that, I think that for a lot of guys, if you're a people pleaser, if you're a nice guy, you, you know, you have mommy issues. And for a lot of guys
Starting point is 01:29:22 that, um, have you ever heard of the Madonna horror complex? Yeah. I thought that was disproven, but yeah, go ahead. The Madonna Heart Complex? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, at least from an EP perspective. The only reason, the only reason I say this, I first read it in, not Steve Stewart Williams, Robert writes The Moral Animal from 1993, and I remember one of my EP friends saying that that didn't show up in the data, but I was like, but every single guy. would say that it does.
Starting point is 01:29:58 Yeah, that it, well, I think it's more of, this is where I think things like evolutionary psychology are, are challenging because part of our psychology is, there's a lot of research coming out around right brain development and the development in the unconscious. There's a guy named Alan Shore who has done some phenomenal, phenomenal work.
Starting point is 01:30:18 He's got a book called Right Brain Psychology and Developmentally Unconscious, unconscious and it is astounding when you see how our unconscious mind which is a huge part of how we identify but a huge part of how we relate to others is actually developed and formed and you know a lot of it is within the first three years but the main part of it is that your unconscious doesn't work like your conscious mind does right it works through archetypes and myths and stories and symbolism. And for a lot of men, they do fall into this kind of Madonna
Starting point is 01:30:56 Hoare Complex because they have... You're going to have to explain what it is. Madonna Hor Complex is when the sort of Coles notes of it, or Cliff Notes, I remember what they have here in America. But the short version of it is that you fall in love with a woman and you project the kind of puritanical, idealistic version and view of a woman onto her. Jung would say that you project the purest version of your anima, of your own feminine within your psyche onto her.
Starting point is 01:31:26 And you start to treat her as this very sort of perfect, pure, wonderful version of the feminine that you never want to sully, you never want to mistreat, you never want to any of those things. And so what happens is that you sort of bifurcate your vision of that woman. and you never interact with her by bringing maybe the truth of disappointment to her or when you're upset or when she's done something that you didn't like and so resentment starts to build and you bifurcate your own sexual desires for her this is the big part of the madonna whore complex
Starting point is 01:32:04 that for a lot of men they will find a woman that they love and that they really want to be with but they find themselves not being able to bring the sort of sexual vitality that they've had in past relationships to this woman that they really love and that they really admire. And this is where a lot of infidelity happens, is that a man will be with a woman
Starting point is 01:32:25 that he wants to have kids with and marry and that he really loves and yada, yada, yada, yada, yada. But he takes the primal sexual nature within himself how he wants to actually be in the bedroom and does not bring that to the Madonna. Why? Because that would be, that would be, I don't know what the word I could use,
Starting point is 01:32:49 but like sullying or bringing down, desecrating the Virgin Mary, right, desecrating the Madonna, desecrating this image of this very pure, loving, kind, nurturing embodiment of the feminine. What's the genesis of that? Great question. So you can grow up with a mother that you held in that esteem, right? If you grew up in an environment where you had this mother that, you know she was maybe a single mom and your dad wasn't in the picture and so she was your only primary attachment and she was very loving and nurturing and kind and so you kind of idolized her
Starting point is 01:33:29 and there's there's this idolization that happened or the inverse is usually very common right mom was disconnected she neglected you she was abandoning she was harmful or abusive and so you created a a kind of character or an archetype in your mind in your mind of the ideal woman that you wanted to be with, if only mom was like this, I'd be happy. If only mom was just loving and kind, I'd be happy. And so that archetype exists inside of your unconscious
Starting point is 01:34:00 and it lives inside of there. And you kind of walk through the world looking at women saying, I wonder which one is going to fulfill this. And then you project that onto the women that you start to date. And eventually you find a woman that's like, she meets all the right requirements, and it just goes heavy, you know, gets projected onto her really heavily.
Starting point is 01:34:19 And so this sort of, this projection of the idealistic woman gets layered over top of the woman that's actually in front of you. It's a very specific type of idealistic woman, right? Because you could say, I want an ideal woman in the bedroom, and that would be on the other side. Right. Yeah. And so what a lot of men end up doing is that they find these types of,
Starting point is 01:34:40 they find this woman, they fall in love, it's like everything that they've ever wanted, but there's parts of themselves that they never bring into the relationship. So they're usually, some of the characteristics are like, they're usually completely annihilated whenever that woman is disappointed, right? She's disappointed, she's upset, he's done something. It's like catastrophic for that man. She's usually on a pedestal.
