Modern Wisdom - #830 - Alex Hormozi - 24 Controversial Truths About Success & Failure
Episode Date: August 26, 2024Alex Hormozi is a founder, investor and an author. Alex’s Twitter has been one of my favourite sources of insights over the last few years. Today we get to go through some of his best lessons about ...life, human behaviour, psychology, business and resilience. Yet again this is so, so good. Expect to learn how to stop being indecisive and take action, how to persevere when things get rough, why overnight successes don’t happen overnight, why Alex hates being around negative people, if there is a wrong way to live your 20s, the single most important habit to cultivate in life and much more... Sponsors: See discounts for all the products I use and recommend: https://chriswillx.com/deals Get $350 off the Pod 4 Ultra at https://eightsleep.com/modernwisdom (use code MODERNWISDOM) Get a 20% discount on the best supplements from Momentous at https://livemomentous.com/modernwisdom (automatically applied at checkout) Get a Free Sample Pack of all LMNT Flavours with your first box at https://drinklmnt.com/modernwisdom (automatically applied at checkout) Sign up for a one-dollar-per-month trial period from Shopify at https://shopify.com/modernwisdom (automatically applied at checkout) Extra Stuff: Get my free reading list of 100 books to read before you die: https://chriswillx.com/books Try my productivity energy drink Neutonic: https://neutonic.com/modernwisdom Episodes You Might Enjoy: #577 - David Goggins - This Is How To Master Your Life: https://tinyurl.com/43hv6y59 #712 - Dr Jordan Peterson - How To Destroy Your Negative Beliefs: https://tinyurl.com/2rtz7avf #700 - Dr Andrew Huberman - The Secret Tools To Hack Your Brain: https://tinyurl.com/3ccn5vkp - Get In Touch: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/modernwisdompodcast Email: https://chriswillx.com/contact - Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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Hello friends, welcome back to the show.
My guest today is Alex Hormozi.
He's a founder, investor, and an author.
Alex's Twitter has been one of my favorite sources of insights over the last few years.
And today we get to go through some of his best lessons about life, human behavior,
psychology, business, and resilience.
Yet again, this is so, so good.
Expect to learn how to stop being indecisive and actually take action.
How to persevere when things get rough.
Why overnight successes don't happen overnight.
Why Alex hates being around negative people.
If there is a wrong way to live your 20s.
The single most important habit to cultivate in life.
And much more.
I love these episodes with Alex.
I'm going to keep doing them because I keep learning stuff
and I think he's got a lot to teach us
and the episodes move at this really sort of quick pace.
It's fast enough to be interesting and slow enough
for the points to have time to marinate.
It's perfect.
I really, really hope that there's tons you take away
from this one.
Don't forget that if you are new here
or a long time listener, you might be listening
but not subscribed and the next couple of weeks have got the biggest guests we've ever
had coming on the show.
Dr. Andrew Huberman, Eric Weinstein, Robert Green and a ton more.
So if you don't want to miss those episodes, just press subscribe.
It helps to support the show and it makes me very happy and it ensures you don't miss
episodes when they go up.
So go and do it for me.
I thank you.
But now, ladies and gentlemen,
please welcome Alex Hormozi.
Here we are again. Hard things are hard, that's why they're hard.
Another episode.
The biggest risk to your future isn't your competition, it's the distractions you insist
on keeping in your life rather than doing the things you know you should be doing but aren't
People delay doing things they don't like for longer than it takes to do them
There have been so many times in my life where I
Knew I needed to do something and then I filled all this extra time
Not doing that thing and then the moment I did it
I was like wow that took way less time than I thought it was going to take.
And not only that, it took way less time
than it took me to delay to actually get to this point.
And if I had only started with just doing
what I was supposed to do,
I could have done four or five other things
that I was also supposed to do by this exact same point.
And so thinking about it from that perspective,
I've tried to eliminate as much time between,
I think I should do this thing and beginning doing it.
And I think you get this positive reinforcement cycle
that occurs every time you start,
I call it pulling the thread.
It's like, I just need to start pulling the thread.
And then all of a sudden what feels really unknown
becomes very tangible.
And you're like, oh, I understand the six problems
I have to solve to do this big thing, but now I know the problems and then it feels like you can,
you can wrap your arms around it and then you can start taking it one bite at a time.
The same thing works in reverse as well. That when you put something off,
it makes putting it off more manana, manana, manana.
I used to define power by the distance between thoughts and reality.
Meaning if you think about somebody who's omnipotent, so if God or the God figure would
be omnipotent as he thinks things are.
So there's zero space between thoughts and reality.
And so if we want to be more God-like in our lives, the distance that we can shrink between
wanting to do something or thinking something should be done and it being done
is a direct indication of our personal power in our lives.
And so that has helped me basically think,
don't be a powerless bitch.
Like, just shrink the gap.
And I think that's why a lot of my little like personal hacks
of waking up and then trying to shrink the time
between when I wake up and when I start working
and shrinking the time between one task and the next task.
You don't need to take 30 minutes
of getting ready to start working.
You can just start working because as soon as you get into it,
you start pulling the thread and you're like,
oh, here it is.
And all of the time that I was getting ready to work,
I was just using up my best brain power time
on things that truly don't move the needle at all.
Yeah.
I came to call that the productivity rain dance that you sort of do this
weird sacred ritual beforehand.
And we've spoken about this before, but it's, you know, there are certain things
that you can do that will make success or productivity or focus more likely and
better, but it doesn't mean that you should disregard them, that over-reliance on them makes a very fragile,
unrobust way to get into working.
I would delineate the difference
between preparation and routine.
And so if I'm preparing for a presentation, for example,
I might assemble my notes,
I might read some stuff about the audience ahead of time,
I might read about whoever's doing the event and learn more about that.
I see that as preparation for the thing, which I still see as work.
And I think some people, I made a post about how preparation is like everything.
I put a lot into preparation.
They're like, Oh, see, you have a morning routine.
I was like, no, no, no, I don't need to, to, you know, stand on one foot and do 17
cold plunges and write six affirmations because none of those things are directly related
to the work that I'm going to do.
And so for me, if it's basically preparation is just a stage of the work.
And so if I need to prepare to work, then that's fine.
As long as it's related to the work that I'm going to be doing.
Well, we spoke about this yesterday, the difference between focusing on inputs and focusing on
outcomes.
If you optimize for outcomes, the inputs are always optimized, but if you optimize for
inputs, you go, what did I actually get done at the end of the day?
So the person that does do the productivity rain dance and it takes ages and everyone's
done this.
Everyone's got a blank piece of paper in front of them and they end up washing dishes that
they never use or even the weirdest
tasks become alluring because of that focusing on outcomes. I so we when we brought this up it was
perfect because I had a whole thing that I was wanting to talk to you about this. So I'm a big
proponent of something I call the rule of 100 and I'm not the one who invented this but it's
basically 100 primary actions. So I talk about this within the context of advertising. So you
make 100 minutes of content.
