Modern Wisdom - #695 - Codie Sanchez - The Secret Mindset Hacks To Become Unstoppable
Episode Date: October 19, 2023Codie Sanchez is an investor, venture capitalist and a CEO. Being a contrarian is an alluring idea. Having a unique insight into the world, a different viewpoint that helps you grow and make money and... become successful. But how do you actually come up with original ideas and avoid always following the crowd? Expect to learn Codie’s framework for non-conformity, how anger can be a useful tool, what we can learn from Warren Buffet about not optimising too much, why pushing through boredom is a superpower, how speaking the truth even when it hurts can be critically important, Codie's best advice from the billionaires she’s met and much more... Sponsors: Sign up for a one-dollar-per-month trial period from Shopify at https://www.shopify.com/modernwisdom (automatically applied at checkout) Get 10% discount on all Gymshark’s products at https://bit.ly/sharkwisdom (use code: MW10) Get 10% discount on Marek Health’s comprehensive blood panels at https://marekhealth.com/modernwisdom (use code: MODERNWISDOM) Extra Stuff: Get my free Reading List of 100 books to read before you die → https://chriswillx.com/books/ To support me on Patreon (thank you): https://www.patreon.com/modernwisdom - 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
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Hello everybody, welcome back to the show. My guest today is Cody Sanchez, she's an investor,
venture capitalist, and a CEO. Being a contrarian is an alluring idea,
having a unique insight into the world, a different viewpoint that helps you grow and make money
in become successful, but how do you actually come up with original ideas and avoid always following
the crowd? Expect to learn Cody's framework for non-conformity, how anger can be a useful
tool, what we can learn from Warren Buffett about not optimizing too much, why pushing through
boredom is a superpower, how speaking the truth even when it hurts can be critically important,
Cody's best advice from the billionaires that she's met. And much more.
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A checkout. But now ladies and gentlemen, please welcome Cody Sanchez. health.com slash modern wisdom and modern wisdom. Check out.
But now ladies and gentlemen, please welcome Cody Sanchez. What's a contrarian to you?
I think I want to steal a quote for this one, which is Christopher Hitchens.
And his quote was, a contrarian is not one who always disagrees, but one who questions
everything.
And so my idea is in the world that we have right now, it's probably
pretty smart to question assumptions continuously. And the humans who do that are the ones that win
over time. I don't think the goal is to just be ordinary or to counter culture, but to actually
use your brain to come up with a formulation of thoughts that is unique to you.
Is that not antithetical to moving quickly? If you've got a question, everything super
effortful, that means you can't make decisions quite as fast. It's interesting you say that
we were talking about a mutual friend of ours, Bill Perkins, and Bill told me he is two
superpowers that have led to every single dollar he's made. And he goes, it is that I'm
willing to take with risk, and I move faster than everybody else. So by the time they've even pondered an idea, I've already done it, made five mistakes,
and learned five lessons. And every time I meet with Bill, I realize that's exactly right,
and that's why he's one of the most successful people that I've ever met. And yet,
I think if you don't question things and you don't have a brilliant mind like he seems to,
you're just going to be on the wrong road path and if you don't actually know the goal
that you want to hit, if you don't actually know where you're going, most people move forward
towards things that they actually don't want in life.
And I've done it many, many times.
And so in my mind, if you don't question up front, then you might not actually like the
answer you get to when you find it.
Yeah, the intentionality point, I think, is so important and it comes up in dating, it comes up in business, it comes up in where are you going
to live, what sort of lifestyle are you going to have, how much success do you want?
Oh, that's a fucking big one.
So this really cool quote that I saw from Nassim Talab, the world is split between those
who don't know how to start making money and those who don't know when to stop.
Oh, yeah, that hits home, huh?
Are you feeling that one?
I feel it now, I'm just gonna deep.
Yeah.
Yeah, well, I think he's right, but thank God
there are some humans that don't stop.
Like sometimes I think about,
you couldn't pay me enough money
to switch places with Elon Musk.
There's not enough money out there.
I am so glad that he exists as a human in the world
because we get to benefit from the creations that he makes, but I don't think he looks very happy. And
sometimes the person that I actually, you know, lust after from an exchange of life perspective
is the person who owns a couple of cash flying businesses, happily married, couple of
kids in good shape, has tons of free time and is really close to their community. And
it's not the person who has built multiple billions of dollars.
Because at the end of the day, what are you going to do with it?
And so unfortunately, I'm wired as one of those freakish humans that loves the game, does
not know when to stop and finds everything else pales by nature.
But I do think he's right, don't you?
Yeah, the idea of when is enough is such an interesting question.
And you've heard the parable of the Mexican fishermen.
Oh, yes, such a good one.
Yeah, so for the people that don't know this
sort of very interesting parable that shows
there is a quicker shortcut to the life that you want
by reducing down complexity, not overcooking how much you achieve
and then just going for simplicity in the first place, right?
Rather than having to build in a elaborate life
to then eventually be able to afford a simple one,
like the elaborate life is kind of unnecessary once,
especially once you cross a certain threshold of income.
And while the another cool quote about contrarianism,
a contrarian isn't one who always objects,
that's a conformist of a different sort.
A contrarian reasons independently from the ground up
and resists pressure to
conform.
Hitchhats, right?
Neval.
Oh, there was Neval, good one.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, that's Neval.
I love the fact that when we're thinking about pushing back against conformity, like
the average American is obese, divorced, with less than one K in the bank. Right?
Taking the normal route might feel safe in the moment, but it's actually a really undesirable
thing to do because you can see the outcomes that you're going to get.
You're right.
They're in front of you.
Yeah, I mean, I was reading statistics the other week about the, if there's one out
of 10 Americans that get to age 65, by that point, only one of them will be independently wealthy.
And by the time they die, only one of them will be independently wealthy. We will have,
I think it's two people will have actually died by the time they go to retire, so they won't
even have made it there. The other two will actually be on government welfare or someone else's
die, make their family, etc.
And so what we have done systematically is not working if only 10% of the population
actually dies with excess cash because feutables are expensive.
And so I think it was interesting.
What I really respected about Naval in many different ways, but I remember when he was first
building Angelist, I interacted
with him a few times on Twitter, by no means friends.
But we interacted a few times after it had done, you know, been valued at a few billion
dollars. And I was bothering him and his team. I'm like, I buy businesses all day long.
There's nothing like Angelist for people who actually buy companies and want to own
total majority
shares as opposed to just small segments of companies like VC, you guys have all the
capability.
Just build it.
And I remember I was kind of getting through to his, I don't know if it was a CEO or
a COO at the time.
And then Evol just came in and was like, it is not what we do.
We do.
And we are the best in the world at serving venture capital style businesses and small minority shares.
And he's like, if we wanted to be everything to everybody, we would have never hit our first billion.
And I was like, all right, sir.
You know, and I get his point.
But to stand up when you have that much capacity and capital and see so many shiny objects everywhere
and continue to say no to the ones that don't serve you as a real superpower too.
Well, don't forget that that is another type of non-conformity, right?
That is another type of contrarianism to not say yes to everything.
And I've been thinking about this so much, the tools that you need when you begin a
pursuit or when you begin a journey are sometimes even the opposite ones that you need as you
begin to develop.
So let's say that it's growing a business.
In the beginning, you need to be very detail oriented.
You need to be across everything.
You need to be completely obsessive
about all of the stuff that's going on.
And then after a while, you actually need to be able
to learn to delegate and the skill
which made you effective in the beginning
and you have proof is good
and you get dopamine from doing
and you're habituated to continuing to do it,
is exactly the one that's going to hold you back
if you can't let go later on. If we were to talk about status and the things that come to you,
explore in the beginning, try lots of different things, make as many connections as you can,
finally build up some sort of a reputation, and then as the reputation rises and rises and rises,
you actually need to no longer say yes to everything, you need to say no to almost everything.
Right?
So again, the skill that you develop in the beginning is often not the thing that is
useful at the end.
And you're so inculcated into this rhythm of doing it.
And you're like, I'm trying to cast off this habit of me doing that thing.
It's very difficult.
Oh, yeah.
Well, especially if you think about dollar amounts.
So when you first make your
first $100,000, there's a skill set that I think is quite normalized if you want to make
$100,000, which is you need to learn as much as possible in order to increase your earnings,
predominantly working for somebody else is the fastest way to get to your first 100K.
And that same skill set to get from 100K to a million is relatively similar. So you can
get to a million dollars pretty much using that same skill set.
But in order for you to become an employee
that has a high level of learning and a high level of earning
that is worth $10 million, actually quite hard.
The difference between a million and 10 million is difficult.
And to go from 10 to 100 million is categorically different.
And to go from 100 million to a billion,
if you just look at the math between the two,
there is no possible way for you to do it as an employee. Like it hasn't been done. There is not a billionaire that was an employee of somebody else's company. And so the math just doesn't lie. And so because
of that, I think it's really interesting to determine what is it that you actually want, who has
achieved it before, what are the characteristics that are similar in those subset of humans that have done it?
And then can you actually find a roadmap or ripple or rhyme between all of those humans
to get to the next level?
And it's a super power to be able to see through the matrix like that to figure out the
difference between one and 10 and a hundred and a billion.
Yeah.
What's your, how do you ensure that you're remaining intentional?
Like what's your framework for non-conformity?
Couple different things.
The first thing that this is a friend of mine, Alex and I,
he's, I said on the board of his hedge fund,
he's one of the smartest men I know,
and he runs a multi-billion dollar hedge fund portfolio.
And I remember, you know, we focus a lot on this idea of how do we think differently than other people?
Because if you invest just like everybody else as an investor, on average, you lose money
over time to inflation.
That is just the truth.
Most humans without a financial advisor in the market actually lose money over time in
the stock market.
What people say instead is, no, the stock market returns 10% a year on average.
Yes, the stock market as an entity that is not you individually,
you individually lose money over time in the stock market,
which is wild.
And so when I started thinking about it as a numbers game with him,
I realized the funnel the non-conformity is essentially this.
It is, you have to continue to question the thoughts that you have inherently.
You have to be off from everybody else slightly and you have to figure out how to be right.
Those two things are really, really hard to be consistently have a different perspective
and be right on those perspectives.
That's the only way you can actually make money long-term in the stock market or really
in just about anything where you want to be worth over a hundred million dollars. You can definitely be in consensus and make a million, two million, ten million, maybe
even twenty-five or fifty.
It's interesting to think about the fact that you can't signal off what everybody else
is doing if you want to get outside results, right?
Ultimately, if you do end up signalling off everyone else, you're going to end up with
the results that are at least comparable with what they're doing. And I suppose
that this kind of, at least in part, relates to you are the average of the five people
that you spend the most time with. I actually think that there's a better rule, which is
you are the average of the five podcasts you listen to the most.
I think my ego knows no bounds. But the outsized influence of the people that you're around, ultimately you're still
going to encounter the same problem, unless you and everybody else that your friends with
is on this insane growth trajectory.
So all right, so what's going to happen?
You somehow, when you are at this stage of your personal growth, family growth, wealth
growth journey, going to find four other people,
all of whom are going to have the exact same trajectory
that you do, and I think this is why,
there's definitely a degree of loneliness
that I have seen to a lot of people
who achieve rapid success, because it's very hard
to find some people to come with you on that journey
because your growth is so rapidly accelerating.
Like, what's the chance that you find somebody else that's able to come along with you
or maybe the person you're with is moving quicker than you are.
So I think what seems to happen is people kind of move through bubbles of friends.
So as they're going on their journey, okay, I'm in this new bracket
and then that kind of falls behind and then I'm in a new bracket and then that kind of move through bubbles of friends. So is there going on their journey? Okay, I mean, this new bracket, and then that kind of falls behind,
and then I'm in a new bracket,
and then that kind of falls behind.
At least I see that through Alex as a good example.
Yeah, no, I think that's exactly right.
I mean, the sad thing is,
and UI and Alex have talked about this before,
I think, and he might have even been the one that said it,
which was, other people want you to be
just slightly less successful than they are on average.
And I think that is a gross generalization because other people want you to be just slightly less successful than they are on average.
And I think that is a gross generalization in that not everybody is like that, but a
preponderance of humans because we're scarcity mindset.
It's how we were wired, you know, from learning how to survive on the planes.
We know that if there's a bunch of other people around us,
historically there weren't enough resources to go around.
We had to actually be protective of the things that we made.
Now in today's world, in which innovation continues to allow us
to achieve more and more, and there's actually,
it doesn't have to be a zero-sum game.
I don't think we have caught up here
with what we know out here in the innovation sphere.
That's interesting.
So if you say say if you're the
smartest person in the room, you're in the wrong room. But what it's also doing, that sort of a
rule is protecting you from being the person that's going to receive the eye and the jealousy
and the back biting from the other people. So endeavoring to be the poorest person in the room,
or the most stupid person in the room, or the least accomplished person in the room, ensures that you're going to receive less and less
and less envy or... That's actually really true. I mean, we were thinking about the other day,
and I was trying to imagine a person who is really, really successful, monetarily, if we want to say,
who actively trolls people and is negative to others.
And I can think of a few, right?
You could think of like Elon Musk does some trolling on the internet.
The Paul Brothers do.
But why do they do that?
They do that because it's actually a direct revenue line to a thing that they care about,
right?
Elon Musk.
Right.
Exactly.
Exactly.
We want to have this attention arbitrage trade.
So because of that, we are willing to troll.
But for the average successful person, I have never met a successful human that doesn't
have a monetary incentive to troll the trolls.
They just don't exist.
Like, if you want to figure out if somebody is going to be successful or not, I think you
should go and look in their Twitter replies and comments.
And if they have a bunch of negative ones, you go not hiring them and also not investing
in them.
Because that type of human, all they can do is they can take rocks and they can throw
them because they don't realize they should build with them.
And so it's one of the biggest signals in our companies actually, we have a social media
screen.
So for every single hire that we have across our companies, we see, do you have a negative
perspective on reality and do play the victim frequently.