Starting point is 01:35:07 So you have this like one up, one down type of dynamic where she's the, you know, over functioning and he's the chronic underfunctioning. right? Everything that's wrong in the relationship is because of him and, you know, he's always doing something wrong. And this is his perspective. That's his perspective, right? It might not be her perspective. And slowly he'll start to withhold parts of himself. He'll withhold maybe the more aggressive part of himself or he'll withhold his boundaries. He'll withhold his wants and needs and desires. So he'll withhold all these things. This is like classic people pleasers and nice guys. And they'll withhold all these parts. but they'll also withhold those, like, primal sexual energy. So the ways that they want to engage sexually with that woman, they'll withhold those. And then it has nowhere to go, and then they'll find a whore, right? They'll find an archetype of the whore,
Starting point is 01:36:00 whether it's through pornography and OnlyFans Girl, the porn that they're watching, or, you know, somebody that they start to idolize online or somebody that they actually find. And so I see a lot of men that are unfaithful that have gone through this cycle is that they've bifurcated their vision or they've separated out
Starting point is 01:36:19 their vision of the woman that they're with and they've taken parts of themselves that they would normally want to bring into the relationship and either tried to kill them off like, oh, that's not okay, that primal way that I want to be with that woman, I'm going to try and kill that off, or they just have a different place
Starting point is 01:36:39 that they get that need met, right? Porn, only fans, etc. how do guys combine the two it's pretty uncomfortable you have to start to bring those more usually primal elements um that you would bring to a one night stand yeah to a one night stand or you know to a woman that you like you weren't in love with or you know uh or even just the more primal elements of admitting that you're disappointed or that you're upset or that you're angry So you have to start to take up some more territory. You have to start to have needs. You have to have some desires. You have to let those needs and those desires be known within the relationship and start to say,
Starting point is 01:37:22 you know what, I've never actually told you what I want. I've never actually told you what my expectations are. I've never actually told you what it is that I desire, you know, in the bedroom. And so I'm going to start to expose some of these things and bring them forward. And you start to do that slowly and incrementally and consistently. And you start to bring that more shadow-oriented, or primal self back into the relationship. And it can be challenging because what starts to happen
Starting point is 01:37:48 is that that woman slowly comes off the pedestal. And your projections of the feminine start to, you know, get taken off of her. Because for a lot of men, what happens is that they, they project onto the women the parts of themselves that they feel deficient in, right? So she's so compassionate. She's so loving.
Starting point is 01:38:09 And meanwhile, inside of him, he lacks self-compassion he's not loving to himself at all he's you know ripping himself a new asshole every single time he fucks up so we start to dismantle this this pure perfect image of that woman and if the funny thing is is that if that man stays with that woman for long enough stays with the madonna for long enough she will slowly turn into medusa seriously so she'll slowly turn into this embodiment of what he resents and what he hates and he'll kind of become bitter and she'll become this archetype of something that he has disdain for and contempt towards and a lot of that is because he hasn't brought forward his needs wants and desires his expectations so he starts to see her
Starting point is 01:39:00 this madonna he starts to see her as the embodiment of everything that refuses to meet his needs when it's actually him refusing to bring forward what he needs wants and desires. You haven't asked? How could you expect this person to deliver you? It's fucking Neil Straussie. It's always, Neil Straussie. Always, always, always, always. Unspoken expectations are premeditated resentments.
Starting point is 01:39:25 It always is. Yes. And it just completely captures the issue of poor communication. But poor communication is just the end result of, well, maybe you didn't have the bravery to look at your emotions. Well, maybe you're so busy that you don't have time to feel your emotions. Well, maybe you're so sedated that you don't have time, you know, like go back down the stack to find where the genesis of this was. So, yeah, when people talk about, you know, good communication is important. It's like, yeah, but you don't fix that by just communicating more.
Starting point is 01:39:55 Right. Because the communication needs to say something and where's the origin of the thing that you're going to say. Yeah. It's done there. It's in there. It's done there. Yeah. And so you have to again there's no change without confrontation right so for a lot of men they have to confront the truth that's inside of them they have to confront here's the need that i have here's the want that i have here's the expectation of the desire that i have that i've been just chronically withholding from the relationship and then to start to slowly bring that forward knowing that it's going to alter the image that you have of that woman what if in doing that uh as I certainly see stories from guys online about I had this girl on a pedestal.