You do 100 outreach if you're doing outbound.
You spend $100 a day on ads.
Or if you've already spent the money on ads,
then you're doing 100 minutes a day of writing ad copy,
looking at other people's ads, looking for hooks,
and then trying to create more advertisements
for your business.
And the rule of 100 for most people
takes about four hours a day-ish.
And the thing is that's pure inputs, not output.
But I've already taken the time to define what those inputs are that create the outputs.
But later on in the book, 100 Million Dollar Leads, I talk about the rule of 100 on steroids,
which is something that I learned from a guy who owned 13 or 14 really successful gyms.
And he called it open to goal.
And he said, yeah, yeah, yeah.
He said, my managers work open to goal.
And I was like, what does that mean?
It's like, so they work open until they hit their goal.
And so sometimes that means they hit their goal by noon
and they can cut out.
Or that means that they have to go from 5 a.m.
until midnight that night,
because that's how long it took them to hit the goal.
And so I've seen this across a lot of high achievers across domains. So like I'll
keep shooting free shots until I hit a hundred free free shots. I will run until
this happens. I will practice my presentation until I do zero mess-ups,
right, or whatever that that output is that you want for quality or quantity. And I think that you have
to first figure out what the input is that most closely correlates or tracks with the output you
want. And then you jam as much as you possibly can into inputs. Because if I said, hey, go get
me 10 customers, somebody, yeah, exactly, you freeze because it's like, well, what do I do?
And so then normally people start, they skew, like behavior ske, you freeze because it's like, well, what do I do?
And so then normally people start,
they skew, like behavior skew.
So it's all over the place, it's scattered,
it's shotguns, sprays.
And then they eventually figure out one thing that works.
And then it's like, once you hit that,
then you just jam that button as hard as you possibly can.
And I think that I've been disproportionately successful
in different domains in my life
by ruthlessly focusing on one input. I mean, even when I was a kid, when I played video games,
it's like if you find a spawn point for zombies right before the end of the level,
I would just sit there for like eight hours and just wait for the troll to come up and just slice
them again and get my little diamonds and put it in. And I would just do that for hours because I
was like, oh, I got to level up my avatar.
But I think I play the game of business the exact same way.
Andy Groves says, there are so many people working so hard
and achieving so little.
And that's the lack of correlation
between inputs and outcomes.
Yeah.
I think the vast majority of business owners,
I'm obviously, I come from the business perspective,
the vast majority of business owners, obviously I come from the business perspective, the vast majority of business owners work a fair amount.
They just work on the wrong stuff and they do it the wrong way.
And so they get so little for their effort that they wonder when they're at home empty
handed in bed, why isn't this working when I am working?
But if you define work, at least the way I do,
which is output.
So I define work by output.
And in order to get output, it's volume times leverage.
So how many times you do the thing
times how much you get for each time you do it.
And so that is the, do you work smart or do you work hard?
It's you do both.
You do as many reps as you possibly can.
And you do it with the most leverage possible.
So if I make a hundred phone calls, the leverage that I can have there
would be how skilled I am.
So if I make a hundred calls, I might get 10 times more.
And so I worked more.
I had more output than somebody who has less skill, but the only way you get
skilled is by doing more inputs, by working more.
And so it's this virtuous cycle of doing more and getting better.
And then you get more for what you do.
Yeah.
Magic you're looking for is in the work you're avoiding all the time, every
single time that there is, we're not making progress in this way.
What is the highest pain task that's in front of me that I've put off the most?
It's always that one.
It always is.
You know, after you spend enough time thinking about work and deconstructing
the way that you piece your day and your life together. You sometimes believe that the answer is still out there and what you actually
realize is that you've already learned it.
And it's like, it's that quote or that insight or that book.
It's one of the first books you read because all of the big insights from
productivity and personal development are the lowest hanging fruit.
They're the ones that are repeated across the most book because they're the
most reliable, scalable and robust.
It's like, I don't need to be looking out there for most of the new insights.
They're just shit that I already learned.
Yeah.
We need to be reminded more than we need to be taught.
It's one of my favorites.
Bad things don't come in threes.
Bad things happen.
People don't know how to cope and they allow one bad thing to snowball into more.
Bad stuff sucks.
The only thing worse is letting one bad thing to snowball into more. Bad stuff sucks. The only thing worse is letting one bad thing
ruin many good things.
I'm glad you found that one.
That was on that list of things that,
you know, quotes I wish had gone more viral.
The amount of, I think it happens more when you're younger,
but you know, girlfriend breaks up with you.
Okay, then you go into work and you sulk
because you're distracted and then you don't do the same level of effort
and you're not enthusiastic. And then all of a sudden your work suffers
and you get put on a pip or you get fired.
And then now you're fired and you don't have a girlfriend
and then you start gaining weight and you stop going to the gym.
And all of a sudden you're like, man, bad things happen in threes.
It's like, no, bad things happen all the time and they only become interrelated
if you let it affect your behavior.
And so I think the equal opposite of that is thinking, okay, this bad thing occurred.
What can I do to decrease the likelihood something else bad occurs in the meantime?
And then boiling everything down to activities or the actions that I have to take.
And I think about that actually a lot, which is how, like, if you think about it
from the power perspective of, okay,
something bad happens, how much would it affect my behavior?
Well, the person who is indestructible
would have something terrible happen
and then nothing would change.
And I love-
Or they'd get better.
Exactly, yeah.
That's antifragility, right?
Yeah, the sword of Gryffindor,
it only drinks in that, which makes it stronger.
Oh, fucking Harry Potter reference, which makes it stronger.
Fucking Harry Potter reference. When expecting that.
Um, yeah, the people don't know how to cope thing, especially with bad stuff is, um,
it does explain why you end up with this weird spiral, tiny little avalanche
pebble at the top, and then this huge sort of over-exaggerated reaction downstream.
Yeah, people don't know how to manage their emotions. I think the more, at least for me,
the more I've tried to create space between how I feel and what I do,
the more consistent my outcomes have been.
What do you mean?
So if I need to create content and I'm not feeling it
or I'm feeling tired or things like that,
the more times I give into that excuse or that feeling,
then the more superstitious I become
about doing it in the future.
Whereas a lot of times if I can just start
when I am tired or when something is painful
and then still execute about the same as before,
I look at game tape or I look at video
or look at the content from those sessions, for example.
And I see that I remember feeling terrible
during the session, but you can't really see anything. And I think the more times you get that loop going, the more you can separate how
you feel and what is required. And the more times you do what is required to get what you want,
the more times you get what you want. I spoke to Huberman last year. I think it's called
the anterior mid-singular cortex. It's an area of the brain. If I've got that right, yes, bro.
Best advert for new tonic ever.
Basically there is an area of the brain that tracks when you do something that
you don't want to do and you strengthen the connections in it by doing things
that you don't want to do, especially when you really don't want to do them.
So you're hypertrophy.