And if you are either of those two things, you're just not part of our ecosystem. We do not believe that humans like you will be successful with
an attitude like that. Wow. Okay, you've got a lesson, the controversy
and conformity conundrum. There is a spectrum where controversies and conformities sit
on two ends of the line. More conformity equals less controversial. And yet, most of the
wins in life land on the edge of controversy, choose your controversy wisely, but choose it.
Yeah. Well, I think you can play this out most easily on social media, right? It's just very easy to tell.
Once you have an eye towards frameworks, is this tweet going to do well? Is this tweet not going to
do well, depending on is it something that is slightly off from
the norm?
And my angler said, you know, people aren't going to remember what you said, but they
will remember the way you made them feel.
And that was this touchy feely thing that she said that I never really associated with
until I saw Twitter.
And I said that is exactly right.
The second that you can make somebody feel something on one way or the other, they are
going to react to it.
And often we humans react really aggressively
without thinking about it at all.
In fact, I've found myself doing it.
Now I sort of have trained myself not,
but when I see something on the internet,
there's like that famous Tom Hardy little meme
where he's like, that's clickbait.
Have you ever seen that?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I know what that is, that's bait, right?
And now we can tell why,
because if it's slightly off from the norm,
it is going to attract our attention,
because it's just like if there was,
where's Waldo and Red and White Stripes,
in a sea of people in green,
you're going to note this thing
that looks slightly differently.
And I was talking to a room yesterday
of a bunch of builders and some of our companies,
and they were asking me,
how do you build a personal brand,
and how do you tweet, know what's gonna work
when we're the other.
And I don't know if I ever told this story, but I feel like your audience might appreciate it or think this is terrible.
But they, I remember I, we have a newsletter, right?
So in that newsletter, I felt like our subject lines were getting really stale.
I didn't like them. So I told the team, I bet you $1,000 no matter what you come up with on this newsletter,
I'm gonna beat your subject line. And my team was like, yeah,, sure there's like three of us and you're not really that involved in this
So let's go like great. So it's about landscaping or tree trimming or something. It's about tree trimming
Yeah, just so sexy, right? And so it's it's about making money with tree trimming and their titles were like this guy made X doing
Why this guy trim trees doing Y, this guy trimmed
trees and had XYZ. And there were a couple of them that were slightly more clever. And
I was like, now we're going to A, B test them. And I go, mine is, I love guys with wood.
Dot, dot, dot. Which do you think bet did better? Of course, this one that's slightly off
spectrum, it's still true. So it's not complete clickbait, but it makes you feel something.
When you see it is going to do better.
And so that's just marketing and sales 101,
and that's also attention 101.
Like if you have a Tinder profile,
you're probably better off having something slightly
controversial, so I bet women would engage with that.
Like a KKK hood?
Probably not that far.
All right.
I don't know if the Brits really know what was happening there,
but.
Fair enough.
Reading as a diet, be careful what you read.
It becomes the way you think.
Words I heard then internalized, then repeated,
and then habituated.
Curate what you let into your brain as you do with your body.
This got me onto an idea I had a while ago
about the content diet.
So most people, especially now, especially in Austin,
Jesus, are super, super
concerned as their seed oils in this. What's the amount of glucose? Tell me if this has
been responsibly sourced and like it better be from an organic farm or there any pesticides.
Did somebody that had the vaccine live within 10 miles of where this cow was like, you know,
getting milk drawn from it? And yet when you look at their YouTube suggested feed, it's just limbic race to the bottom of the brain stem.
Ben Shapiro destroys like panel of leftist.
You know, it's the stuff that the guilty pleasures
that many people like to watch.
And yeah, it got me thinking about if the cells in your body
are made up from the food that you put in your mouth, your brain is made up from the food that you put in your mouth.
Your brain is made up of the things that you watch and listen and read.
And given that, your content diet should be spirulina for the soul rather than fast food
for your amygdala.
It's a great line by the way.
It's spirulina for the soul, bookmarked, trademark.
Yeah, I love that. What I've found about reading is I can immediately see the contagion of greatness when I read it
and then I take action.
So if you go and you read Charles Bukowski's best pieces and then you go to write, your
writing will be uplifted by this contagious effect of greatness rubbing off.
I don't know what it is.
I don't know if there is a framework or philosophy as to why,
but I've found the same thing with looking at deals often when I go to invest in a
company, I look beforehand at what did Warren Buffett say in his last memo about
how he analyzed a company.
And you can actually, I think, steal from the minds of others by figuring out what
you allow into your brain and then applying that immediately to what you do.
So it's not just in the ether all the time what are you listening to, but right before you
go take an action, if you're going to go into the gym, you know, usually maybe you're
taking some sort of pre workout, right?
And then when you're in the gym, you're putting in some hardcore wrap or whatever you listen
to when you work out, you buff dudes.
And then when you're done with the gym, you might go sauna or whatever.
But the influence that you have right prior, if you have a giant donut or steak immediately
prior and you listen to Lana Del Rey is going to be a different experience than if you do
the former.
Why would we think it would be any different with any other aspect of our life?
And so I have now applied that pretty aggressively to the very few things that I know drive most of my success, which is before I'm writing, before I'm investing, before I'm hiring, who can I steal from to get some of their intelligent.
Oh, it's like an intellectual aphrodisiac.
Yeah, exactly. Yeah, I think that's right. I still like spiraling up for the soul better, but I thought that was good too.
I'm gonna keep that, I'm gonna keep that, I'm gonna keep that. Yeah, I am the content thing, the priming yourself, who do you want to be around?
I love, you know, I know that he's like an unspeakable guy because you've promoted the
fucking lockdowns or whatever.
When I read Ryan Holiday and I kind of get this, it's much more pedestrian pace to kind
of what's going on and I imagine as every man does that I'm in the Roman Empire,
I imagine that I'm walking through, you know,
the Roman forum or the Stoa Poe Clay below the Parthenon in Athens.
And you just get this much slower sort of pace of life and pace.
I'm sure if I looked at my HIV and my resting heart rate
it would come down.
You know, I'm just thinking about ideas and I'm, it's couched in this much slower, slower sort of
existence. And I really, really enjoy that. And you know, if I was to then go in and try and
have a difficult conversation, I think I'd feel more resilient. If the alternative is watching
whatever podcast, like we kicked these only fans' thoughts out.
Can you believe what Candace Owens said to this such and such a person?
Well, guess what dreams I'm having tonight.
I want dreams.
Here's a good metric.
Me and George Mac have been talking about the difference between hidden and observable
metrics.
We're trying to come up with some of the greatest hidden metrics
that tell you whether your life is going well or not.
One of his that was pretty contrarian was the number of hours per year
that you spend in a hammock is like a really fucking great hidden metric
of how well your life's going.
That like if you spend a good few hours in a hammock period,
it's like it's probably pretty good.
I would say the number of hours that you have
having dreams about the Roman Empire would probably be a strong, a strong, but yeah, hidden and
observable metrics, fucking obsessed with this idea at the moment. I like it. Well, we even on our
fridge, Chris and I have, my Chris is my husband, not you, Chris, other Chris. And he, one of his
favorite quotes is from Marcus Raley,
a said that is the something along the lines of throughout your day assume that the people that
you meet will be miserable, wicked, selfish, etc. and do right anyway, something of that regard.
And I always chuckle with it because, you know, my husband is so, he's a very intense dude.
And he has incredibly high expectations, former military and AVC all, and expects humans to be honorable and to do the right thing and
to be thoughtful and turns out most humans are not like that.
And so I bought it for him as a reminder coming back into the civilian world that unfortunately
this warrior culture that he has been in is not normalized.
And thus if you can start your day, every day with really low expectations, it turns out that often the day is surprising. And so
that has been helpful for us too.
Ideas strongly stated and loosely held. Having a strong opinion is the mark of intellect,
but having the ability to change it is the mark of true intelligence. Only politicians
hold one stance forever for fear of flip-flopping. We mortals do better to constantly experiment.
Yeah, I've recently spent some time with Vivek Ramaswamy, the presidential candidate,
and also spent a lot of time with other political candidates who are high up, named or won't name.
And what I've been impressed by with, let's say, two of the candidates, on one on each
side of the aisle, has been that they played in the realm of business where numbers mattered
and outcomes were obvious.
And so, you either win or lose in business.
There is a scorecard every single day and every single year.
And you only stay in business if you continue to win in the scorecard. And what I like about
Vivek's perspective, I don't agree with him on everything, but he has changed his mind on many
things. And what sort of business leader or human would you be if you couldn't change your mind
once you had increased inputs? That would be absolutely wild. You find out X and you say,
nope, I already made up my mind on this. yet, that is what we expect of our politicians often
and our leaders.
Like, well, this guy changed his mind.
Thank fucking God.
Thank God there is a human out here
who continues to think not just in sound bites,
but in full nuance.
So I've got this idea about the unreliable ally.
And basically somebody who's a monotheiker
that is sticks rigorously to the party line
that's ideologically pure. They
are very predictable for the future, which means that they make a really great ally, because you know
that no matter how much new information comes to them, they're not changing their mind.
So yeah, I can totally see why that would be a good signal that you want in a friend,
but a totally terrible one that you want in a
political ally, right? Because you don't know what if the, what if things change a lot
over the next couple years and they switch parties? Oh my God, you know?
Yeah, I think you're right. Yeah, we, we kind of talk about choosing sides. I do think
it's really important to have humans who will choose difficult sides, but not have strong
opinions once they learn new information. And so my husband
and I always talk about the fact that you can really, I think what you, what people want, but they
don't know how to look for it, is most humans, what you want is somebody who will stand by you,
even when the mob won't. When things are irrational, somebody will stand by you because they know who
you are as a human being.
That is what we want in our lovers. That is what we want in our friends and in our colleagues.
And instead of looking for somebody who has over time taken courageous stances,
you look for somebody who has continued to follow set norms in order to put them in a box.
And I think that's the mismatch. If instead we looked for people who, no, they took a really difficult stance on this.
Even though that was detrimental, actually,
to their wellbeing, I would rather side with that person.
Then while this person has done the party line continuously,
and so I could assume the outcome here.
Two really good models for this.
When was the last time, in fact, more?
When was the last time that you heard this person
change their mind?
Can you recall when they said, I was wrong about X,
and especially if they're different in center about it?
Secondly, how often do their opinions surprise you?
I think about so many of the creators online that are big.
And I know, tell me something's gonna happen.
Russell Brown's being accused with a Me Too thing.
There you go, I know every single person
in this lineup's opinion, right?
I can predict it with 100% accuracy.
Interesting.
The most, as far as I can tell, good faith,
genuinely, intellectually virtuous people,
are the ones who every so often are going to do something
and you go, really?
Are you think that?
Yeah.
Right.
I don't agree or that might be wrong or whatever.
Say what you want about Sam Harris.
I know he's like the least cool guy on the internet at the moment and everyone wants to
keep dunking on him.
Despite the fact he's not on Twitter, he continually trends on Twitter.
But I have good faith that he believes what he says.
That counts for a lot, but the problem is unreliable,
really unreliable, all right?
Third thing, final thing is how many different problems
does this person explain with the same solution?
So if all of the issues of the world,
if all of the problems are because of climate change, all of the problems are because the world, if all of the problems are because of climate change,
or all of the problems are because of racism,
or all of the problems are because of capitalism,
say, oh, you're demand for answers outstrips your supply.
And because you only have this much world view and perspective,
you just retrofit the one answer you have
to all of the problems that are in front of you.
Yeah, one of the things that I found most interesting is when we're analyzing companies,
the best companies and their founders, they do this one thing. They say, here's the action
I want to take and here's our company. I'd love you to poke holes in it and tell me the things
you think I'm missing. And they are actively looking for disagreement because they don't want to be
right. They want to win. And most people who want to win, all we care they don't want to be right, they want to win.
And most people who want to win, all we care about is we want to information gather.
We want to always be connecting dots and we can only connect dots if we see more of them.
And so the winners are usually the ones that will ask you, tell me what I'm doing wrong,
tell me what I'm missing here. I think this, but I am open to persuasion on where the other.
And it was funny because we actually did a little mini podcast the other day and I was
so irritated because I had this person on because they had an incredible tweet that I was
like, ooh, spiky point of view, I want to talk about that.
And then they came on and they just softened it and they waffled it and they didn't all stick
by what they had said.
And I was poking.
I'm like, did you change your mind on this?
Like, do you think something differently?
And they're like, no, well, what I meant to say was,
like, know what you meant to say is that you got kind of
called out for this.
And your strengths and beliefs were overcome
by other people's opinions and likes.
And those type of people, once that happens to me once
with somebody, I realize, hey, those can be in acquaintance,
but they'll never be in the inner circle.
I had an interesting lesson that I learned, which relates to something that you had here,
the gift of descent.
Sikafant's, yes, men, will kill you faster than descent.
Surround yourself with unruly individuals who make you stand your ground or berate you
for not. That's exactly the same as what you were just talking about.
Yeah. One of my favorite job descriptions of all time is the Shackleford job description,
which is Shackleford went to Antarctica and wrote this little tiny job description that
now has been used all over the internet about, you know, high likelihood to die looking for adventurous souls, you know,
who want the ability to fail greatly, basically.
And one of the things I talk about with our team and the people that we hire continuously
is you want to look for the people who get off on the heart.
Like you want to look for the people who, when there is a potential to fail, and when something is difficult, is when they get interested. And if it's not that
interesting, they're probably not going to participate. And those human humans are relatively
rare, because in today's world, we want to succeed so badly. And it seems like we have
repercussions that if we do fail, there is something wrong with us. And yet, most of the
most successful people I know have just failed something wrong with us. And yet most of the most successful
people I know have just failed prolifically, continuously and yet iterated and learned on it.