Starting point is 01:40:39 I learned about her past, and it was sort of an ick. To me, I sort of almost have a fear of this Madonna being sullied into a hall by somebody that isn't me. That's a kind of fragility around that perspective. Or of bringing this in and of maybe not seeing her as the perfect embodiment, white as snow, managing the transition from Madonna to amateur singer how do guys
Starting point is 01:41:08 deal with that that pivot there it's going from being goddess immortal maybe another way to look at it yeah I mean I think part of it is for those men you are pedestaling that woman because you are used to be
Starting point is 01:41:28 in a subservient position with women and not used to being on equal ground so for a lot of these men there's if you're emotionally uh if you care if you're emotionally intimate with them so you're happy to be you're happy to be on the pedestal but only if you're going to discard them afterward that's right yeah so what men will what will often do and I see this so so often it's it's wild is that we'll toggle back and forth between this right we'll have have the women that are like the one night stands or that you know that we're friends with benefits with and there's no real emotional connection there's no desire for a relationship there it's fun it's exciting you can express whatever the hell you want sexually there's a complete sexual freedom
Starting point is 01:42:13 and then there's the women that you fall in love with and all of that shits out the window right and it's like there's a huge challenge which with bridging the gap and actually having a relationship with a woman where both of those things coincide and And there's this very strange, like, inverse relationship between the more that you pedestal a woman, the less that you feel worthy of her, right? It's like the saying, like, when you pedestal a woman, don't be surprised when you find her looking down on you. But that usually is because a man has grown up as a young boy, either needing to idolize his mother or he created an image of the ideal mother that did not exist. in his life, that he had a mother who, you know, was an addict or she was abusive or, you know, she was cycling through men and she was just unsafe or whatever it was, right? And so he,
Starting point is 01:43:11 he had to create the image of an ideal mother that he ultimately needed. And then what happens is he falls in love with a woman and he projects that image of that ideal mother unintentionally on to her. And of course, you don't want to fuck your mother, right? So what ends up happening is there's a type of impotency that starts to show up in those types of relationships. And it's not true impotency in the sense that he can't get it up ever or whatever, but he's not bringing his own potency, whether it's, here's my boundary, or I'm upset with you, or I didn't like that, or that's not okay, or here's what I need, you know, here are my expectations in the relationship, or here's what want to explore sexually in the bedroom. Those things get completely omitted, and he finds himself
Starting point is 01:43:59 in a more subservient relationship. Such an interesting dynamic. One other one that causes that impotency that I see a lot of guys talking about is navigating the transition from honeymoon phase to like passionate love to companion at love. And the sort of deceleration in drive sexually that comes from familiarity, kind of knowing all of the tricks. Complacency. Killer. Okay, so how do guys navigate the
Starting point is 01:44:31 nine-month hump, 18-month hump of going from this girl's hot as fuck, and all I want to do is horrendous things to the lower half of her body. So now, I don't know, man, I'm a bit tired tonight.
Starting point is 01:44:47 Yeah. A couple of things. The first thing is bringing what I call expectationless desire back into your relationship. So a lot of the times when a relationship exits that honeymoon phase where it's like hot and heavy and it's super intense, and then you kind of get into a groove and complacency starts to set in and all of a sudden, you know, it's seven, eight o'clock a night,
Starting point is 01:45:12 you both have your sweatpants on and the TV's on and you're just fucking chilling out. That type of complacency really erodes sexual intimacy and polarity. in charge. Over time, over time, because comfort, comfort and safety, it's like you do want safety a lot of times when you, you know, when you want sexual polarity, there has to be some level of safety there, but comfort over time can be a killer because you really fall into grooves that lead to complacency. So for a lot of men, what I talk about is bringing expectationless desire to table, which means that you just start to bring, whenever you look at her and you feel that like a little bit of excitement of like, oh, she looks really good today or like, hmm, we haven't had sex in a
Starting point is 01:45:59 while or whatever, that you bring that to her, whether it's through, you know, a look, a touch, a comment, and you start to bring that to her without the expectation that it needs to lead to sex. What ends up happening when a lot of couples get into this complacency state where desire has completely dropped, is that men, we stop making those comments. We stop initiating those types of pieces. We stop bringing this like, I'm aroused by you, or I desire you, or, you know, I find you exciting. And we also start to really fall back into this complacency place where maybe we want the other person to initiate or, you know, some resentment has started to build up or, you know, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, and we see them for, you know, see them in a different way, but we stop bringing these, like, little pieces of excitement and desire, and that simple act of just bringing expectationless desire so that you're not expecting sex to happen, read in that moment, can really refuel things, because when complacency sets in, what happens is, it pressurizes when sex is going to happen.