It's this exact sort of intuition that you've got
that some people would call it resilience
or willpower or whatever,
but this is neurologically represented in the brain,
these connections get stronger.
So I think it's so funny,
gym bros will need a gym analogy
in order to be able to believe that their brain changes,
but it's really useful to think, hey, you're hypertrophying this area of your brain. I
snapped in Achilles. I had to do a very particular series of rehab movements in order to grow
it back. This is just the same.
Yeah. Agreed.
Successful people. This is kind of similar to what you were talking about. Bad things
don't come in threes. Successful people see opportunity in every failure.
Normal people see failure in every opportunity. Both are right.
Only one gets rich.
Yeah. So I was,
so this has been something I've been thinking about a lot,
which is basically the shittiness of stuff. Um, which is,
when you're growing in a business, it's very painful.
When you're stagnating in a business,
in your plateau and you don't know what to do,
it's very painful.
When you're declining and you also don't know what to do,
it's very painful.
And so that means that all conditions of reality
are painful.
And so if pain is a prerequisite for reality,
then it means it's just a signal that we are alive.
And so in thinking about that,
rather than pain as a problem,
it is a signal that I'm breathing,
and then becomes irrelevant.
How do you ensure that you're not suffering unnecessarily?
Pain can be a useful signal.
It can tell you to move away from certain things that are suboptimal.
Yeah.
I probably have relatively
contrarian views on this.
But just even the judgment on pain
I relatively reject.
Just like
pain is good, pain is bad.
I mean in the gym, to give a gym
example,
they found that the pain that you experience
when you're going to work out,
and there's a difference between like massive joint,
you're like, oh, I just snapped a muscle
and like just feeling bad,
but feeling bad has zero correlation
to your performance in the gym.
And so I remember reading that for the Olympic weight teams,
they talked about that and I was like,
oh, well, if it has no correlation,
then it's almost irrelevant
and I can just keep living my life.
And so I think the ultimate version of the resilience
that you were referencing earlier is rather than,
in the beginning, you're like, I feel bad.
And then you think that that should weigh on the decision
of whether you do the thing that you're supposed to do.
And then you start realizing that you can do the thing, even though you
don't feel good about it and you start hypertrophying it.
But I think the ultimate version of the hypertrophy, when the muscle becomes
a tendon or it just becomes fused is when you don't even consider how you feel.
It's just not a thought.
You just keep, you just do it.
That's that movement from sort of type two to type one thinking, you know, from it being very conscious,
very effortful to it's just a reaction.
I get up and I start to write.
Right.
And, um, use up any war power.
No, because it's just what you do.
Right.
There's a Rory Sutherland that we were talking
about yesterday, um, in his, he's the only guy
that I've ever heard swear in a Ted talk.
And, um, he gave me this idea, which is kind of related.
Things are not what they are.
Things are what we think they are.
For instance, you're doing a hard workout
which gives you a signature feeling.
You're laid on the floor, panting, heart rate at 180,
sweating from everywhere with the taste of metal
in your mouth.
This is oddly enjoyable. But if this exact same sensation was taste of metal in your mouth. This is oddly enjoyable.
But if this exact same sensation was to spontaneously occur in your car
while sat in traffic, you'd call an ambulance for fear that you're having a heart attack.
Framing is everything.
Rory Sutherland says,
Sometimes you just want to stand in the corner and stare out of the window.
The problem is, when you're not smoking and staring out of the window,
you're an anti-cial friendless idiot if you stand and stare out of the window with a cigarette
You're a fucking philosopher the power of reframing things cannot be overstated
It's significantly easier to find a way to reframe your experiences as enjoyable while you improve them
Rather than waiting for them to be done before you give yourself license to be happy
So a friend of mine, she's a very very successful therapist and waiting for them to be done before you give yourself license to be happy.
So a friend of mine,
she's a very, very successful therapist.
And she always asks her patients when they come to her
and say some terrible thing happened,
she said, what would it take for this to be amazing?
And so, for example, lady comes says,
we're getting a divorce and she says,
so what would it take for this to be amazing?
And so it just completely shifts the reality of like,
okay, how could this be an amazing thing that could
happen to me? And this is relevant for me shifting gears because we just had a big tryout inside of
our company for a presentation slot that we have an event. So we had a bunch of the leaders in
the company. There was like the fucking hunger games. Yeah. We put a cash prize out. Fight to
the death pitch forks. We did. No, we put a big cash prize out there. Oh yeah, I totally did that.
I told them I was like, I'll have no expression.
Just in a toga.
Yeah, exactly.
And I could tell that some of them were nervous.
And I thought about this,
cause you know, I speak a fair amount
and I don't get a lot of nerves in general
and I have a whole bunch of thoughts on that.
But the most basic one is that
if you're still feeling anxiety,
which many of them were like, hey, I'm so nervous or hey,
I have a lot of anxiety before going up.
I thought about it and champions just interpret anxiety
as excitement.
And if you're excited to go up, then you're like,
I'm amped versus I'm stressed.
But it feels the same.
The way you frame it totally changes how you feel
when you're stepping on stage.
But my two cents of if you are feeling lots of anxiety,
it means you need to practice more.
That's just my two cents. And that comes for everything.
Whether it's to have a meeting or give a presentation
or write an email or do a book.
Like, if you feel nervous before you release it,
then you probably didn't work on it enough.
And I think the reality is that most people,
to get not anxious about whatever they're doing,
you have to do it so many times
that by the last time you're doing it,
you're bored of it.
Like you don't even wanna see the thing again.
When you're sick of it,
is the point where you'll have no adrenal response
to the stimulus because you've seen it so many times.
You could do it in your sleep
because you hate it at this point.
And then when you get up, you're like,
oh my God, let's just do this
because I, I can breathe this day.
Yeah.
What's the gap between your expectation of what is going to happen and the, um,
requirement that you need to perform.
Right.
This is where I need to be.
And this is how I think I'm going to perform as opposed to the other way.
So I saw this firsthand when I did the live tour last year.
So I did, I think 17 shows in 28 days, three continents, right?
Like proper tour, like real proper, proper tour thing.
And, um, you know, I did full work in progress shows and then that run all
around UK, Ireland, Dubai, Canada, US, Canada again, US again.
And I could see because it was around about every other day for a month.
And each time that I stepped out on stage, every single time that I, even though I'd
done the prep, I'd spent all of this time, I'd done the thing.
I tried to, you know, I'm not nervous.
I'm excited.
I'm not nervous.
I'm excited.
Um, still that degraded over time until at the end of it.
And this is why comedians, I think, when they end up doing really big tours,
one of my friends did a 300 day tour of the same show.
He said, I no longer felt like a comedian.
I was a performer because he's not stepping out on stage.
He is so dialed and routine eyes that he's bored while he does it.
And, uh, yeah, that's how you look at, oh my God, Joe Rogan just did Netflix live to
fucking God knows how many millions of people metropolitan area of San Antonio's
internet probably went down for him to be able to get that connection moving.
And how could he do that?