And so, you know, on our team, one of the other things that we do and, you know,
tanners here, so you can tell if I'm lying or not. But, like, I find that if you are a manager of
humans, if you are a leader of humans and your humans don't disagree with you often,
then you probably are not a leader of humans.
You're a director, you're somebody who they work for
because they have to, but you haven't actually inspired
somebody enough to tell you their true thoughts
one way or the other.
And that's usually what kills companies faster than anything,
is a series of yes, men surrounding somebody
who should have been told no.
The problem as well is if you don't have people who will tell you what reality is showing you your own obfuscation
and biases and blindness will never get corrected and presuming that you start to continue to make progress over time,
the impact of your decisions continues to get bigger and bigger and bigger and bigger.
That means that at the time when your impact and the magnitude of what you choose to do
is at its greatest, your ability to see what realities feedback to you is at its lowest.
You've had this emperor has like Emperor's new clothes, fucking scenario.
God knows how long and it means that you're completely out of touch.
Yeah, that's true.
Live and joke with my husband that you should tell me when I look fat.
Please do, because I don't want to hear that from somebody else, first of all.
Second of all, it's not healthy for me to be that way.
So in fact, I would want nothing more than the humans that are closest to me to tell
me the hard thing first before I go out and people tell me I have no clothes or I look awful in
this.
And where is it, okay, in society where we say, oh, it's just a little white lie.
Yeah, they didn't look great, but I lied to them.
Why would you want to be lied to by somebody that you know loves you?
You certainly won't get lied to by people who don't.
And so let's front, you know, let's front run the pain so that we could have some short-term
pain, maybe even in private instead instead of suffering over the long-term. Well, actually, we were talking about our mutual friend,
Hormosi before, and I'm like many people, a super people-pleaser, like actually-
I'm really bad at-
At my core, which is probably why we're semi-good at media. We can have empathy and understanding,
which leads to association. And so I'm really bad at that, which means that sometimes I'm too agreeable.
And later I'll be like, I didn't agree with that.
Why did I say that thing?
And why did I say yes to this?
When I shouldn't have been saying yes to this.
And so, he jokingly has become my captain, no.
And I'll just say, I don't feel like saying no to this.
So I'm going to screenshot to you anytime I don't.
And you just tell me, no, because I already know I should say no. And then I'm going to screenshot to you anytime I don't. You just tell me no, because I already know I should say no.
I'm going to start screenshoting you what I actually do.
We trade back and forth, no's, because the more successful you get, the more questions
and requests you're going to have.
If you don't learn to say no, you won't be successful.
There's a kind of cringy video of Elon Musk's first wife.
Did you see that?
Where she basically says, it's just cringy in how it's displayed,
but the message is incredible. And the message she basically says is, I had a very successful
husband. I watched him for a long period of time. The number one reason he was the most
successful is he had an amazing amount of requests paced upon him, and he learned to say,
no, better, faster, and more frequently than anybody else.
And I was like, if Elon Musk says no a lot, that probably means there's something good
happening there.
Hmm.
How have you overcome your felt sense to want to be a people pleaser?
Practice.
Practice saying no as often as possible, with kindness every single time and brevity every single time.
So somebody asked me the other day,
they wanted to style me or something.
Can I pick out your clothes?
And normally I would say, oh, I'm okay right now,
but thank you so much.
I actually don't need that or I just bought new clothes
or I'd have some excuse.
And now it is no thank you.
I hope you're well.
No.
Period and the second that you allow one other sentence behind the word, you have allowed
an opt-in.
So if instead I say, no, I don't really need it right now.
What's the opt-in?
Well, what about later?
You know, if I say no, I already bought some clothes, it's like, well, what about, I give you some clothes.
And so what I found is we allow our concern for hurting other people's feelings to open
a door.
It just means we sound like more of a dick later because we could have said no fast up front,
but we should have said it later.
The other truth is, you will, people will be pissed at you about this.
People will be upset.
I'm sure it happens to you all the time.
I'm almost thankful I don't have a podcast because I can only imagine the amount of times
interesting people that you really like ask to be on this podcast.
And you have to say, no, thank you.
And no matter how you do it and no matter how you phrase it, that is always going to feel a certain way to a person.
One of the problems that you encounter, if you don't end up learning to be able to say no fully,
is that you have a kind of like a wave swell underneath the surface of these, first you kick a can down the road,
and then you kick a couple more cans down the road.
And then before you know it, you have this overlapping number of cans that turned into a fucking tornado. And you're all you spend your time doing
is kicking cans. And that is born out of a fear of disappointing people. I sat next to
a mutual friend of ours and he referred me to a therapist that worked with him. And
as I tried therapy before a couple of times and like mixed, mixed results out the other side of it. But if
she can deal with this guy's bullshit, she can definitely deal with Mark, because he's
a dickhead. So I've started, I've started going back into therapy and spending some time
with her, which is really, really fascinating to be on the receiving end of questions for once, as opposed to be the person giving them. And the people
pleasing things, just such a huge, huge block for me. It's such a difficult thing for me
to get past. And I was starting to see it in a lot of other people because a lot of the
time you see people's politeness or the way that they move through the world as an accurate
portrayal of their
volition or their intention. It's what they actually meant to do. And you go, no, it's not.
Think about all of the things, all of the ways that their desire has been perturbed.
Right? I thought this was what you actually meant to do, but what you meant to do was the opposite,
but you were so shy or tired or nervous or hungover,
or you didn't wanna upset this person,
or you had an argument with your boyfriend
that whatever it was.
So the other thing happened from the outside,
what you see is, oh, that's what they meant to happen.
From the inside, it's this game of tennis and ping pong
between two choices 10,000 times in a minute,
and then they go, oh yeah, we'll do that thing.
You go, wow.
So yeah, that's kind of opened my eyes to the world of people.
I was like a secret member of the people, please a club.
And I never knew.
Well, I bet people on the internet would be surprised that you
would say you were a people pleaser and that I would say was a
people pleaser because we have some rough edges on the internet.
We'll take some difficult stances.
But I've almost found that people who take difficult stances have
learned to do it because we too often didn't. In spite.
Yeah.
And so you're scared and you don't want to take
the difficult stance, but you do it anyway.
I think there's very few humans.
You know, maybe Donald Trump has learned to like,
you know, the pain of.
To be the heel.
Right.
But I've never met a person, even who was quite abrasive,
who said that they didn't have some discomfort
with controversy pushing back.
Have you ever met one?
Michael Malice.
Okay, I don't know who that is.
He is a cultural commentator, professional troll on the internet.
He's like the low key of politics.
And he likes it.
Oh, he fucking lives for it.
He absolutely lives for it.
Another interesting one, Warren Buffett doesn't optimize.
Wake up at 5am, meditate, work out, drink 72 ounces
of chloride water, and stand upside down, okay. Or do none of those things, and instead
focus on thinking clearly, intently and strategically before you pull any triggers. This relates
to an absolute monster from Alex, which was, your fears about perfection will kill you more quickly than your imperfections.
Yeah.
This was an OG one of mine.
Often, I think if you want success, you should look at those who have had the thing that
you already want.
And so I was getting caught up in this series of noise surrounding all the sheds that
are in my life that are actually not needs.
And so I went to one of the people that I admire the most,
which is at least from a business perspective, Warren Buffett.
And I looked at what his day was.
And the motherfucker drinks Coke every day.
He's eating McDonald's cheeseburgers.
He's not working out and hasn't for a while.
And he largely sits and thinks and reads a newspaper every single day.
And when I looked at that, I thought, well, he has basically realized a while, and he largely sits and thinks and reads a newspaper every single day.
And when I looked at that, I thought, well, he has basically realized that there's a 10
to 20% that drives the 80%.
And so now I'm in a thing right now where I'm trying to be healthier and work out more
and try to get a six pack and whatever the cool kids do.
And I have this trainer right now that I really like, but he has me, you know, tracking
my steps every day, tracking my macros, inputting a workout
or like check the box and how much my lifting.
And what I finally said to him is,
what are the two things we could do?
Where if we did those two things,
everything else gets easier.
My team gets tired of hearing me say this,
but I'm like, you have a list 400 lines long
of to-do list items, just like everybody else does.
And yet, you spend your time ticking them off as opposed to thinking is there one snowball
in which, if I pushed it, everything else became easy.
And, you know, for working out, for instance, there's one snowball, which is, if I just pre-order
a set number of meals each week from the same provider, I don't have to track my macros,
because I've had the guy track it already and I know what it is.
And you could do that even if you just ordered Chipotle every single day.
And so there's no monetary reason why you wouldn't have to do it.
And this tracking in the app every single day ridiculously doesn't have to happen.
And it's the same thing for a workout.
Well, what if I just do the same workout every single day or three rotations of it for
one month and then I rotated again to have diversity
in my training. Instead of that, we layer all this complexity, which makes absolutely no sense to me.
So, I like cold plunging. I like some lemon in my water, but I think we'll be fine if we skip it
every now and then. Yeah, and the concern about the overoptimization often gets in the way
now and then. Yeah, and the concern about the overoptimization often gets in the way so much and makes you fret. I'm worried. What if I don't show up sufficiently effectively?
I had a re-endoris on the show. You know him from Flow Research Collective, Neuroscientist,
Researcher in Flow. And he's brilliant. He taught me that if you're bothered about
flow, the best thing that you can do as a morning routine is work within 90 seconds of waking.
Oh, that makes me feel better about what I actually do.
Yeah, yeah, it depends.
I don't think that what he meant by work was frantically answering emails with lots of capital letters.
But don't actually do my own email. So I've been rough at now.
That's good. But my point being, his thing is get up within 90 seconds of waking, right?
Not of getting out of bed of waking, be at your desk.
Interesting.
Working, especially if you need to do deep work, writing, creative stuff.
And I've done this on weekends with my newsletter, which I do on a Monday.
I release on a Monday.
So I'll be writing away.
And it seems to work pretty quickly. The reason the argument is that Delta and Theta, sleep and flow, brainwared states are right next
to each other. So it's actually easier to slip from sleep into flow than it is typically
from daily, I've just walked the dog and got caught in traffic into flow. Even though
you might think, God, I'm only just awake. This is stupid.
It seems to be the case,
at least the neuroscience backs it up.
Yeah, I mean, there's a great book
that I can't remember the name that talks about
all the varied habits of the grates
and their morning and evening routines.
Five AM club, Robin Sharma.
Right, and then there was a New York author
as well that tried all of them.
Of course.
And then also did a YouTube series on them,
which was hysterical.
You know, because it was like some of the great writers, you know, basically like got up at 3am,
snortable light of cocaine, started writing until they got so hungry that they needed a drink,
and then they kept writing. I mean, ridiculous, right? But what I've realized is, you know,
I think the Muse loves habits. Whatever those habits are for you, the muse really likes when you continue to show up
in the same way day after day.
And whatever that way is, you can decide by and large,
but the common thread I've seen for successful people
is they have a process, they have a flow.
And to try to project that on another person
is like to try to say that you should eat this
when I know nothing about your genome and how you work.
And so for me, I get up early, I do a cold plunge because I like I'm groggy in the morning,
I do it for like way less than I probably should or any scientific benefit, I grab a coffee
and I get to work.
And that works for me right now.
But seeing a year, the only thing that I know will be consistently true is I will have
a process I follow every single morning because I do not believe that you wait for the mues
for whatever you do. I think you wait for the muse for whatever you do
I think you go and you grab it and you tell them to show up at an amp just like you will very
Stephen Pressfieldy boredom as a superpower the best ideas need breathing room
There are flour stretching for the sun clutter them with meetings and watch them die
Instead he clearly schedule every morning with no calls prior to 10 am
I do the same paired with two no call days a week.
Yeah. I'm pretty religious about this.
My team knows that I only take calls or meetings on Monday, Wednesday, Friday.
I will substitute something like a podcast for a Tuesday, Thursday or a speech,
but nothing continuous because what I've realized is, you know, as you get more
successful, you really have one job and that is to find that 10 to 20% that drives the 80%.
And it takes digging.
It's needle in the haystack work.
It's not stacking up haystacks.
And what most people do all day is they stack haystacks.
They do the same thing continuously every single day.
But what do we know about normal?
Normal equals results we don't actually want.
And so I find that if I do not allow my ideas
room to breathe, I'm anxious, frustrated, kind of uncreative, and probably come up with more
problems and solutions. Hidden metric, how many hours per year are you spending being bored?
I bet that that would be correlated with the quality of your life and your flourishing as well.
More time being bored would be good. I think they say that that is true.
I wonder though, it depends what type of boredom, right?
Of course, by the definition of what we're talking about.
A country club, yeah.
Not bored with someone giving a rubbish speech, a presentation at work, but like walking
through nature, allowing your mind to flow as it wishes.
Right.
Pretty good hidden metric.
Very much so.
And so what would we call that instead?
It's not really boredom, it's like.
It's not quite rumination, I guess imagination time.
Yeah, it's basically when are you,
when are you in a non-action taking state?
How often can you be in something
where you're not entertaining
and you're not taking action?
I had this conversation with John Lovell
from the Warrior Poet Society.
Big military guy, pro-patriot guy,
also big Christian guy, and he was episode 666.
And I got a shitton of kickback in the comments
because people, I can't believe that you put John
on episode 666, we needed a man like John
to battle the devil's number.
And I was like, it was just a Saturday, right?
To me it was just a Saturday.
I didn't think, but anyway, cool.
And he taught me this term, which I fucking love.
I think he'll enjoy as well.
It's called the tyranny of the urgent.
Oh, yes.
Oh, so good.
The tyranny of the urgent.
And there's this like a quote or something that either he has or somebody else has about that.
Oh, okay.
It's not his. I didn't know.
I'll have to find it. You are the you have the memory for quotes, but something to the
gree of if you let the tyranny of the urgent overwhelm the important, you'll never achieve
something like that. We can have the internet tell me I'm wrong. Say the right words.
But I think that's that's very, very true.
I also find the most, like if you're particularly frazzled,
it's probably because you are focused on urgent
and not important.