Starting point is 01:47:15 so slowly over time it's like it's been two days it's been three days it's been four days and then what happens for a lot of guys is like oh when is this going to happen and they start to track right and the like calendar comes out and like I've had guys that
Starting point is 01:47:28 you know it's like they've done the math they've got a fucking spreadsheet of like when rejection happened 320 hours since the last time I asked it's been 500 hours since exactly but there's been you know every time they've brought desire expectation
Starting point is 01:47:43 to you know their girlfriend or their wife every time that they've brought desire or arousal to them it's like there's this really big expectation that it needs to go somewhere it's like okay i'm gonna make this effort i'm gonna make this effort so that we have sex and for women what what happens is for a lot of women they have you know like receptive desire we as men usually have spontaneous desire so guys can you know most men can look at you know see their partner in a certain outfit and it's like oh i'm aroused Oh, I'm turned on. And for a lot of women, it's the inverse.
Starting point is 01:48:20 Some women do have spontaneous desire where they just will look at us in the gray sweatpants and they're like that right now. But for most women, it's they're receiving. They need to receive and kind of get the battery charged up in some way, shape, or form. I disagreed with Esther Perel on this. She came on the show and she was saying, what woman do you know that is aroused by a man being aroused at her? I'm like, lots.
Starting point is 01:48:43 Every one. Like, is being desired not one of the biggest turn-ons for a woman? I think I might have needed to just ask her a different sort of an angle. Maybe I misunderstood what she said. But that was phenomenal conversation. I think she's fucking great at what she does. Yes. But that was one angle where I thought, hmm, I think you need to update your data on that one.
Starting point is 01:49:04 Yeah. I think, I mean, look at us talking about what women want. Mansplaining our way. Mansplaining. But I do think that part of that, you know, when that period of time happens is just bringing this like little spontaneous, unscheduled, uncalculated, non-expecting form of arousal into the relationship and re-injecting it. De-pressureizes the...
Starting point is 01:49:28 It depressurizes it. And I think for a lot of women, when they get into that relationship and there's like complacency that sets in, then there's like, oh, when he brings desire to me, there's like an expectation that now I have to perform. Now I have to put out. And she will have also had some sort of a pivot, too, I'm going to guess. So, yeah, you're now, you're adding pressure on both sides. One thing I was thinking as you were talking there, the complacency, comfort thing, which
Starting point is 01:49:55 is like safety on steroids, it's very sort of, it's like toxic safety, I suppose, at least toxic to the bedroom. I wonder how much the working from home revolution has been cancerous to this. Terrible. One of my, dude, I was away, it was George Mack's birthday this year, and one of the guys guys were sat around the table at dinner. We were in a corner bar here in Austin. And we were talking about working from home, which I still currently am until the office and studio gets built. And he was saying, I can't fucking bear working from home. And it's got nothing to do. I would
Starting point is 01:50:30 much sooner work from home, but I feel like such a cuck being in the next room. And my girlfriend, if she asks me how my day went, it's like, you fucking know how my day went. You heard it. I was sat in there. I was sat in there like a degenerate with my shirt on and my sweatpants because I couldn't be bothered to get changed. And he said, I need to leave the house. I need to create some sense of mystery, some sense of absence and intrigue, not just for her, but for me as well. Totally. And yeah, I wonder how much the working from home revolution has caused some dead bedroom because, well, the guy hasn't gone out and killed any deer. Maybe he managed to do it from his laptop in the dining room but there's no intrigue there's no mystery yeah yeah i mean i do i do think that's a big
Starting point is 01:51:14 piece of the equation you know that if you're around each other too much that complacency just starts to set in right it's like there's nothing to talk about there's nothing new there's nothing exciting and you know like even after my wife gave birth to our second child i mean i i've traveled a number of times since then and some of that's been pretty hard but A lot of it is just creating some separation, creating some space, you know. And so it's like I didn't need to, I didn't need to come out here, you know, like you and I could have done this virtually, but I wanted to. And I wanted to create a little bit of space and separation.