Well, all of these people watching and all the rest of it, that set that Joe did.
I've seen at the Vulcan gas company downtown in Austin, and I've seen it at the mothership in different iterations
for coming up on three years now.
And his last special was six years ago.
That guy has said those sentences and waited those times
and got those laughs and understood the inflections
and the little pauses he needs to do.
Maybe 300 times on that one set, there's no more degrees of free.
The only thing that could go wrong is a real quirk mistake.
That's kind of, to be honest, out of your control.
If you misspeak a word when you're paying attention, that's not your fault.
So yeah, that's how people have unbelievable performance ability.
It's just a case of stepping there,
sort of one degree of competence at a time.
And if we think of confidence as the percentage likelihood
of what we think is going to happen will happen
as a predictive metric,
then in order to be more confident,
we wanna have more proof
that what we think will happen will happen.
And so the easiest way to do that is to do it a lot of times.
And so it would be reasonable to say that you're confident that it will go the
way you want because it has gone the way you've wanted so many times in a row.
Before I've just realized, I've never thought of this before.
The fact that the word confidence as in how we describe it from a psychological
perspective and confidence is in the interval level that you have numerically
at the same fucking word.
That's so funny.
Operationalizing.
What, how do you become confident?
Do it enough times that you feel like it is unlikely that what you think
should happen won't happen.
My model of the world is accurate.
I'm confident when I go up to girls.
Well, you start going to girls and you start tanking and then one out of
10 times it goes well, and then you do it another 10 times and two out of
10 times goes well, and then four to 10 times and then eight out of 10 times.
And all of a sudden you're confident because you have a high degree of
predictive power when you say it will go this way.
That's a such a good reframing of confidence.
And the best part is you get to use the same word and you can boil it down to inputs.
You just have to do more.
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This is my favorite one.
I think from you over the last few months, you once wanted the life you have.
And if you don't like the life you have, you probably won't like the one you want,
but don't have either.
Yeah, this one I think about all the time because I think about the life that I have
now and I know that I wanted this life, but I obviously do a lot of thinking about this
type of stuff. But the equal opposite of that is that when I was poor, I was pretty happy. I was okay with being poor.
And now that I am rich, I'll put quotes on that, degrees,
it's about the same.
And so then it just goes down to,
well, then the richness had nothing to do
with the level of contentedness,
which means that my wants in past and present and future all go into the bucket of irrelevant in
terms of their
ability to affect my perception of reality in the present and so
And thinking about that it makes my wants
Have less stake today
And so a lot of anxiety that I think a lot of people have is around things that haven't happened yet, either good or bad.
Like, I hope this speech goes well, or I hope I get this job promotion.
But the reality is that once you get the job promotion you wanted it, you resettle. And the negative version of this is, and
you've probably seen this stuff, but when handicapped people get handicapped, so they have a terrible accident,
they get paralyzed, or they lose a leg or whatever, there's a dip in their subjective well-being.
So they have a terrible accident, they get paralyzed or they lose a leg or whatever.
There's a dip in their subjective wellbeing.
But after three to six months, it typically restabilizes.
Which means that if I didn't get paralyzed
or even if I did get paralyzed,
I'd be just about as content as I am right now.
It's like, whatever is about to happen
is probably not as bad as that.
And so that's the worst case scenario, which is nothing.
So, okay.
Good things aren't as good as you think they aren't.
Bad things aren't as bad as you think they are. Bad things aren't as bad as you think they are.
Yeah.
Life is life.
Well, it's the, it's the, you've already achieved goals that you
said would make you happy again.
It's the other side of this.
And, you know, the fact that we take for granted things that only in recent
memory, we would have begged to have had the opportunity to have been able to have.
And now we're flippant about them.
The new car that you thought about
and you researched for 18 months
and then you finally got it
and you just curb the tires yesterday
and you go, all right, whatever.
And you're like, you spent all of this time
thinking about the house that you're going to move into,
the marriage that you were going to do,
the holiday you were going to take.
I told you about this last time Morgan Housel steps out
after this huge, big buildup with his kids and his wife,
steps out onto the balcony of this holiday that he'd taken.
And his first thought was, wow, it would be so good
if we could come back here next year.
That was like during the process of experiencing the thing,
he was thinking about the next thing.
And he caught himself and thought, okay, this means that success isn't a goal,
a journey or a destination when you get it wrong, it's a horizon.
Every single step that you take towards it, it runs one step further away.
So during my year off that I took after, during the year of the sale, I couldn't really work on
the business because you don't want to change anything major when you're going through a sale.
But I didn't know if I was going to be owning this business soon. So I basically just had to
do nothing because I also had to demonstrate that the team could do it without me so that it's
still a sellable asset. So I basically just sat there for a year. That's when a lot of my like thoughts kind of caught up
from, you know, when I had started years earlier.
And that was when I kind of refined my kind of theory
of living for me, which was that hard work is the goal.
And so it's not like work hard, so that X,
because as soon as you have a so that,
then the X is the thing.
But if the goal is to work as hard as you possibly can,
then the only real output we have
is who we become along the way.
And so in reframing that,
then it's something that I can win
or measure myself against every day in real time
throughout the day,
which is how hard am I working?
Because that is the goal. And then even I say this just for audio,
but like everything else takes care of itself,
still puts the everything else as the goal still.
It's just being vaguer.
But if you just say like,
the only point is working hard,
because I know that whatever I'm going to get
is stuff that I will become accustomed to.
And...
the, I guess, opposite of the hedonic treadmill
is like the resilience piece, is that my ability
to work hard itself is growable.
And so I just need to keep my RP,
my rate of perceived exertion at eight or nine or 10.
Because I know that when I look back on my life,
the days that I loved the most were days
when I had nothing left in the tank. And there's this thing that Jesse Itzler has this, and I love it. I look back on my life, the days that I loved the most were days when I had nothing left in the tank.
And there's this thing that Jesse Itzler has this,
and I love it. I hate him for having it
because it's so fucking good.
Um, but he has it, he taught us as kids,
which is he has them, they have a little zero,
means that there's nothing left in the tank.
And when they finish a race or they do whatever,
it's like, did you leave, did you leave anything in the tank?
Mm.
And I thought about that.
And the best days of my life were ones when I had leave anything in the tank? And I thought about that and the best days of my life
were ones when I had nothing left in the tank.
And so then the goal becomes to empty the tank,
not what, where I drive, but just to drive the
car as hard as I possibly can.
And that means that in the beginning, it's just
straightaways and just seeing how high I can
rev the engine.
But as it becomes more advanced, it's like,
all right, well now we've got turns and then it's
turns and elevation, and then it's turns and elevation
and then it's turns and elevation without guard rails
because we have risk.
And so when I think about how hard I wanna work,
the interesting thing about that is that the only person
who can judge you on your success is you
because you're the only one who knows how much left
in the tank you really had.
And the better you get, and you can resonate with this,
you start winning exteriorly.
That's when people are like, it felt so empty.