And those who focus on important, not urgent,
kind of coast their way through life.
I mean, to go back to Bill Perkins,
because I adore the guy, I remember when I showed up
in his house the first time, I was late,
so I was frazzled, I'm Latin, I'm basically always late.
And I'm an over-schedular, so I was doing way too many things.
And as I got there, he was so calm while making more money than I do and having more businesses
than I do.
And I was, you know, I was kind of like, Bill, what are you going on today?
He's like, this is the day.
I'm like, what's this?
He's like, you, this conversation with you is the day.
It's the most important thing that I have to do today.
And I just thought, that's fascinating.
And even when I talk to his wife, she's like, yes, he's quite, he will move very quickly
between activities.
He'll get out of bed.
He will immediately get on a phone call.
But the things that are important, he will allow a ton of space on either side.
Yeah, he's not swamped by the urgent.
He seems to have a lot of, an awful lot of time.
Here's another hidden metric.
I'm just throwing this out at you.
The average speed that you walk at,
I bet that if it's reduced down,
the average speed you walk at per year
is like a really lovely metric of,
I'm just fucking, I got time, man.
Except if you're at the airport.
Can we out, you know, if you're at the airport,
because you should always spend
as little time as possible at the airport. Yeah, and you should just get out of people's way. It's like. Can we, you know, if you're at the airport, you should always spend as little time
as possible at the airport.
Yeah, and you should just get out of people's way.
It's like number, actually, you know what?
There's two things, I think.
I agree with you on when necessary walking
with conviction, but not franticness is an interesting one.
I think the counter opposite is show me how long it takes you
to order at a counter, and I will show you your bank account. I think the counter opposite is show me how long it takes you to order at a counter and I will show you your bag account
I think the longer people take and I had to send me it happened to me the other day and I about lost my mind
But I was at a counter like one does a coffee shop or something and there was a there's always a lady in front of you
Right and the lady in front of you takes
four centuries to order a coffee and a muffin.
And when I realize very quickly is, you know, if you want to get something done, you give it to a busy person is the same.
And I think often that's why they say you should take somebody dinner before you hire them or take
them out to lunch, see how they treat the staff.
But I also think see how quickly they make decisions because people who take forever to
order when they stand in line one are really
comfortable inconvenience in somebody else around them, which means they have limited self-awareness,
maybe borderline narcissism.
And then simultaneously, they're not very efficient at the things that don't really matter.
That coffee order does not really matter.
And so if we know we are here for a finite amount of time, I spend so much time on that as
opposed to a walk, a sunset, et cetera.
A lot of tolerance for uncertainty as well.
Oh, yes.
You really didn't like this lady, did you?
Speaking of that, the toleration challenge,
what if your intellect is measured by how much truth you can tolerate?
Can you be told you're wrong?
And that dress makes you look fat and you're getting older,
and he's smarter than you and take them all in stride. Yeah.
My husband and I basically have a thing where something annoyed me yesterday, actually,
and instead of typically what do we want from our partners when something annoys us,
we typically want the other person to just go, yeah, fuck that guy.
Yep, agree, you were right, he was wrong.
And instead we make it sort of a purpose of saying, all right, what are we going to learn
from this?
And so he gave me some feedback that I didn't really like.
I was like, who's the cider you want?
And yet that practice helps us because if we don't associate with, you know, to get woo-woo
because we're located here in Austin, we know that, you know, we're not our body because
we can have thoughts that changes our body changes. We know we're not our body because we can have thoughts that change as our body changes.
We know we're not our job because our jobs can change.
We know we're not the way that we look because if something terrible happens to us, we're
still there.
If we know we're not all of these things, why would you let it control so much of your
brain for you to be seen one way or the other about them?
It's something I think about a lot because we're on the internet, which means our reflection is thrown in our face constantly. And often other people's reflection
of themselves is thrown in our face constantly. And because of that, I don't think you can have
thin skin and beyond the internet. That's actually kind of a beautiful thing because you learn
none of it, it really matters. We will all die eventually, and every one of us will be forgotten. And there's such liberty there.
The way that that gets perverted is people go from,
it doesn't matter.
I can have unbounded dreams too.
It doesn't matter.
Nothing that I do makes any difference, right?
It's the nihilism or cynicism versus optimism,
helicopter thinking, C-saw.
And it seems to be a bit of an eye-fedge between the two.
But I also agree that if you have a partner or a friend
or somebody who regularly will compromise what's true
in order to tell you what's convenient or comfortable,
that are actually really rubbish.
Why bother asking them anything?
Because every single question that they hear is not what is the truth about this thing.
It's, what do you think I want to hear from you?
That's every single question is the same question.
What do you think that I want to hear from you?
And then you say that.
And again, that's the people please, I think.
What else have you learned from Bill Perkins?
He was instrumental in bringing you down to earth
in a pretty big way, I think.
Yeah, well, he was funny.
I think our first interaction, I consider myself
relatively successful.
And so when I went to meet with him,
and I told him about some of the things we were working on,
he had this line that stuck with me that I wish I could just put on a bumper sticker somewhere,
which was I was explaining all these things were working on.
We're buying these companies here and here, we're growing.
And he kind of looked at me and paused like he does.
And he's like Cody, do you think that you have been investing in small businesses for
so long, small has infected your thinking? I was like, and an immediate reaction could have been like, where are you? Fuck you. I don't
know. And instead, I took a pause and I was like, God, there's so much freedom in that
line. What if I am thinking too small and somebody else who has had a past history of positive
performance says that.
Then what might I be capable of?
And so I almost wish all of us a friend
that pushes us harder as opposed to
is the shoulder to cry on and says like,
you know what I'd like you to do next time is something else.
In fact, we have another mutual friend
that I was talking to that did something really big
and really successful.
And they came to me because they're a high performer
and they're like, what should I have done different? What should we have done different? And I was
like, I think one, and I want you to hear this, everything you did was incredible. I'm so
impressed by you. And I think you should keep going. And then I said, secondly, there's
this one thing that you did that was a mimic of somebody else. And what if that would
have been a totally unique style to you? And that's what I want to see from you next time.
I think you are capable of coming up with your own style
that is totally copyable.
And she was like, thanks, because what everybody else said
was positive, positive, positives.
And very few people will tell you, yeah,
but what if you could do this one thing?
Not that you're shitty, but like,
what if you could do this one thing better
when that'd be cool?
Two stories that come to mind.
First one, Lex Friedman was at some party, neurodivergent
degenerates at Michael Malice's house. I was talking to him about, I think he was saying
he had a lot of work on at the moment and he was doing his robotic stuff and he's doing
the podcast and maybe the Ukraine conflicted, it was going on too and he was just feeling it.
It's feeling like all of this stuff's going on blah, blah, blah.
And I was like, oh, interesting.
And then he took a pause and he said, I wish that my friends would stop comforting me
when I say that I work hard.
Because some of his friends say, you already work so hard.
Lex, you know, you should go easier on yourself.
Like this is, you're doing a lot as it is.
He said that he really, really values the friends that say,
yeah, this is tough, but you're tougher.
100%.
You know, even my mother, she had an incredible line to me.
She basically said, and it's so simple, but we don't hear it enough.
You just continue every single day to do the best that you can, and only you know what
the word best is defined as.
And most people put some subjective, best, hard, good, bad on you, as opposed to saying,
I believe in you so much that you know what you are capable of.
And only you can answer if you are actually living up
to that on a daily basis.
And I love that because I actually think most humans
are very capable should they apply themselves continuously
and work past a point that is comfortable or even rational.
And if you can do that, you can achieve very many things.
Pending, you don't wanna be a basketball player
and you're, you know, five one.
Like, pending those things, you can achieve much.
And that's part of the reason I'm so prevalent on the internet now,
is, you know, I made a lot of my money already in finance and doing the things that I did previously.
And then I realized, eh, I wanna make more money because it's fun.
I really like every dollar I make.
But I think it's more interesting.
If I could figure out, could I help other people actually achieve the same thing?
And not because I'm nice, I'm really not that nice.
But just to see like, is that possible?
Because that seems like a more interesting and bigger legacy actually, then just can I
apply this one thing continuously.
And so lots of people who are on the internet, I think people say one thing or the other
about humans like us that talk about things publicly.
And yet, thank God that there are humans like you
who talk about things like neurodrovergent being normal
because I thought that just used to me and well,
you know, I have a little bit of ADHD
which means I'm defunct in some way.
And so, yeah, I think most humans can work harder and they just don't want to hear that.
You're getting perilously close to Chimath's man in the arena tweet, which is going to get you destroyed on the issue.
And I actually have actually used that before. I do think, you know what, fuck that. I think if you
were on a small business and you were a business owner, now maybe not Chimath in the sweaters and jets
at this point. Maybe you have a lot of buffer there, but I actually don't know his life, so I don't know. But I think if you are a small
business owner and you are working really hard out there, you're in the arena. And I think my husband
who went to war multiple times would say the same thing. Councils, it definitely counts as an arena.
Yeah, yeah. Some sort of difficult. And we should, we should actually praise people for that a little bit more.
You remember when Elon took over Twitter and he said, it gets rid of 95% of the coding
team, dev team, whatever. And I think he puts out a job application, web page, and say
something like, if you want to work hard, you've ever worked in your entire life, come to Twitter.
And people criticized them on the internet and said, this is a return to, you know, early
1900 sweatshop labor. What is this? Are we going to be going down chimney sweeping?
And I understand that in a world where we can have much more luxurious working conditions and everybody can have their mindful Mondays and they can have their latte Wednesdays and stuff like that.
And that's not just a market like I do think it's a in some regards a much more balanced holistic culture.
But what it fails to understand is that there is a cohort of people out there who just want to put their nose on the grindstone and see how fast they can make it spin. Like all they want to do is work. They love
and are fired up and take so much more pleasure from the idea of achieving something completely
unreal with their time. And it is a failure of theory of mind for you,
And it is a failure of theory of mind for you, personal and the internet, to look at that job post from Elon.
Maybe it is exploitative.
Maybe it's fortunately a coincidence that he can both use the people's drive to be
able to achieve whatever they want and also get them basically a cut down price to work
24 hours a day, perhaps.
But it is a failure of theory of mind to understand that there are people out there who just
want to do that, and it would fire them up way more to be told.
Here's an obscenely unrealistic goal in a ridiculously short time span, and I want
you to do it.
Here's as much Adderoll as you need and a comfortable standing desk.
Let's see what you can manifest, yeah.
Yeah, I mean, I was, so my husband was a Navy SEAL
and I was at the, it's like the 40th year anniversary
of his team, SEAL Team 3.
And I thought it was fascinating
on a couple different fronts.
One, you looked around the group of 600 people
all gathered and you could immediately pick out all of the seals, right, out of uniform.
Because it's become so rare to be fit and healthy and have, you know, 200 people who are like
that all in one space, 200 warriors was really rare. I thought that was interesting. What I also
thought was interesting as I spoke to them about it,
and I spoke to those who had come out,
and those who were still in,
is those who had come out and said,
do you know what we miss more than anything?
And I'm like the adrenaline,
you know, the operations kicking down doors.
I'm a Roger.
It was doing extremely difficult things
with other people who want to do extremely difficult things.
Well, and that level of human who wants to excel is just rare.
And so when you're around them, you feel it.
You feel a difference between, you have an energy that is positively accelerated when
you're around another doer.
They just, they don't drain from you because they're too busy doing and pushing out.
And with the SEAL teams, I was never in them,
I can't speak to any of it myself,
but what I've seen is that these guys miss that
more than anything else when they get out.
It's not just like camaraderie,
it's we were excellent at what we did,
and we held each other to an incredibly high standard,
and we had a joint purpose.
And I mean, there was a study done during the blitz,
right, during during the World War that everybody talks about with humans were conceivably happier
as defined by lower suicide rates during the blitz than afterwards because there was the shared
purpose and meaning. And so I think if you compare your shared purpose and meaning with
a group of excellent humans, let go of all of those who do not want to be excellent because
cancer spreads. Then you can create somewhere where people want to spend 24 hours working
because society at large looks nothing like that. And you can feel the difference.
What did you learn looking around a room of 200 sales, 300 sales? What did
you learn from looking at their spouses? Well, that's interesting. Well, the spouses
probably fit in a lot of ways to categories. One category would be more traditional looking
in sunglasses, you know, cute kids running around happy looking American
family.
The other were just as jacked as they're, just as strong and tattooed as they're meant.
I actually thought that was an interesting dichotomy.
You see that, like Gabrielle Lyons, a friend of mine, and she's a badass doctor.
Also, just one of the strongest fittest women I've ever met in my life.
It's her husband as a seal.
Her husband as a seal.
And a surgeon.
And then Emily for Sella, Andy for Sella's wife,
also just jacked in great shape.
Her husband as a seal.
But like I do think that it seems like
really strong driven men that our team guys
either want sort of the traditional spouse,
you know, sundress, etc. or like a very strong similar person to them. And when I've gotten to
know a lot of these guys and I have a lot of respect for them and their spouses, there's two types
of strengths there. I mean, the physically strong thing is really important, but you will not last.
I mean, the divorce rate among team guys and special operators in general is incredibly high.
It's really?
Oh, yeah. It's the highest of any military.
One, because they're gone all the time, both training and deployment.
And two, because I've been, you know, through deployment with my husband,
and it's emotionally taxing in a way that we are not habitualized, too.
And so, you have to be strong enough to do that. I think I would have
struggled to do it with kids. Like I have nothing but respect for the women who have kids with
men who go into line of duty every day where they could potentially die. That's incredibly
difficult to live through. What's the reality of being married as a power couple?
You know what's so funny is everybody says it's really hard.
And Chris and I kind of look at each other every day.
And we're like, best part of my day right now.
Like we wake up in the morning, you know what I actually do in the morning,
I don't get in the cold plunge first.
Chris and I snuggle like little nerds for like five or 20 minutes.
We're just like snuggling, talking to each other.