Starting point is 01:51:56 And I think it's good for kids, but it's also good for marriage. You know, it's good for a relationship to have space because otherwise you're just on top of each other constantly. And, you know, it's like you do have to have really great relationships have a couple of things. Number one is that really great relationships have zero guesswork. So I never want to have to guess around what it is that you want, need, expect, or desire. Those types of things should be communicated because I think for a lot of couples, what ends up happening is it's a constant throwing the dart to try and get the bullseye. but you're not even anywhere near the board.
Starting point is 01:52:35 And so there has to be some, there has to be very good communication about expectations, needs, wants, and desires. The other thing is that there needs to be some level of space and mystery. And I think this is very important for men as well. Like, I joke with my wife that the reason why she's with me
Starting point is 01:52:53 is because I'm kind of like an untameable beast. You know, like there's this part of me. She knows me super well. And, you know, we have, such great conversations. We have a lot in common, blah, blah, blah. But there's always this edge. I have this edge that I'm like, you'll never know this part of me. You'll never really understand this aspect of me. And part of it's a joke, but part of it is just keeping a little bit of that mystery alive, you know, of that edge of like, I think that the game is over
Starting point is 01:53:26 when a woman says, oh, I know you better than you know yourself. I think the game's over at that point. How do you blend that with what I need to be able to be um barrierless with my partner? I want them to fully know me. I don't want to hide things from them. I don't want to hide things from myself. Are we not supposed to be in this, you know, a seamless transition where we tell each other everything? Is this not the reason? It's the only relationship apart from my therapist that I can do this with. How do you think about, uh, that not being some beginning of, this is just for me, this is my little precious secret that I have. Yeah, it's not about intentionally withholding. It's about a display of, one, I know myself exceptionally well,
Starting point is 01:54:18 and two, I am resourced in relationships outside of you. So for me, I have, you know, I have my own men's group. I have my own group of men that are very good friends of mine that know a tremendous amount about me. And there's things that I bring to them that I talk to them about that I don't necessarily need to bring to my wife and talk to her about. And we talk about a lot. I don't want to paint the wrong picture that like, you know, that there's things that are, you know, withheld or hidden or that I'm keeping secrets or anything like that. But it's just that not everything needs to be processed and spewed out into the relationship. Not everything. and I think that that has become a kind of unspoken expectation in some modern relationships
Starting point is 01:55:03 that like the relationship should be a container to talk about and process literally everything and that your partner should be your therapist and your coach and your parent and your, you know, and your best friend and your lover and you're a fair partner and like literally everything, right? And I don't necessarily, I don't think, I don't agree with that. I think that that's usually doesn't work for most people because what happens is that it's a sign that they are under-resourced in other relationships and that they are under-resourced in their self-relationship, that there's certain parts of themselves that they don't necessarily understand or that they're not connected to.
Starting point is 01:55:47 So I think in part, and I also think that, you know, when you look at, I don't know if this is going to get me in trouble or not, but when you look at, not in my relationship, just online, when you look at like female desire and, you know, women's archetypes of arousal and desire, it's really that kind of beast that gets tamed, right? And when you look at something like Beauty and the Beast, I think it's a great example of feminine desire, right?
Starting point is 01:56:17 You have the kind of psychopath in Gaston that is lacking, empathy that's not compassionate, that is overly relentless, that doesn't pick up on her cues, that she's not interested, but then you have this other archetype that is literally a beast that has not been in a reciprocal relationship, but has kind of been a romantic that wants that. And part of the feminine desire is to be in relationship with the beast that, you know, has the status and has those things, but also the desire to sort of tamed. that part of him and so I think we as men what ends up happening is that we get into
Starting point is 01:57:00 relationships with women and we oftentimes in an effort to create safety for her we overly domesticate and tame ourselves and we become this very docile version that then collapses the polarity and we lose a kind of intensity and ferocity a kind of primal nature to ourselves that creates attraction and we try and signal safety by being excessively docile. And I think that that actually in the long term, maybe not in the interim, yeah, but in the long term does more harm than good. Connor Beaten, ladies and gentlemen, dude, you're so great. Thanks, buddy. I think your work absolutely fucking rules. Where should people go to check out
Starting point is 01:57:48 everything you do? You can go to mantops.com, man talks on YouTube, on, uh, on Instagram, check out the alliance. We've got a great, you know, community. A thousand plus dudes. Yeah, the book is called Men's Work, which has been crushing, and I'm working on a second one, which is fun. So, yeah, thanks for having me back, brother. Appreciate you, man.
Starting point is 01:58:07 Yeah.

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