It's because they didn't actually work as hard as they could have.
They just worked hard enough to beat everyone else.
But that discrepancy between how hard you could have worked to work
your hardest versus what was required in order to win,
to me, that's the opportunity that's shifting
towards the work being the goal unlocks for you.
And I work harder now than I did when I was poor.
And I think it's because I've learned to enjoy it.
How do you ensure that the hard work focus doesn't detach you from outcomes and
inputs, this seems like there's a little bit of attention with what we started
talking about at the beginning.
I just to, it's direction over speed is the first one, but we're
now talking about maximizing for speed.
So how do we balance direction and speed?
So with the question, if the outcome that we're trying to have is being
present, then the outcome actually is irrelevant because it's about
how much empty the tank.
If we're talking about the science of achievement, then the outcome actually is irrelevant because it's about how much you empty the tank. If we're talking about the science of achievement,
then the outcome does matter, obviously.
And so balancing both of those things,
which is that if I want to accomplish all my goals,
then I need to make sure that my inputs are tied
as closely as humanly possible to the outcome.
If I want to be satisfied, it doesn't matter at all.
And so I think it's marrying those two ideas
where the perfect world, in my opinion,
would be you work as hard as you possibly can
because you thought ahead of time,
what is the input that has the closest correlation
with the outcome that I want?
And then you put your blinders on and you start digging.
We don't rise to the standards we have
when others are watching.
We fall to the standards we have when no one is watching.
The only work that really matters
is the work that no one sees.
It shows you who you really are
rather than who you say you are.
There's this line that I heard David Goggins say on Rogan
and I can't remember who he's saying it to
or what he said in response to,
but he just said, I'm David Goggins, bitch.
And I remember him saying it. response to, but he just said, I'm David Goggins, bitch.
And I remember him saying it.
And I thought to myself, like, you want to be able to say that in the mirror to yourself and not laugh at yourself.
And the only way that I can do that is know that when no one's watching, I
work harder than when
they're watching. And thinking about it like that has given me this persistent
and ever-present scorecard or third party that's like no one's watching, which
means now you have to work because otherwise you're full of shit. And so
it's this continuous reinforcing cycle of the me and other me holding the whip behind me
to see how much I can take. But with each lash of the whip that I take, learning that I can take it
and continue to trudge on. And so as long as you keep going, you bear witness to yourself of what you are capable of.
And I find that incredibly satisfying in the trenches of misery when you have to go through
it.
It means you're not full of shit.
I'm still here.
It means that you're not full of shit.
What it comes down to is, I think I told you this story about when I was with Sam last
year in LA.
So Sam Ovens used to make content on the internet.
Now he's very much an operator rather than a front facing, which is funny to
think about Sam, the creator, as opposed to Sam, the operator.
And I asked why he'd stopped making content.
And he said, because I felt like I had to start living up to in private the
things which I was saying in public.
And he was beginning to feel discordance between the two.
You know, he was making changes personally, but he created a brand publicly.
But I think if you can get to the stage where the public version of you is the
best version of you and then private, you have to live up to the best version of
you, and then you get to do this sort of self-reinforcing cycle, that's kind of
the virtuous version of that, which I guess is kind of similar
to what you're talking about here.
So I think what we're teasing at is authenticity.
And so a lot of people feel like imposters because what they think, what
they say and what they do are completely different.
But from an operational perspective, because that's how I liked it to find a lot
of words, which is what do I have to do to be that, right?
What do I have to do to be that? What do I have to do to be authentic?
And you can describe someone as authentic by saying,
how would you behave if there was no possibility
of punishment?
And so if you could not be punished at all,
that behavior is who you are authentically.
And so in my opinion, our degrees of freedom
are predicated on how much, to what extent we act as though we could not be punished.
And so if what we want to do and what we do have no possibility of punishment, that is what we are when we are our true selves.
Jimmy Carr talks about, um, nobody throws a Coke can out of the window with kids in the back.
Right.
That means you're a fucking monster.
It's what you do when there's no one around your old one about authenticity.
People are attracted to authenticity, but it's hard to define for me.
Here's my best attempt.
True alignment of what you think, what you say and what you do.
The hardest part is realizing that our thoughts are fucked and that we have to
fix them instead of faking the next two.
And it's exactly that.
And I think that, I actually think ground zero of that
is living out your fucked thoughts and then slowly try,
like I think it's, it's, it's, I think the hardest jump
is actually doing and saying what you think.
When someone's like, hey, what do you think about this?
And you're like, I wasn't paying attention at all.
It's like, Oh wow.
Okay.
And so then you basically become, because I think if personal truth of not lying to,
if you start by not lying to yourself, and then you start saying those things,
then you start not lying to other people.
And I think if you can decrease the friction between what you really think and what you
say, it starts to create some virtuous cycle outside of you that starts to orient your behavior so
that you actually start doing what you really think. And I have integrity, but in the truest
sense is one of my personal kind of goals. But it's jarring to people when you're just honest, like really honest. Like, hey, do you want to go to
Sarah's birthday party? No. And they're like, what do you mean? You busy? They're like, no,
I'm not busy, but I don't want to go. People have a hard time just saying no to things.
And I would encourage you if you're listening to this, like, try saying notice, try actually telling the truth
when you don't want to do something.
Because we have so many social niceties
that we say, oh, I'm really busy,
or it's a really bad time right now, or whatever.
I had somebody the other day, I was with a friend,
and he like, I didn't notice that I did this.
So sometimes it's nice to have somebody from the outside.
And so somebody came up to me, we were looking
at a real estate property, and someone
knew I was going to be there and said,
that guy showed up unannounced or whatever.
And he was like, hey, man, can we do a podcast?
And I was like, I'm just in town, going to hang out with Leila for the next few days.
Like not really trying to do that.
And he asked again, he was like, hey, you're like 20 minutes.
Let's see, like we can just we can just rock one out.
And I was like, well, let me show you my calendar.
And I pulled up my calendar and it was all empty.
And I said, see, there's nothing on there.
And I was like, and I just wanna keep it that way.
And I didn't think anything of it,
but apparently he left and then my friend
just starts crying, laughing, just thinking how hilarious.
He's like, I can't believe you said that.
That was so boss, blah, blah.
And I was like, what is he talking about?
He's like, you just showed him your calendar
that you had nothing and you were still like,
you're still not gonna get any of my time.
And I didn't perceive any of this extra narrative
that he added to it.
But I think just being able to say no to stuff
when people ask you for it,
because people ask you for stuff all the time.
It's these little nibs, these little tiny things.
Hey, can you do this?
Or hey, can we show up to this thing?
Or hey, you're supposed to.
Or hey, your aunt did that one thing for you,
so therefore you owe her.
And saying like, I don't subject myself to those rules.
And I had a New Year's resolution,
which I do believe in making resolutions,
like why not, if you stick with them.
And so one of my more recent ones was,
there are no such thing as social obligations,
only consequences.