The dog gets into the bed.
The dog's a little tiny thing, not even a cool-looking team guy dog.
And he's, you know, my person who's somebody that I can just trust and rely on, and I
think I'm that for him too.
We loved the quote, I remember in the beginning when we were first dating, didn't age well,
because I think it was Jeff Bezos who said, I married my wife because I wanted somebody
who could get me out of a third world prison at any point.
But we always kind of associated with that.
Our thing is it's us against the world.
And so I think that's the one truth of being a power couple.
I don't know any different because I've always worked.
So I've never been, and my husband, he's always worked and most of my significant
others were powerful and successful in a traditional sense.
But one of the most incredible things I think when you find another human who is
striving for something is you really can track on what's going on in your lives.
And there's a lot you can share, whereas at least from my perspective, if I was with a man who wasn't working very hard in a job in some way, shape, or form, it's harder for us
to be on the same page. And I end up having to talk with a lot of other people
about the thing I'm obsessing on all day long. And I never really understood
how people could be with like the trophy wife thing never really made sense to me.
A trophy girlfriend makes a lot of sense.
A trophy boyfriend makes a lot of sense.
A wife or husband doesn't to me because what would you talk about?
Do you guys just look at each other all day?
Like what's happening there?
And so I actually think that's really shallow and we should all strive to be the best versions of ourselves.
Not to mention, do you remember that there's a blog post a million years ago
where the guy was like really brutally said,
why would I ever have a trophy wife
or a trophy husband he was talking about a trophy wife,
and he's like, and marry that person for just their looks.
When your looks are definitely going to depreciate over time
and my assets will appreciate over time.
And at the time I remember being like,
yeah, fuck that guy.
And then I was like, well, also kind of true.
Makes a lot of sense if all we're talking about
is the way you look.
That's pretty shallow.
And so, I don't have a lot of complaints.
And I think I wouldn't last very long
with somebody who wasn't striving right alongside me.
What, there's a lot of talk and narrative on the internet
about the sort of alpha polarity,
the, you know, super masculine guy with the very feminine woman, there must be a leader,
there must be a follower. What is the dynamic like given that you are two leaders?
Yeah. I sort of have this theory, and we'll see if it plays out. You had the girl boss me to movement,
right? Women, power, fuck guys, we don't need you. Then you had the alpha man movement,
you know, get behind me, I'm the protector, I'm in charge, you know, women stay home in
your gardens. And I think in the future what we're going to come back to, which is what
we do every time we have massive pendulums, pendulum swings, is like, yeah, why don't we
both kind of chill out
in the middle?
That seems like typically where we go.
And I think there will be not an alpha power couple,
but a, what if we both just realized
there were nuance humans and we look for somebody
who could actually support us continuously?
A bunch of the guys that have that alpha woman movement
saying got divorced.
One of the main guys who was like,
you must protect
your family, you know, do whatever and had a woman that was sort of this other thing gets
a divorce. The other guy who's a big proponent of it, like Andrew Tate, not fucking married.
So like the people who are talking about this alpha man movement, let's scoreboard it.
Let's see over time, does this work out for you? And I'm a big proponent of you should
do whatever you want,
but I think I'm good friends with the Hormozis
because I watch them have each other's back through time.
And that seems to me more sustainable
than the other way around.
What do you think?
So I think that there is a significant cohort
of women who are like you attracted to guys who have excellence, but
don't have that same drive themselves, I don't think that the reverse is quite as true
for men.
I don't think you're going to find a normal dude who chugs away at a perfectly acceptable
job, but it's like, you know but I really get turned on by like boss bitch
women, like high powered lawyers and stuff, because the socioeconomic status of a woman
doesn't matter as much to a man on average as it does in reverse.
So I think that ultimately being competent as a man, and this is to cut through three and
a half years of learning evolutionary psychology,
whether it be status, whether it be resources, whether it be looks, whether it be height,
whether it be being funny, whether it be being charming, or whatever, like just portraying competence,
right. But competence comes on both sides of the equation, and the polarity can be changed with quite nicely because if you see as a husband,
if you see your wife, just like a fucking wizard
with the kids, you know,
and all three of them are ready for school
five minutes early and the breakfast's done
and there's a kiss on the cheek and she's out the door.
You're like, you're a fucking boss.
Like sure, you're not going off to the office or whatever,
but you've got this shit unlocked.
That's attractive. sure you're not going after the office or whatever, but you've got this shit unlock.
That's attractive.
A grade players look for A grade players, right?
Regardless of sector.
Correct.
Regardless of what the subgenre of game is that they're playing.
Yeah, that's right.
And this is why, you know, very rarely do you see, I've been watching that a quarterback
on Netflix. it's about three
different NFL quarterbacks and Patrick Mahomes is one of them.
And you look at all three of the wives of these guys, all three of them pretty well spoken.
They're not super, I think at least maybe two of them have been together since before
they were even in college.
So it's not like they picked up some hot, totty girl and moved her into the house or whatever,
long-standing relationships.
But all of the girls are competent with what they do.
They're able to talk and they're able to explain and they have insight about themselves
and they have insight about their partner.
And you're like, yeah, that's like, that's hot, that's cool, right?
Like it's attractive, competence is attractive, and incompetence is almost always going to
be unattractive.
That's absolutely true.
Yeah, I mean, I do think one thing I've found for women that I think women really need
to watch out for, and I've noticed this just among my friends because I'm a little bit
older now.
So I have a lot of my friends who have had kids and been married for a period of time
And a lot of them are highly competent like you said
We're incredible mothers are incredible mothers have gone through childbirth multiple times
Which still intimidates me and I find incredibly impressive
and
Then I found there's this there's this low period
After your kids don't need you as much anymore and you know your husband has continued to progress And then I found there's this, there's this low period
after your kids don't need you as much anymore.
And, you know, your husband has continued to progress
in this linear career progression.
And you poured yourself with competence
into your, your, your kids.
And I think we will see in the future
a rising usage of prescription pills, sleeping aids,
adderol, to the subset of women
because they start to realize,
ah, where do I go now?
And society doesn't really have this fit for me any longer.
Well, what that typically or traditionally would have been,
if we roll back over 200 years,
we would have been in pan generational houses, right?
So it would have been assisting with my sisters' daughters,
we're assisting with my daughters' daughters, assisting with my niece, assisting with my what up, right? So it would have been assisting with my sister's daughters, who are assisting with my daughters' daughters,
assisting with my niece, assisting with my what-up, right? You know, there would be so much to do,
it's called alloparenting, not many animals do it, but humans do, where multiple related and
unrelated women share the child rearing burden together, right? Because rearing a human child is
a much better task.
So you share it between your friends and your family
and there's an idea, do you know why the evolutionary
psychology explanation for why menopause exists?
No.
This is cool.
So it's called the grandmother hypothesis.
Grandmother hypothesis says that why would you have
an animal, female animal that exists beyond their reproductive window?
If our goal is to survive and reproduce, as soon as you stop reproducing, surely kicking
the bucket makes a ton of sense, because get out of the way, let the calories go to the
ones that are going to be able to survive if you can no longer make kids.
But that doesn't account for the fact that the very effortful
rearing that's required for human children. So, if you imagine that you have a particular
fertility window, after that point, you as grandmother can no longer produce children
that sap calories, but can contribute to the rearing of children, not only yours, but your daughters and your sisters and so on and so forth.
So this is the grandmother hypothesis. You age out of your reproductive role and move into a new kind of role.
So you are still a net positive from a caloric perspective to the whole tribe. I thought that was really interesting.
That's fascinating. It actually makes a lot of sense. But I don't know what the solution
is for the modern day, modern day woman.
Rough. You've got Adam Lane Smith tweeted this thing where he said, don't forget that moving
out of Homer 18 is a siaop by the real estate industry. And in some regards, it's true,
right? We would have always lived in big, pan-generational houses, farms,
community type things.
I think that you're right.
I think that as financial independence
becomes more available to women,
its lack will be more tightly felt, right?
If you have sacrificed a career that you were already on
or never got into a career,
to be able to raise the kids because you wanted to be the greatest mother that you could when that role is now gone.
It's like being an NBA star, you're 37 years old, right?
Jonathan, come in, sit down, there's your retirement check, you've done really great, okay?
All I've known my entire life, or all that I can remember that I've known for the last 15
years has been ball or children.
Where do you take your sense of meaning from?
And you see this, I think the Peterson talks about the greatest sacrifice that a mother
can make is to allow their child to go out into the world knowing that they're fragile.
And he says,
If you go out there, you might lose yourself, but if you stay with me, you'll lose your soul.
And it's this...
Michelangelo's pieta, it's this beautiful marble sculpture that's in the Vatican.
It's the mother with Christ sort of draped across her arms like this. marble sculpture that's in the Vatican.
It's the mother with Christ sort of draped across her arms like this,
and he says that, you know,
it's the female crucifixion.
It's not about you, it's about your child.
And it's rough, I think that you're right.
I think that we will see some challenges there.
That being said, women have got really,
really great performance in the workplace at the moment.
And I don't think that a 52 year old said, women have got really, really great performance in the workplace at the moment.
And I don't think that a 52 year old mother of two who is still conscientious as hell and
super competent is going to struggle to reintegrate back into an office working environment, especially
if you've got all of the emotional intelligence
and all of the people skills that have been developed over the last two decades of raising
a bunch of tiny screaming kids.
Like that's a skill set.
I certainly know within my operation that having like a mothering role, someone to just lubricate
the wheels socially, I think that would be a really cool, like literally like a surrogate
mother. There's a lot of like lads, I guess, that work for me, you know, 25 to 35 dudes.
And like, just someone to come in and be like, boys, can we stop doing X, Y and Z? Or
someone's forgot that this thing. Professional mother, I think, would be corporate mother.
Yeah, I think we've got a new coin there. Yeah, well, there's a couple of things. One is, I've never really understood ageism in the workplace because if you actually employ
older people of both sexes, both people, you know, let's say 50, 60 and above, the
immediate reaction is usually that they have a deficit with technology, which is true,
as we will when we get to that age.
But the flip side of that is actually that their lived experience is so strong that when
you hire somebody like this, they just have more reps on this planet.
And so I saw the other day we were in a team meeting and I have this one person on my team
shout out Kimberly.
And she's great, she's a mother of three.
And I saw one of our individuals in the team getting a little flustered, a gent, and I was
pretty aggressive and direct, which not usually the best way to be when somebody is that way.
And she, as she probably does with her three kids, was amazing.
She was like, really calm.
She was like, you know, how are you feeling about that?
Like, what do you think?
And I would never ask a question like, how are you feeling about that?
I need to work on my EQ.
And she did.
And I do find that that aspect I hope to bring
back more. Goldman actually had a great program which was bringing women re-entering back into the
workforce. I'm not sure re-entering back into Goldman sounds great after I had been a mom for a while,
but I'm curious to see what happens for that generation of women and I think it'll be it'll be
really, really cool. And I also think, my husband and I work together
in a lot of capacities, and he still has his,
he does work for the Department of Defense.
But that's another thing that people say you should never do,
and I find extreme joy in it.
And I'd be curious what would happen for more individuals
if partners allowed their significant other
more into their sphere. Doesn't mean you have to overlap entirely.
We have very different pursuits, but when you can watch your significant other
excel in something that you really understand day to day, I don't think there's anything sexier.
On both sides of the equation.
It's competence plus understanding, right? You're able to interpret, you watched someone be really good at Brazilian
Gigietsu or pickleball or drawing or something. And you're like, honey, you did great, right?
You, I'm so proud of that thing you just did, which I don't largely understand. And actually,
if you were to look at some of the most sought-after pursuits for guys,
because again, the increase in status that you get by being competent at something seems
to be beneficial to men a little bit more, what they're actually looking at doing, I wonder
if this is right. What men are looking at doing is trying to find pursuits that are the most
easy to interpret by the widest number of women. That's your son.
Music.
Everybody can tell, is that good music or bad music?
But, you know, how many people are like,
I'm gonna make cyberpunk drum and bass.
I'm gonna be the best cyberpunk.
It's like, yeah, sure,
but it's not gonna be as broad comedy, right?
Movies.
Everybody watches movies,
everybody watches comedy, everybody watches, listens to music. Movies. Everybody watches movies. Everybody watches comedy. Everybody
watches, listens to music. Yeah, exactly. I'm going to be in shape. I can see that. I don't
kind of understand what's going on, but I know that's good, or at least other people think that
that's good. And that's another one, signaling, right? So you've got not only, is it obviously competent,
but do other people hold that competence in high
esteem?
Gain, cyberpunk drum and bass, who even knows if that exists.
But if you're in a cohort of people who very much value this thing, I remember when we
were doing club promo, so many times, some of the boys would use the term like she's Instagram
hot, right?
Which is like, so she looks fit on Instagram, but in real life isn't quite as hot.
But part of the hotness of the girl on Instagram was impacting how highly they regarded them
in real life, because you've got kind of pre-selection, right?
If this girl's got more followers than everybody else and everyone else is like
looking at what she's doing and everyone thinks that she's really, really fit online,
even if she kind of isn't that in the real world, it's almost like a degree of competence,
right? Butification, the ability to beautify yourself and having a style, visual appeal,
even if that doesn't translate very much at all to the real world, it's still a thing,
right?
Yeah, what's true, I was talking to a couple of entrepreneurs the other day about they
delivered something, and the end product was okay, but the way that they delivered it was
poor.
And so I call this the Tiffany's box theory.
And basically, if you look at two diamond rings that
look identical to them, but one is from Zales and one is from Tiffany's. This one from Tiffany's
will have a price tag of 50,000 and this one will have a price tag of five. It is the same exact
product. There's literally no difference except the name on one versus the other. And what is the
real difference between the two? Well, if I was to give you either one of those rings, and I like stuck in a paper bag, and I crumpled it up,
and I threw the paper bag at you,
and then you got that ring.
You're already pre-selected.