So you have no social obligations,
you have social consequences,
but you don't have social obligations.
And so you have to go, I don't have to go.
If I don't go, what will happen as a result?
It decreases the likelihood they will invite me again,
which is great because then I won't have to say no again.
So this actually saves me time in the future.
And so a lot of people don't play out the like,
what happens if, it's like, oh,
more of the thing that I would prefer,
which is not getting invited to these stupid weddings
or not getting invited to these, you know,
Christ's or whatever they're called, you know,
whatever, I don't know, bris, whatever the thing is.
You probably know what the word I'm trying to say is.
I have no idea what you're talking about.
Yeah. Well, kids getting circumcised or,
I think it makes it too much fun.
Well, you go watch it?
It's like a viewing gallery?
That's a common thing. Yeah.
Is it?
Yeah. Circumcisions.
American.
I think it's not a bris.
Whatever. It doesn't matter.
All right.
Point being, if you say no and are honest about why you said no,
people will be jarred, but then you get this muscle
when we're talking about that muscle of being authentic,
which is just saying what you really think.
And I think that when you do that,
you unlock a certain level of confidence in yourself.
We were like, oh, I didn't die.
Oh, actually what I would prefer to have happened,
happened as a result of that.
Oh, you know what?
It's Friday night and I am gonna get a good night's sleep
because I do have a clear day tomorrow
and I'm gonna work my face off
and I didn't have to go to Sarah's thing.
And to me, that's like over time,
I think I just do more and more and more of that
and it feels better and better and better.
It's funny that your friend saw that as a flex,
that it was, and I can see why.
And I think I would too, oh my God, dude,
like you totally owned him with that thing. Like you showed off the fact that you've got nothing. a flex that it was, and I can see why. And I think I would say, Oh my God, dude, like
you totally owned him with that thing.
Like you showed off the fact that you've got nothing.
But really, if we're all being honest, if we didn't
want to do it, that is the truth.
The only reason that it feels like a flex is that
it's such a left turn from the social mores that
people typically go through.
I said this to you yesterday, Dan Bilzerian
superpower is his frictionlessness from what he
wants to his mouth.
Say what you want about Dan, but he's
lived very unapologetically.
And that's what are the things that you can
get downstream from that?
I mean, maybe you don't like his values or his
principles, maybe you think that he's a bad guy,
or maybe you think he's worth more or less money
than he actually is, all of these things.
But what you can't say is that you don't trust
the things that he does are not
the things that he wants to do.
And that commands a level of respect that absolute, and it should command a level of respect.
I actually think that when you live that way, people trust you more because their ability to
predict your behavior.
A hundred percent.
If I can't trust your no, how can I trust your yes?
Right.
And I think when people see you say no and then later say yes, your
yes means a lot more.
Of course.
Because it's the same thing Peterson talks about that a rabbit can't be good.
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You can't, the vicious, I'm actually, I think that some rabbits are a
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If you want revenge for the bad things that have happened in your life, start
with the version of you that hasn't lived up to your potential.
So I think a lot of us have the battle of the other self that were the lesser
version of ourself that we're, the lesser version of ourself
that we're trying to kill every single day.
And so a lot of times we have this desire
to point the blame finger externally,
but wherever you point the finger of blame, power follows.
And so whoever I blame for the life I have
is the person who I give all the power over my existence,
over my circumstances.
And so it hurts.
But if you turn the finger inwards and you start saying, huh, I don't like my life.
The person that I need to punish or get back at is the real person who got me here, which
is me.
And so you may be right that other people did certain things or you got dealt a bad hand.
It also doesn't matter because the only thing
that you can't control is obviously the actions that you take.
And the only person who's in control of that is you.
And so the revenge porn is thinking about what the version of you who got you here did, and then
acting in the exact opposite of that as many times as you possibly can.
And the pain that you feel by rejecting the thing that you used to do that got you into
this bad circumstance, that's the real revenge.
It's kind of like the stoic fork, the dichotomy of control, but it's just
taking all of that and just lumping it all on you.
Yeah, it's, it's, you know, I mean, this is kind of the, the pushback against
victimhood culture that externalizing the locus of control, it is the fault of
the politics or the economy, or it's the state of the dollar or it's the patriarchy or it's whatever.
He goes, Hey, look, you will get a hundred X, a thousand X your returns, placing your efforts to
try and change those things on you as opposed to on the world.
Like you, I think basically the best way to move through the world is to see your entire
surroundings as immutable and you as mutable.
You're the only mutable thing in the entire world.
You're the only thing that can change everybody else, people, opinions, places, economy, politicians,
policies, all of that.
None of that's going to change you.
You can change.
That's it.
And then maybe some of the other stuff does,
and that'd be great. It's a really interesting concept. So do we accept the world and change
ourselves or do we change the world and accept ourselves? And so it's a really interesting
dichotomy when you ask the question because on, cause both of those sound right. You're like,
I should accept myself and change the world. But on the other hand, you're like, wait, no, I should accept the world
and change myself. And so, yeah, because they're both pithy, pithy aphorism.
Aphorism pawn.
Right. And so I think all of it comes down to when you change yourself, you will change the world
because you'll change how you see it.
I think as well when it comes to accepting yourself, do you want to accept you, do you
want to accept a version of you that you shouldn't accept? One that you're not proud of, one that
doesn't live up to their word, one whose thoughts, actions and intentions aren't aligned fully.
Well, I mean, I can, but I don't particularly feel good about that.
That feels like the higher version of me, the potential version of me
that I want to live up to is I'm sort of derogating them that it's,
this isn't really the tribute to them that it should be.
And yeah, that's why the self-accept acceptance movement, that's why people feel icky
about it, people feel icky about the self acceptance movement because they know
that people are accepting a version of themselves, which is falling short
from what it could be.
I would say that they're not accepting themselves in saying that they accept
themselves.
So if I say, is there a version of yourself that's better than you are right now?
And most people hopefully would say, yes.
It's like, great, accept that person.
And I think that to me, when we talk about the authenticity,
accepting yourself is accepting the ideal that we can live up to.
And that is what we accept, not the shitty version of that, that we are
today.
And I think that marries both sides of the argument.
Jimmy Carr broke my brain with this one.
Everyone is jealous of what you've got.
No one is jealous of how you got it.
I love that quote.
My God.
People see the trophies, but not the training ground.
Everybody wants the view, but no one wants the climb.
I love it.
But the people who win love the climb and the real mountain has no peak.
And so the view is always present the whole way up the climb.
It seems to me to push back there.
It seems to me like a lot of the time you're head down, the pleasure
comes from the climb, not the view for you.
Again, maybe sort of, uh, non-typically constructed from a psychological
perspective, so that was nice.
That was diplomatic.
Um, uh, so what would you say? constructed from a psychological perspective. So that was nice. That was diplomatic.
So what would you say? And this is something that I think, you know, with these episodes that we do, I often want to try
and get you to push a little bit more to adapt your ideas and your insights for people who maybe do
have a little bit more of that emotionality that comes through to try and sort of soften this up.