You already have a bias to say,
what is this?
This is like a fake ring, this is whatever.
It wouldn't actually matter that this was the Tiffany's ring.
But if I gave you the $5,000 ring,
and I put it in the Tiffany's box,
and I tied it up, and I presented it to you in this way,
you would now value that ring at a $50,000 amount.
Even though the difference between a paper bag, 25 cents and the Tiffany's box, I don't
know, $1.50, doesn't actually equate at all to the value that's changed between the
two.
But if we wrap something properly, we will consider it to be more valuable.
And that is like rule number one in success, business probably sex, love,
the way you present the medium is the message. That's exactly right. Yeah. Think about I
learned this from Stephen Bartlett a couple of weeks ago, really good example. Think about
how much space every Apple store loses in terms of real estate by not packing more technology
onto each table, right? Go into in the UK, I don't know them over here, target,
maybe I guess, but like PC world or curries in the UK, like big electronic stores, go into
that, and it's just a fucking chaos of cables everywhere and screens are touching each other
because the most amount of products that we can put out means that customers are able to
find exactly what they want. And you go into an Apple store and there's just barren wasteland in between each product.
All right, so a couple of interesting questions for the guys who like the idea of having a
highly competent driven smart girl, what are the do's and don't what should those guys think about what
are they getting right and getting wrong in your and your friend's experience?
That's such an interesting question. Well a couple different things. The easiest
the easiest way I think to attract a we need to we should come up with a term for
this. Is there a term for this.
Is there a term for like, I-
I got a high value woman.
Oh God, I don't want to use that.
I know the origination.
Also, could you imagine if I called myself a high value woman,
or somebody calls themselves a high value man?
I immediately, there's rule number one.
Don't fucking call yourself that.
Rule number two is,
I think a couple things people underestimate.
If we're talking about the wrapping,
the wrapping does not have to be six pack and hot
to get a high value woman.
It really needs to be confidence.
I always joked with my husband.
He's like, he jokes because he's shorter.
So he's like, nobody's looking at this.
And if you met him, which, have you met him?
Yeah, you didn't meet him.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. He just takes up a room. Just the way that he is, his presence, he's really at this. And if you met him, which, have you met him? Yeah, you did meet him. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. He just takes up a room.
Just the way that he is, his presence,
he's really not afraid.
He's rather direct.
He looks you in the eye.
He walks up to you specifically,
like he's supposed to be there and so are you.
And he's actually quite calculated on the method
in which he would communicate with you.
And so because of that, he could be not the six foot five guy who's going to naturally have
an unfair advantage in finding a partner. But he would have this like, this satellite around him
that you just, this magnet that you get drawn towards. And I've found that with a lot of the women
I know who are, let's say, traditionally good-looking, successful, competent, and in some way, shape or form. Often, their
partners or people who have an it factor in some way. And the cool thing about an it factor
is you can create it. You could actually learn to be the type of person who just shakes
hands with a little bit of strength and looks somebody in the eye. And you could actually
learn to be the type of person that listens and repeats back the thing that the person
just said to them. And it's a little bit curious
and that chooses not just to be nice but to be kind. The other thing that I think people who are
competent on either side of it is they want you to be courageous in one way, shape, or form.
And it doesn't have to be because you're a man. But they don't really care if you're the, you know, nice to, oh yes, of course, thank
you.
You know, we don't really want that overly nice thing.
What we actually do want is that you notice the guy on the side of the road who's having
a flat tire and needs a little bit of help and you decide to pull over and see what you
can do to help the guy.
You don't even have to know how to fix it. Just call up and make something happen.
And so I think this world of like humans who make things happen,
end up running into more humans who make things happen.
Because we're just busy doing the doing.
And so the cool thing I think about if you want to find a woman
who is a strong partner in many pursuits,
is they really just want a woman or a man
who is also kind of strong in their own pursuits.
And some of my best friends who have long-term marriages, you know, 10 years plus,
to men who even aren't as monetarily successful as them, and some of them are,
is that actually the way that the man looks has very little to do with it, which I don't
always find to be true on the other side of the equation. But they might have like some incredible personality trait. And I think that's just really attractive to women.
What about the other side of the fence? What advice would you have for your female brethren
who think, I like the idea of getting a competent partner. What are the ways, the pitfalls that you see
those women fall into or what are the things that they should be prepared for or what are the ways
that that can go awry if they're looking for the competent man? Yeah. Have you ever proactively
looked for a partner like been looking and thinking a lot about finding a partner?
No, not particularly. No, it's always kind of just stumbled upon me.
Yeah, that's a common trait I've found. Typically, I think people who are competent
and looking for that same thing in a partner, they focus on bettering themselves
before they focus on looking for another. I think the biggest red flag is
typically a human who's like, I really just want to looking for another. I think the biggest red flag is typically
a human who's like, I really just want to be with somebody. I want to be with somebody. I'm ready. How
do I find my person? Get that energy out of your life as both a woman, which I can speak more to,
and a man, and instead become somebody worth finding. And that's really hard to hear, I think, on
either side of the coin. But when you start working out, which doesn't mean you have to be perfectly
fit, but you have more energy, when you start pursuing something
that you're uniquely interested in, when you have real pursuits that are obsessions for
you in some way, shape or form, form, you're more interesting.
And thus you will attract more interesting people.
And I think the biggest thing that we have done wrong is a disservice to society.
And you might have told me about this, and we might have talked about this before, is assume that finding the right person is simply a
game of swiping ref left swiping right continuously. I think one of the worst things we've ever done
is allow dating apps to enter into our dating equation, because we have thought that it is a
numbers game of finding the right person as opposed to a daily activities game of
becoming the right person. When you become the right person, you will attract
people continuously no matter what. And I've seen this from both myself and my
friends who are varying levels of attractive, varying levels of rich, but working
really hard on a few things that make them very interesting to humans.
Yeah, I think lots of people ask the question where are all of the good partners at?
Very few people ask the question, why am I not attracting the kind of partners that I want to be
attracted to? That's the question. And there's a line from artificial intelligence to zombies,
rationality from A to Z by Eliezer Yukowsky, and he writes this book about rationality,
which is cognitive biases and the ways
that I think goes awry and stuff.
And at the start of it, he says,
people take the piss out of rationalists,
not because being in love with rationality is strange,
but because it's so rare to love anything
in the modern world.
And this dearth of passion that people have. Like, if you ask someone,
what do you really love doing? Like, tell me what gets you
fired up. If you had an appointment at seven in the morning to
do this thing, you would be out of bed at six, because you
couldn't wait to go and do it, right? And me and Zach, my
housemate, we always use the same example, rally cross. So it's
like the drivers in the four wheel drive cars and they're
going through wooded things and everyone dies, everybody dies all the time. But there's
these dudes that go in the fucking pissing rain to Perth Scotland, right, in November,
at 3pm on a Wednesday afternoon with an anorac and an umbrella over the
top of the head.
Some of them have got cameras, some of them haven't, and they stand there to watch a rally
car go, like that.
And then they turn and look at their boys and they're like, ah!
And we love watching those videos because watching anybody else get fired up at something that they love
Fies you up, right to see someone love anything is so rare
It's like an oasis right in a desert of bland indifference. Oh, yeah. I remember I knew I was gonna get divorced when I'm divorced and remarried
I knew I was gonna get divorced when I
Remember him saying
there's nothing in the world that makes me happy anymore.
That's a damning indictment of what of life, isn't it?
It was, and I thought that's not the world's problem. That's yours.
And we can work on that. But if you are not willing to see that it's not cool to think nothing
and is cool, then you will never love anything again, including me.
And thus, I cannot love you.
And so, I find that, that spark of obsession,
doesn't even have to be greatness, but obsession is so contagious
that it's like a little bit of oxygen
in a Vegas casino, it makes you want to stay up all night.
Anybody that loves anything is cool. The guys on the side of the road watching Colin
McCray go past at 120 miles an hour, it's a flash of this one person that they know
about. Like, I went to Cameron Haynes took me to the bow rack in Eugene, Oregon, and
he tuned up this bow. I'd never shot a bow before, since I was like 13 on a holiday doing like some lame kids
club thing.
And I'm there with the dude that owns this shop, Family Run Shop, since the got a decade
and decades and decade.
And you know, you can tell that it's a well-won in shop because there's loads of stuff
that's only there because it's been accumulated
there. Like, it's not precise, it's not neat, it's accumulated stuff. It's the opposite
of an Apple store, right? There's like, someone brought that cap in seven years ago and
you haven't moved it yet. And it's just been on this Windows sell for ages or whatever.
It's that, but everywhere. And there's all of the bows and all of the arrows and all
of the different types of arrowheads and all this stuff. Anyway, he's tuning me up on this bow,
tuning me up on this bow, tuning me up, making sure that everything's right, dials it in. He's
like, oh, that's cool. And then I go over to the, like, kind of like a workman's desk. It's an entire
workman's area. I don't know whether you've ever seen bones. Bowls getting tuned up. Yeah,
yeah. So he's like tuning in the site and he's making sure, and then he does this special thing with a lighter to just make sure that
I think if you heat the thread, it binds a little bit more tightly. And he's like, oh,
this is a little trick that I learned with whatever, whatever, like not supposed to set
shock horror, bow 101 don't set the string on fire. But like he found that if he did
it a little bit, it like tightened and locked everything in or some other bits and pieces, I was enthralled because
I was just around people that were fucking in love with what they did. They were fired
up. They were passionate about their thing. I love as well. One other thing that I really,
really love seeing is people that have, how do you say, very innocuous mastery, right? So, for instance, one of the things
that I have, would you know, I'll never see when I sit down at my desk or stand at my
desk to do the episode remotely, I can be thinking about the episode that I've got coming
up while I was doing vocal warmups, but the way that all of the studio comes together of like Mike's in, everything's checked,
master is on, monitoring's coming through my ears, every like just doing, boom, boom, boom,
and I've seen it with so many friends, a friend that was a doctor and went to university for
basically a decade to do three degrees, worked at BlackRock, became a doctor, became a surgeon,
and if he has a pen in his hand, we'll just sit there and he'll do the most insane pan tricks. And he's not even thinking just because familiarity,
right? Like if I saw you prepare, in fact, I did see preparing for a talk or something
like that, there'll just be something that people do. Oh, here's a perfect example. I saw
a guy playing guitar on sixth street and he's playing away, playing
away, playing away. And this pick, like, boom, like just, it's in the crowd or something
like that. And without even thinking, he's just like still singing away, pick goes and
he doesn't even think about it. He just keeps on playing with one hand, reaching his
behind himself, unnecessarily twirls this pick from the top knuckle all the way down to the bottom to catch it off and keep going because he's just done it
a million times. So like, yeah, like very normal mastery of stuff. And that's kind of the same as
take the person that you're going to date or employ to a restaurant to see how they treat the staff.
restaurant to see how they treat the staff. Yeah.
It's, what do people do in the beats in between?
Yeah.
Right?
It's not the big performance because that's dialed.
It's, what's the way that they put their jacket on before they walk out of the dressing room?
Yeah, what are the small wins that compound?
Yeah, you know, I was thinking about it.
I think the 2.0 level to being a person that finds another high value
one is not just being the one in the stands watching with that wild enthusiasm, but finding
the thing that you can actually play in the game as opposed to be a voyeur in.
And so to your point, even if you're not the champion bow hunter that Cameron Haynes
is, being that person who sells and tweaks and prepares
the bow for the champion is incredible to watch. Now Cameron probably makes quite a bit more money
and perhaps is more physically fit than this other guy and yet both things are enthralling.
The necessary, right? 100%. You know, I watched my father for many years, he's a long time hunter
and he was the same. He'd get up every single weekend that he could
at three in the morning, pack a bunch of stuff
in order to drive three or four hours,
hike a couple more hours to try to find an elk.
And it was like a joke amongst my mom's friends.
Like, yeah, you're gonna go look for another elk
for days on end and then eventually one day shoot one.
And I remember when my father and I became really close
and I was a young girl
with some cognition about it, we would go hunting together. And now my husband will say that
I have quite good eyes. So if there's game around and we're hunting, I'm usually the one
that can spot it first because I have these reps with my father of watching movement across
a landscape. And in the way like an animal has a different shape that you'll never really find
in nature because there's often smooth lines on shape that you'll never really find in nature
because there's often smooth lines on animals and on nature you find much more jagged as the norm.
And so watching him for so many years do a thing that made no money whatsoever but him master it
in a way where he could spot an elk that nobody else in the entire like group could spot even
when he was trying to show them and he would have to shoot it and down it before anybody else knew where it was was so incredible to me from
a young age and so joyful with no, there's nothing like he doesn't post on Instagram.
You wouldn't be able to find my father anywhere.
He's not a showman and yet he did this thing to the best that he possibly could every single
time because he had that obsession and love for it. And I think that's part of why him and my mother
have been together for so many years. And I see the same thing with my husband. When
you find a partner who has that wild obsession and pursuit, it is contagious. And Chris
is a purple belt and we'll get off a flight and I'll go work because I'm obsessed with
working. It's my favorite thing to do. And he will go get in the gym, immediately changes clothes and go off to
Jiu Jitsu because he wants a pursuit of a black belt. And that is really, really cool to watch.
And you know a bunch of, we have a bunch of friends we both know who are famous humans.
They're not always attracted to like the other famous humans and they're exact same crowd.
You know Joe Rogan is attracted to Cameron Haines,
yes, because they both shoot,
but also because he's like, wow,
this is a pursuit that's just so fascinating.
And Joe's also interested in somebody like you
who's just obsessed with human psychology and frameworks.
And so maybe the goal to find an incredible partner
who's top tier in some way, shape, or form, is
just becoming top tier obsessed with something yourself. That might be enough.
What was your insight about why you should get into rooms where your average Tuesday is
your best day?
Oh, yeah. Well, I think the easiest way to change behavior is to get around other people who already have
the behavior you want normalized, right?
And so I would always joke with my trainer like, is your six pack contagious?
Can I just like, can it rub off on me?
And I remember one day he was like, yes, I'm like, can we explain how that works?
He was like, because if you hung out with me all the time, I don't drink.
I'm up early.
I work out every day.
I work out really hard.
If you saw my intensity level paired
with the normal person's intensity level,
aka yours at the gym, you would probably up yours.
And it would just be natural.
It's actually why I think group fitness is so important.
Especially for women who weren't a lot of us,
I was an athlete in college,
I'm sorry, in high school, I wasn't an athlete in college,
but a lot of women, we didn't have that intensity ingrained in us.
You didn't find women fighting and wrestling with kids until, you know, we won some more
sort of outcome.
That wasn't normalized.
And so when it comes to really intense workout sports, I tend to think women are better off
doing group classes because you see a bunch of other competitive people right next to you
and you can up level.
Whereas my husband and maybe you, you know, if he's in the gym, he's just an animal.
He, nobody could be in there for weeks and he would act that way.
And so that's why I believe, get around other people who, what you want, just is their Tuesday.
Yeah, what other advice have you got from Billionaires? You spent a good bit of time around wealthy people.
What, you know, lots and lots of net worth combined in rooms
that you've sat in front of.
Like what are the biggest takeaways that you've had?
Yeah, well, sort of a funny story.
One of the guys that is a billionaire,
but also spent some time with Warren Buffett
had a story about how he went to dinner with Warren.
And I'm a little bit of a Warren junkie.
That would be like the guy that if I got to meet,
almost anybody else don't care about him.
It's not going hard.
Yeah, maybe I could be his third wife because I hear you so.
Anyway, so he goes to dinner with Warren and he's like, I have 400 questions for Warren
because I'm worth this and he's worth this and I'm all excited.
So I fly there and I go and sit down for dinner and he's like, I couldn't ask him a question
because he just kept asking me questions.
All he did the whole time was pick my brand on what I thought here, what I thought there.
And he's like, I didn't even realize that until I left that he had basically gotten all this information for me and I had got nothing for them.
Yeah.
And he's like, and so he's met a couple other people that know him too.
And he's like, the smartest, richest people, I know, ask the most questions and try to
prove their intelligence the least because they know that the ones who collect the most
knowledge have the biggest unfair advantage.
And so I found that almost across the board.
That's interesting.
What about there, there's a lot of talk about ethics or lack thereof in the
billionaire class. What's been your experience of that?
Obviously, we have real knowledge that there are billionaires that have done horrible things
and we've seen that in the news of late. I do imagine a bit like the science fiction
movies where once you have a certain level of money,
it all becomes a power game and you lose a sense of reality for what is actually good
bad or otherwise because you have an ability to actually control your entire environment
and bend it to your will.
And the more money you have, the more you can bend your environment to your will.
It's just true. One thing's interesting. We have a
friend of ours that runs a family office and was a chief of staff for two billionaires.
And I remember last time we saw him, I was like, what's going on with you? What are we doing?
We're explaining what we're building and what our goals were and what our companies were worth.
And he was like, I wish you not one dollar more than $299 million. And I was like, that is such a weird number.
Albatry.
Yeah, like why $299?
And he's like, I've run a family office
for multiple billionaires, and I see right about that amount,
is when they start losing touch with reality,
and when you lose touch with reality,
you don't feel like you're a part of society,
and when you don't feel like a part of society,
you start to become unhappy,
and you start to have really negative decision making.
And I thought that was really interesting.
Now, I'm willing to try to be worth over $29.9 million, we can see what it works like for
me, but I thought that was really, really intriguing.
Kevin Kelly's got this piece of advice.
You must try as hard as you can under no circumstances to become a billionaire.
Yeah.
Like his, that's, that's his, I like Kevin Kelly.
Kevin, Kevin, I really, really enjoyed my conversation that I had with him.
I love his thousand true friends.
I think that's true.
But one thing I would say to get back to ethics and morals of business, billionaire is just
for one second.
I have found that the more people have and have created, the nicer and more giving they
are.
It's actually those who haven't created a ton
who are still living in scarcity that are gnarly humans.
And so what I find interesting is maybe there's some level
where that changes.
There's a Goldilocks zone in the middle, perhaps,
and then you can overshoot it.
I mean, I told you today, the reason I've got this mark on my arm here
is I had COVID last week and it
but fucked me. And I was whining to Rogan the other day about the fact that I did it. And
then his nurse showed up at my house today with an IV bag filled with unpronounceable
NAD, vitamin B, phosphate, some other bullshit. And she sat there for two hours while this thing slowly went into my body.
And I was like, yeah, I feel really good.
And that was a very nice gesture from someone who didn't need to help.
That's not.
And I find that's really, really normal.
I actually asked one of my friends who's more private as a billionaire about it.
And, you know, I think a lot of it is learned behavior, right?
After a while, you realize that to give to people who are givers in return, just multiplies
back to you.
And-
All the the most selfish thing that you can do somehow.
Somehow.
And so, and then you learn that it benefits you and then you get ingrained into your action, which I find to be the same thing.
Like, it brings me in a scene amount of joy to be able to help people accept there's
a little twinge if they don't appreciate it over the long term or if I don't feel them
giving or paying it forward.
And so, you know, the other thing I guess with billionaires is they just think different.
And everybody at varying levels of income, I mean, haven't you felt that?
Like, you're first, when you first made your first 30K, you're like, I'm so rich, I'm
not sure what I'm gonna buy.
Then you make 100K, you're like, I feel pretty good.
I'm like, doing pretty well.
Then you make 250K, you're like, this is pretty good.
I think around 500K is where the real happiness to increase past that
tapers. And then about a million, 10 million, there's not that much difference between the two.
And so as you get worth more and more, the only thing that really changes is that your world
views so much bigger. And so instead of spending a bunch of time on a thousand dollar problems or
a hundred thousand dollar problems, you just naturally gravitate to problems that will hit the level that you're at
And so it's a huge unlock to be around more people who have more fact there was a great study
You would love this. I'll find it so I can send it to you afterwards
But basically showing that kids in a excuse me if this is incorrect manyapolis neighborhood
Let's say so same sociodemographics of both groupings of kids, but in one segment in a neighborhood
where there were only people of that sociodemographic, so lots of people that make below $60,000
a year.
And then one segment where they had a lot of interaction between those with wealth and
those without wealth.
Now, the kids grew up in the same types of environments. Their parents make the same amount of
monies, but this group interacts with more rich people. This group interacts with less rich people.
This group, on average, makes 33% more over their lifetime, which is astounding. All else being
equal if you are around people that make more money, you have the ability, I think, to see
what options really are.
And so I think getting in rooms with people with big dollar amounts is actually really,
really important.
You had a contrarian idea about whether or not you need to sleep on your couch in order
to be successful.
What was that?
Yeah, Alex and I disagree on this one because he definitely did.
I think technically the gym floor for him.
That's right.
He dreamt of a couch.
Yeah, and our other friend, Andy Fercela, is the same.
He has the best culture that I've ever seen as Andy Fercela.
His company first form is incredible to me.
But he has this huge flag in his warehouse.
And the flag was representative of the exact size of his very first store that they opened,
that they almost lost and went big-rept on, and the in the corner is a representative of the place
that he used to sleep on the floor, on this huge flag that's located in their warehouse. And so
he also slept on the floor to become successful. And I commend the fuck out of people who have had those sleepless nights without mattresses.
I think there are few humans that can actually persevere through that.
I think it breaks a lot of people.
On the same vein, I think we don't have to have this hustle, porn culture where we think
that is what you have to be willing to do.
And in fact, what if we gave people the allotment and the allowance that you could stay in your relatively comfortable 9 to 5 and build up a business simultaneously
or because I'm biased by a business simultaneously and go from your relatively comfortable 9 to
5 to a slightly harder but more lucrative XYZ, whether it's a side hustle, start up
or a business. It's not going to be easy, but I do not think you have to sleep on floors to get success.
And the reason I say that is because I worry about people taking a massive amount of risk.
You know, studies show if you're bankrupt once, it's incredibly hard for you to reach financial
freedom again.
You want to almost avoid bankruptcy at all costs.
Most people never recover from it.
And so if we know that to be
true, do we play to the edges to the excellent humans like Andy and Alex until everybody to be like
them? Look at the size of those fucking calves. Look at the size of Andy's guns. Most people are never
going to be those two people. And so we should allow them the ability to have massive success without
the massive risk. And that's sort of my nuanced point there.
That's interesting.
You don't hear, it's kind of survivorship bias, right?
That you just, exactly right.
You just don't hear about how many people slept
on the gym floor and then ended up having to sleep outside
on the floor, right?
You know, how many people end up going bankrupt
and up going into insolvency or administration
for their business.
Yeah, I, uh, did you ever have to sleep on a floor?
No, I didn't have to do it. I mean, the worst that I ever got, I haven't told this story
before, the worst that I ever got was my placement year from university and I was living in Scotland.
So we ran a, we had the franchise when I was 19, I picked up my first franchise for a night club bar
crawl called Carnage.
And this was, you wore a t-shirt and on the t-shirt were the list of bars that you were going
to go through and there were tasks on the back, like pulled a pig, down three drinks,
did a bluff.
This is a different era when you could do this sort of stuff.
And it was a license to print money.
I mean, it was a license to print like very normal amounts of money, but it was very reliable
in terms of how it sold out.
And the goal was to expand this into new cities.
So we put it in Newcastle, me, my business partner, Dominate, and we were very, very good
at this.
Then I was from Middlesbroughtown 50 miles away. I knew that that was a shithole. I thought that that would work well.
Sure enough, it did. It's full of Larry degenerates that loved it. And we had a great time.
It was really fun. Our place when you're coming up from university, from a business degree,
and the owner of the franchise, big dog, it's like, look, why do you come and work for me? You guys are already more fired up about work than you are about your business degrees.
So why not just like go full time and the thing that you're almost full time in
would this part time degree on the side and then go back to uni once you didn't
really. Yeah, that works.
So we move up to Edinburgh.
We move into this apartment and we're in an Edinburgh for all of the summer.
I'm going to the University of Edinburgh, Jim, I'm walking down the Royal Mile in Edinburgh
every single day, getting annoyed by French children who were off to the Edinburgh French
Festival, and we're driving around Scotland.
We had Sterling, Dundee, Glasgow, and Edinburgh's four cities, plus Newcastle, and Middlesbrough.
So it's like a pretty big net, you know, from Dundee down to Newcastle, it's probably
300, 350 miles, maybe it's a good distance.
Anyway, so we're doing this little loop and we're going to different places and dropping
our flyers and making sure that the guest list staff and the selling staff, all of these
things are occurring.
And the problem with events is that you want to get paid once they've happened, and we
were building up to this big, big, big chunk of events, but we had no income coming
in in the interim.
And I needed to keep on getting our boss to send me money to be later deducted from our
cut so that I could have petrol to drive to the places.
And there was a period where it was like, okay, I actually don't have money to eat here.
And I had a guy that came and stayed with me
who was gonna help and he come from a little bit more
of a nasty background in the mind.
He was like, dude, I'll just go and steal some food
from the store and I'm like, bro,
if I descend to the point where I have to steal
fucking food, the guy that owns the company earns easily enough money,
I can just get him to wire us some cash. But that was, that was a period. I remember I
once went to go and see under oath like a metal band. I went to go and see them. I went
from Edinburgh to Glasgow to go and see under oath play. And it was, I knew that by doing
that, I couldn't drive my car. Like it was the amount of fuel I had to get there
and come back and I was like supposed to drive
to work at whatever the next day
and I was like, each shit, I'm gonna go watch this ban.
So I drove there on my own, watch the ban,
drove back on my own, got home and I was like,
okay, I've got like 15 miles of fuel in the tank
and that was it, but it wasn't destitute.
That was a very short space of time.
And largely, you know, I straddled I straddled three or four different industries,
I'm going to be a DJ, I'm going to go full-time with commercial modeling, I'm going to go continue
to build the nightlife business, then the podcast comes along. And it just permitted me to kind of
weather the storm very nicely. And I realized I didn't want to do late night stuff. Being a DJ is fun
from the outside, but kind of painful from the inside. The modeling stuff was depreciating
asset, as you'd said earlier on. And it's like, okay, podcast, there it is. But by tinkering
around, it gave me the options.
I remember when we first met, I didn't know your background or who you were. And so I was
googling you because I have two breaths on my team. You remember those two.
One of them is a crazy kid.
And they were so excited to meet you.
And I was like, who is this guy?
What is Chris, what's his deal?
And so I was Googling you.
And the first picture has come up.
And they're like, you shirtless like this from your, which I didn't even know what love
Island was.
Shelted life you've been reading.
Apparently. Apparently. And I remember sort of laughing because I heard you speak and I was like,
well, it's not the same guy because we've got this really well-spoken gent who has like
abs all over the internet what's going on here. And then like senior background, I think it's
really interesting to see the cobbled together history that equates to something rather.
Frankenstein's monster. But that's how most people, I mean, I was, I thought, I think it's really interesting to see the cobbled together history that equates to something rather.
Frankenstein's monster.
But that's how most people, I mean, I thought that you went to university and you knew what you wanted.
And then you went to your first job and then you climbed the ladder and then you continued up the corporate sphere.
And I'm probably one of the very few corporate people.
I mean, I was corporate for 12 years at big financial institutions.
And finally had the balls, but didn't have it before
to step out and do things on my own.
That's really rare, actually an entrepreneurship.
And so I'm trying to speak to anybody in your audience
who is in that corporate position that they really hate,
that right now you're sitting there thinking,
I am watching this clock tick from 452 to 459,
and it feels like it's 12 years of my life.
And I'm actively sitting here thinking, I want to be closer to death just so that I can
get up from this job.
And I want to reach that person and say, you don't have to have a wild origin story in
order to be really successful.