Like, I understand that people need more degrees of freedom than me.
Typically.
I understand that people probably can't get themselves to the level of work that
I can.
So do you ever sort of play with that idea of, okay, what does a little bit of
view taking in look like whilst we're climbing?
taking in look like whilst we're climbing?
I think a lot of the discontent comes from the judgment people have about what they should or should not do
along the way.
And so they take my description as prescription
for what they should do.
So I describe my life and then people think
I'm prescribing what they should do and So I describe my life and then people think I'm prescribing what they should do
and it couldn't be further from the truth.
If you wanna take a break at every two steps
and take in the view, do it.
I mean, in four generations, no one will remember your name.
And so enjoy the view if you feel like it.
I just happen to enjoy how much I can see that I can do.
That's what I enjoy.
And I feel like I am most present when I work.
And so I'm not gonna go onto work-life balance, whatever,
because we already know where that conversation goes.
But people have a harder time accepting
that someone can just work all the time and, and truly love it.
And I define that by there's nothing else I would rather do at any time.
And so for me, I feel like I exercise, exercise absolute freedom in my life.
And freedom is reinforcing for all species, dogs, cows, fish, humans.
Freedom is one of the most positively
reinforcing thing that people have that everyone wants freedom.
Everybody wants to be able to say, fuck you.
Right.
But once you say, fuck you, you have to do something because you can't just stay
at stand there and saying, fuck you over and over again for hours for the rest of
your life, you start to do something.
And that thing that you choose to do after you do, after you say, fuck
you is what you want to do.
That's an interesting point. So there are certain things that you have to do to get to the point where you don't
have to do things you don't want to do.
And then when you're liberated, there is a whole new challenge now, because it's a
completely blank map where you have to actually define that.
That's one of the things, you know, about working for yourself.
There's, there's a lot of derogation about nine to fives and university
education and kind of the typical track and stuff like, bro, you should be very
cautious about criticizing people that have more normal salaried nine to five
jobs, because I look at most of my friends and they can't not take their work home
with them.
So for certain psychological makeups, who's more free, the person that actually
gets to shut their work laptop at 5 PM in France, they've got this new policy
now where you can't email staff after I think it's maybe 5 PM or 6 PM at night in
certain businesses to try and sort of enforce this work life balance and stuff
like that.
Uh, so for certain people you're shaking your head.
What's your, what have you, what's your problem?
I mean, my first thought was, well, France just took the, it's
a relevant economy and just made it less.
And, and secondarily, the person who made that rule is somebody who
fundamentally doesn't understand human behavior.
So if they were to pass that rule for me, then what they did is
they actually made my life worse.
This was the thing when Elon took over Twitter.
So it's one of my favorite stories over the last couple of years.
Elon buys Twitter.
Elon finds out that 80% of the staff base just drinks smoothies and go on
hot girl walks all day and he fires fires them and says, this team,
it was him and a bunch of Asian dudes selfie.
And he says, this is the team that's gonna run Twitter now.
And he puts, I think a job posting out maybe on Twitter.
And he says, I want people who want to work harder
than they ever have on the most difficult problems
in the world and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
And he got tons of shit for it.
And they said, this is a regressive policy for industry.
This is taking people back to sending kids up to chimneys and so on and so forth.
And it's just a complete failure of theory of mind that there are people
out there for whom that is the job advert.
I want to work harder than I ever have on the most difficult problems in the world
at an intensity
that would kill most people because that's where I derive pleasure and satisfaction from. That's the
best situation that I could hope for and trying to take your model of, well, yeah, but what about
my maternity leave and yeah, but what about, you know, jeans Fridays and yeah, but what about,
you know, hot girl walks? All of that is that those are things that people don't want.
Adding those in gets in the way of the thing that they do want.
I think a lot of the confusion around the people who are wanting to work harder
than they are, or don't like that I work harder, that you work hard,
think that they take this statement as a judgment or criticism on how they live their life.
And it's because on the other side of that free line, you're like, okay, I'm now free, I have a blank slate.
If I do something or you do something that they deem painful for them now or something that they don't enjoy,
they then say, you are suffering and that is bad.
And both of those things I reject wholeheartedly.
First, you don't know that I'm suffering
because you have no idea what's going on inside of me,
comma, and also, what does your judgment mean at all to me?
There's a Tim Cook internal memo that he sent.
There's a saying that if you do what you love, you will never work a day in your life.
At Apple, I learned that is a total crock.
You will work harder than you ever thought possible, but the tools will feel light in your hands.
So good.
Chef's kiss. Chef's kiss, Tim Cook. light in your hands. So good.
Chef's kiss, Tim Cook.
I feel like you crushed that one.
I have a friend who worked for a very high level recruitment company, C-suite execs for the biggest companies on the planet.
I don't know whether it was some internal intranet thing or whether they actually saw these people
or they maybe pool candidates with other companies, but he was able to see the breakdown interviews
with some of the best CEOs in the world. So he was able to see the summary of Tim Cook
So he was able to see the summary of Tim Cook and Susanna was Juki the lady.
And apparently the first line. So these guys are seeing everybody the best on the planet.
Right.
And I was like, okay, so just explain to me the interpretation difference between
the guys that are already AAA and then Tim Cook.
the guys that are already AAA and then Tim Cook.
And he said the first line of Tim Cook's summary just said, rock star.
That was the first thing.
All it said was rock star.
And he realized that in a pool of the best executives on the planet, people like Tim and people like Susanna still are heads and shoulders above the rest.
I just thought that was so cool to like see these people in their nascent stage before they've got
the thing that they're going to really magnify. They had all the attributes. They didn't have the
proof yet. Yeah, they didn't have the playground. They didn't have the Petri dish to be able to show
just how much they could multiply it. Yeah. Which I think about that a lot when it comes to kind of like potential energy versus reality
for people on their way up.
And so there's this huge time delay between
when we start behaving in a way that a winner behaves
and when we start winning.
And the problem is that the bigger the mountain
you're trying to climb, the bigger the W you're trying
to get, typically the more delayed it is between.
The longer the lag. Yeah, between when you start behaving like a winner the mountain you're trying to climb, the bigger the W you're trying to get, typically the more delayed it is.
The longer the lag.
Yeah, between when you start behaving like a winner and when you start being a winner.
And most people don't get the fast enough feedback loop to know that they're on the right path
when they are taking these first steps in the right direction,
because they have this really big goal, but they forget that with that really big goal comes the
even longer delay that it takes to get there while still continuing to act with no feedback from
society.
Positive reinforcement.
Whatsoever.
And I think that's like, if I actually had to put a real like what's, what's been, what has worked so well for me and why the input
over the output focus has been so powerful is that I can extend the time rise and basically
indefinitely because the goal is me.
And then the external goals occur.
You don't need the positive reinforcement.
I mean, everybody's seen an X.
I need the positive reinforcement, but the positive reinforcement is coming from me.