It's really wonderful if you have the David Goggins incredible background where you have overcome such strife to achieve success but it is actually not necessary.
And you can create just as much of a hero story for yourself having come from
monotony as you can having come from travesty. And most humans today aren't
getting that story because we want to idealize which is actually great for the
big big victims out there. If you've had huge difficulty,
it's actually a superpower, you just don't realize it yet,
but you don't need it.
You can still be wildly successful
and interesting by just applying it.
But maybe the only thing I would ask you're opinion on,
you know, there's another guy that we know who has a podcast,
and I remember he was asking me like,
how do I grow this podcast?
You know, how do I get it bigger?
And my, I kind of thought about it for a second.
I was like, there's a bunch of tactics I could tell you right now.
But I think the most important tactic would be go and do something really interesting.
Instead of just trying to go interview a bunch of people who are interesting and use their
clout to grow your podcast, go do something wild.
Go do something interesting in yourself, build something yourself,
create some stories, and then enter the Chimazareena.
And I think a lot of people these days are missing that.
And that's why there's push back to gurus on social media.
And that's why most podcasts, only last seven episodes, is because they think to do the
thing, they just mimic the big interviewing of humans.
But there's a reason why you get really interesting podcast guests, because you are uniquely interesting too.
It's because you have crazy pictures of abs
on the internet, your Honor Reality TV show.
You've been in the grind of building businesses.
You also have this weird, sort of modern day
stoicism, philosopher aspect.
And all of that together is packaged to human
that is unique, Chris Williamson.
And so how can you allow yourself a little adventure that actually equals your success, but
it doesn't have to be tragedy.
I don't think.
No, I don't think so either.
You are right.
Trying to growth hack being interesting.
Not cool.
Is rough.
And you're right as well.
I think it's the reason why there is skepticism around gurus on
the internet because it seems like the story is fragile. And if I hit it with a strong enough hammer,
it'll shatter. And the hope is almost in some regards that I can shatter it. You know,
this is why people I think are going after Logan Paul's relationship, amongst a whole
host of other reasons.
One of them being that there's a skepticism around both his and his partner's fidelity.
Logan Paul's kind of portrayed as the king of the bros, and his misses has got a history
as well.
And all right, like, let's keep hidden this thing.
I'm pretty sure that there's nothing there.
Let's keep hitting it.
I'm gonna keep hitting it.
And then maybe you're working on this side.
There's podcasters who've got huge, huge platforms online.
And there's as many haters as there are,
like, and critics and skeptics and stuff.
And all that they do is spend their time trying to find holes.
And I think a big chunk of that is that they think,
hmm, maybe there is a big chunk of that is that they think, maybe
there is something hollow inside of that. And if I keep whacking it enough, then it won't
work. It'll break. So yeah, I think we should be cautious of portraying like an infallible
front. Yeah. One of the ways that you can kind of protect yourself quite nicely against that, just as a normal
person. Nobody likes someone who doesn't seem to have any vulnerabilities. It doesn't seem to have
any problems. Yeah, exactly. We bond with people over their flaws as much as we bond with them
over their successes, but the flaws humanize them. If you've got someone and you're like,
this guy or girl doesn't seem to struggle with anything,
sorry, what, what am I gonna bond with you over?
Like what are you?
Are you just a fucking, are you an equation?
Who are you?
And you can, by wearing your weaknesses on your sleeve,
not running with a victim mentality and not exposing them
unnecessarily. But, you know, if someone asks, today, this people please a thing is like
a revelation I've learned within literally the last two weeks, right? So I'm like, all
right, I guess I'm part of the People Please a club. And this is kind of a new thing for
me to realize and learn about myself. And now, I don't know, like, there's other people
out there, there are people pleases and they think, fuck, like, there, that's maybe that's
me too. So yeah, giving that gift of like self insight, I think is useful.
It's true. Well, I also, I think people really don't like seeing perfect people for whatever
reason. I think that's a flaw. We should work on that. We should be thrilled if somebody seems to have all the things together.
That, to me, I'd rather err on the side of optimism
that somebody else could have those things,
and that means maybe I could too.
Maybe I don't have everything right now,
but maybe I could if this other human does.
But I think, for instance,
there's a reason that characters are created when people have personas.
And those characters are very thoughtfully made.
I always like talking about or thinking about the rock
because I think he seems like a good guy.
And I also think he's much more crafted
than people give him credit for.
I would agree, I would say so too.
The way he dresses, so as to not look too intimidating
and also sort of like the people's champ,
which is what he calls himself even the way
He humanizes what he talks about calling himself the people's champ, right?
I think these
Characters are created because we realize that nobody likes a glass house
We want to see if he break it and for for I'm a little embarrassed because I couldn't stop watching the whole Dylan Dana slogan
Paul thing on Twitter.
I mean, I was like, when something like husband, because he's a jujitsu guy, you know,
we're going to watch the fights and whatever.
So when some of his like degenerate friends sent me sort of the stuff they were doing back
and forth, you know, I felt like, oh my god, did she really say that?
What happened?
Compelling.
Oh, very great content, premium content.
And yet, as I was watching it all, I'm like, at the the end of this I have a feeling they're both kind of losing
good and I think they both they took it like a little too far they could have actually stopped at some point and
um and then it just gets gnarly and at the core of it I don't think
humans are as bad as we make them out to be I think we like a little drama we want to tear people down
slightly but it gets too far and we go ah this is gross I'm out of here yeah by and large and I think we like a little drama. We want to tear people down slightly, but it gets too far and we go, ah, this is gross. I'm out of here. By and large. And I think that's what happened with
both of them, you know, and, and yet, like, for me, on both sides, I just find it so funny. Like,
who cares? Who cares what these two humans that none of us know are doing on the internet? And why
do we get so fixated on somebody else's life and projecting what we think should be right on them?
One of the things that you don't see, and you can't do it if you're about to punch
somebody else in the face because it makes you seem like a coward, it makes you seem like
you have limits. And the whole game of this is, I have no limits, right? That's fundamentally
I think what's happening. I'm prepared to go further than you. I'm prepared to be more
ruthless than you. This is this great story of Tyson Fury. And I think what's happening, I'm prepared to go further than you, I'm prepared to be more ruthless than you. This is this great story of Tyson Fury.
And I think it was Vladimir Klitschko and him.
This is way before they were going to fight, maybe even years before they were going to fight.
And they were both in a sauna together.
And Tyson Fury just silently made a promise to himself.
He was like, I'm dying or he's leaving first.
I'm going to die or he's going to end there in there for like 30 minutes,
40 minutes, 50 minutes, forever. However long it is, Clitch go, gets up and goes and he was like,
I knew I'd beat him. I knew I'd beat him as soon as that had happened.
In TV? Yeah.
Oh yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So. So who do you think wins the Logan Paul Dillon Danis?
Really important question for the podcast? In terms of the actual fight.
Yeah. And does it matter anymore? Who do you think wins the Logan Paul Dylan Dennis? Really important question for the podcast. In terms of the actual fight.
Yeah, and does it matter anymore?
Does it matter anymore?
Well, I mean, they've both lost and we've all won so far.
I really don't know.
Dylan Danis has been fighting for a long time.
I've seen some footage of him hitting pads.
It doesn't look good.
Logan Paul looks great at the moment.
Physical condition is fantastic and he looks good hitting pads too.
But he's also, I think, never want to fight. I don't think he's ever actually won. And Dylan definitely does seem quite calm. Let's say Dylan by decision.
Wow.
It goes the distance, but it's an ugly fight.
It's both very bumbling.
Nobody looks particularly slick.
I would say Logan by knockout a Dylan by decision.
I don't think Dylan's gonna knock Logan out
because of the size difference.
But one of the other things that you see, right,
they're talking about
who's going to go further and that story of Klitschko and Tyson Fury, there is an amount
of how far you go that actually becomes account to signal after a while. And what it teaches
the world is, oh, you kind of don't have any morals.
There's nothing left.
There's no sacred ground left.
And this can be done from the receiver as well as the accuser, right?
And this is what I meant on Twitter.
You never see anybody on Twitter, which is crazy because of how many insults get thrown
around on Twitter and DMs and sub-tweets and all that bullshit.
You never see anyone on Twitter say, reply and go, yo, that's out of order and you don't
get to fucking say that.
Don't talk to me like that.
No one has ever replied with that on Twitter.
But you do that in person.
Someone, like you and your partner and your partner actually decided to bring up that thing
that they know hurts you and you, they promised that they wouldn't or it's just beyond the
payload ever and you go, yo, you don't get to talk about that, okay?
Yeah.
Like, no one does that on Twitter.
It's always a sadonic, satirical reworking of what they actually said or it's a screenshot
of what their wife did the other day or what it's some fucking bullshit.
Like what would have been an interesting strategy and again, it doesn't work quite so well because it's like,
oh, you're bowing out, this is like complicity and cowardice
and weakness or whatever.
But what would have been an interesting strategy
for Logan at least to have done in this particular exchange
would have been to have gone, you're a piece of shit,
you don't get to talk about someone's fiance that way,
I'll see the fucking fight.
Yeah, okay.
And you go, oh, that's fucking interesting, right?
And it makes you look like the bigger man, problem being, all of these tweets are like
Logan is financially invested in like he's very, very incentivized in ticking this over.
But yeah, had you not had that on the other side?
Had there have just been some, you know, like meaningless beef with no face punching at the end of it, I would have been interested to see if he could
have played it in a more noble way.
I agree.
Yeah, I also thought about it from the woman's perspective of fucking rough is mostly what
I think.
Rough.
And also, what would you want your man to do if that was you in that situation?
Very rough for them as a couple, I think, on either side.
I cannot imagine.
I actually asked my husband, I was like, what if that was me?
He was like, oh God, you know, just like a visceral reaction.
And we're very close and have been married for a long time.
But that is like a primal instinct, I think, in men that we just have to be honest about.
So that had to make for fun conversation between the two of them. I don't wish anything on that. And on the other side, you know,
there's part of me that I think would have said, fuck the purse. Like why are we continuing
to engage with a person that's done this? And despite it making you a ton of money,
you know, is it worth it? Because her reputation has been severely beaten up up and she'll have to come up with something
really creative to turn that around if she cares. Yeah, the rebrand of Nina is going to be an
interesting one. I don't know. I mean, we pray at the altar of status and prestige and money
and we will do an awful lot to kind of get. Then it's part of that brand as well.
It's part of that like turbo alpha male machismo.
Nothing can fuck with me, dude.
I'm untouchable.
But again, you know, if I think he'd said something like, like, she doesn't care about you.
This isn't going to be a big deal.
She thinks that you're like scum and that you're despicable, but like, she doesn't care about you, this isn't going to be a big deal. She thinks that you're like scum
and that you're despicable,
but like she doesn't care about you.
I'm like, again, maybe that's the case,
maybe the whole relationship is like that.
But if you'd said like,
she's really been fucking hurt by this.
Like you've really hurt her.
Like that's a headline,
like Dylan Danis is emotionally abusive to a girl that he's never spoken to.
100%.
That's a strong deal.
Especially some of the stuff just pictures of her with men.
I'm like, I mean.
Fucking funny, though.
Yeah.
Well, that is the problem.
So fucking fun.
I was on all of my, you know, Jent's friends text messages and just-
Don't pretend that you weren't following it, yes.
Oh, I admitted it.
I was admittedly and barricadingly following it for a period.
But then I had to turn it off because I thought it would
Peter out.
Well, remember what I said.
Content diet, right?
Omega De La, the fast food for the Omega De La,
all over again.
Like, what does it make you?
Here's another good way, right?
When you watch your current content feed or create it, not necessarily of choice, but
like the algorithms creator of choice that it's feeding you, how do you feel?
I call it post-content clarity.
How do you feel?
I feel the opposite.
It's like, fuck.
Yeah.
Well, it's just like, do you want to ring your mum and tell her that you miss her?
Do you want to go outside and go for a nice walk and be calm and look at the sky?
Or do you feel like the world's out to get you and everything's pointless?
And it's zero, some doggy dog scarcity world mentality.
And when I think about some of the most popular channels and how they make me feel,
they make me feel rubbish after it.
I don't, I don't like the person that I am.
And I almost need to like acutely rehabilitate myself
back into being the person I am
after watching this content.
Well, especially something like that.
You know, I was, I was talking to one of my friends
and immediately, you know, what I think about,
I imagine it like, if my attention span,
or if my attention and focus is an apartment,
let's say I consider a penthouse,
like this space in here is actually quite nice
and it's very expensive. And everything say I consider a penthouse, like this space in here is actually quite nice and it's very expensive.
And everything that I allow into that apartment
is me air being being out.
I'm renting my mind out to these people.
And I have just given these two dudes,
you know, this apartment for a week free.
You know, they've gotten this penthouse level attention
which has some cost and it's not been a benefit to me.
And so I've rented it out to them for nothing.
And every time I rephrase it that way,
I'm like, oh yeah, I wouldn't do that.
I wouldn't allow these type of people
to steal my attention for a week
if my attention was an actual house in which I lived.
And by the way, my brain, your brain,
is much more valuable than some Airbnb penthouse you could have.
And so my mind always goes back to the numerical calculus of,
what does it cost to you?
So you can feel it in your energy.
You can certainly feel it in your output,
which I guess could be monetarily driven.
But yeah, at the end of it,
I was just thinking, God, these two idiots are living
rep free in my mind for much too long.
It's totally my fault.
Big hidden metric again.
I love contrarian thinking.
I love your newsletter.
Where should people go if they want to sign up to that? Thank you. It's contrarian thinking. I love your newsletter. Where should people
go if they want to sign up to that? Thank you. It's contrarianthinking.co. Fantastic.
And where else should they go if they want to follow the things that you do? On all the
socials. We do a lot on YouTube. We do a lot on Instagram. And yeah, I hope they tell
me if they end up buying a business, such as what we talk about the most.
Hell yeah. I appreciate you. Thank you, God. Thanks for having me.