I'm just being like, just because I think it's important.
The positive external reinforcement that most people are looking for.
Right.
But if you are the goal, then the actions you take every day are reinforcing who you
believe yourself to be.
That's where the confidence comes from.
As long as they're directionally correct.
And if you just want to be satisfied, then just work your ass off.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, everybody's seen one of those exponential graphs and I, I, one of my good friends, George
bought me a professor.
He's great.
He's fucking fantastic.
I've, I found, I'll tell you once, fucking won't let me say it, but he's just got the
most insane client.
Like one of the coolest companies on the planet.
He bought me for a gift last year.
It's the 1 million subscriber announcement post that I did.
It's the first ever test footage episode I did in 2017.
And in the middle is the play graph that goes between the two.
And you look, and
it is up until a year at the time, up until like a year before it's flat.
There's nothing.
There was days.
I remember looking back, there was days when we were doing this show in.
March, April, and May of 2018, where we did zero plays.
We'd already launched.
I was releasing an episode a week and there was days where we did no plays. And I released an episode and we did zero plays. We'd already launched. I was releasing an episode a week and there was days where we did no plays
and I released an episode and we did no plays.
I went back through and looked,
I don't think I even told you this.
I messaged every single one of the thousand contacts
in my phone that I'd accumulated from Nightlife promo
on WhatsApp saying,
hi, I've just launched a podcast,
would you mind subscribing to me?
A thousand different people bunched
into 50 person broadcast lists because that was the maximum broadcast list you mind subscribing to me? Yeah. A thousand different people bunched into 50 person broadcast lists, because that
was the maximum broadcast list you used to be able to do.
And I was the most ground floor door to door sales to try and accumulate an
audience and it just keeps happening.
There's no presuming that you keep on going exponentially.
It makes every previous version poultry and, uh, yeah, being able to continue doing something without seeing the
results of your work is one of the best competitive advantages because everybody
else is feeling the same discomfort that you are, everybody else is going, I don't
know if this is going to work and this is hard and why is no one telling me that
I'm doing a good job and fuck another day with no plays that stupid.
And then you end up looking at the top hundred podcasts in the world.
I think account for 80% of the global plays, a hundred shows out of about 4
million account for 80% of the plays, which means there's
what 399,900 and 900 and fucking that has got the entire rest of it.
That's 20% for those.
That's it.
The leading indicator of a successful person is the ability to act without anything happening.
And when you continue down that path, it happens slower than you expect and then faster than
you can imagine.
And I think that's the part that everyone misses is they expect the faster than they
can imagine and they imagine really big.
And so then their expectations are really big, really fast, but they take the intensity
and they don't apply it to a timeline that's appropriate.
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This is from Mark Manson.
Why I hate being around negative people.
Being an asshole is a weak person's idea of strength.
Complaining is their connection.
Never let yourself be held back by other people's fears.
People criticize what they were afraid to do themselves
because bold action reminds them of their own inaction.
If you're afraid to be criticized, why do you care about the opinions of those who are too timid to do it themselves?
If you are the criticizer, does tearing down someone who has the courage you lack make you better?
Yeah. People criticize because it helps them justify the risks they chose not to take in the hopes
that it will dissuade you from doing it so that you can be in the exact same position
as them, which then justifies that they made the right call.
This happened when I stopped drinking. You know, it was now going low and no on alcohols
kind of in vogue and super duper common,
but as a club promoter in whatever 2015, 2016,
that was pretty rare.
And I think a lot of the pushback that I got
from the people around me, some of the people around me
was your behavior is
throwing my behavior into sharp contrast.
And, you know, this is the lonely chapter, right?
This is why the movement away from your existing friend group.
This is Neo, you've already been down that road, you know where it leads.
You know, you don't want to go there.
It's all of those things, but because at least for me, I always have such inherent uncertainty of my own opinions and
such a sense that everybody else is balanced and actually knows what they're doing, that
I give undue weight to the criticisms of others.
Oh, maybe they are right.
Maybe it is stupid for me to stop drinking. Maybe this does make me boring.
Maybe it is pointless for me to do like, who even knows if meditation works.
Fuck Sam Harris, right?
Like, you know, all of these doubts that start to creep in and that, like
we were saying before, this is the discomfort that everybody feels, whether
you're launching a business or doing personal development or doing all the
rest of it, and as opposed to thinking about it as a bug, think about it as a feature and as
opposed to thinking about it as something that's a personal curse, that's difficult.
Think about it as the selection criteria that everybody has to get over.
That's the reason why so few people are equanimous
and actually have peace in their mind,
because meditation is hard and everyone thinks,
am I doing it right?
This kind of sucks and I'm twitchy and I'm tired today.
Why so few people in shape?
Because going to the gym and sticking to the gym
is difficult.
Maybe it's a tiny bit easier for some people
that like it than others,
but for most people, most of the time, it's really, really hard.
Thinking about the challenges that you need to face.
It's just a selection cry, the cost of doing business, right?
This is just the cost of doing business and I need to pay it.
It's rarely the information or the intensity that makes things hard.
It's the sticking with it that makes it hard.
And so the desire that we have to quit is simply breaking the consistency.
And so that's why consistency has always been the hardest thing for most people to achieve.
But the intensity of what you have to do to be successful is much lower than most people expect.
And so oftentimes they suffer significantly more in a short period of time than is required to
be successful over a much longer period of time with a much lower intensity. And so it's just like
if you walk for five minutes a day, you're going to get 50% of the health benefits, probably more
than that, I'm sure,
of just even exercising.
You add 10 years to your life
if you walked five or 10 minutes a day.
And the path of personal development
is befriending uncertainty.
And so I obviously sit from the entrepreneurial perspective,
but almost all decisions that
you make in the beginning, you have incomplete data and you have to make decisions anyways.
And so it's growing comfortable with taking your best bad guess and being directionally
correct rather than searching for a perfect answer because a perfect answer assumes perfect
information, which you could only have after you begin.
And so in some ways, making a decision is the perfect answer so that you can get
the information to then improve the quality of the decision later.
And I think that one loop is what a lot of people miss out on is that they spend,
they obsess for years sometimes on the perfect pick, the perfect business, the
perfect job, the perfect mate.
on the perfect pick, the perfect business, the perfect job, the perfect mate.
When most of the times beginning each step.
Eliminates the next step, which means the information, the feedback that you get from walking gives you more about where to walk than trying to sit at the beginning
in the darkness and pick a direction.
Well, it's the difference as well, I think, between people who are super advanced,
super developed, super far down the line and people who are beginning.
It's like, dude, what have you got?
What are you risking by trying to do this thing?
For you, it's fine for you to spend 18 months negotiating with Sam on the school deal.
But if you are yet to do any business, that's probably not necessarily the right way to go
about things.
Tim Ferriss says, in the short term, your success depends on your intensity.
In the long term, your success depends on your consistency. Do not sacrifice the latter for the
former. Hmm. What's wild about the fear that people have when they're starting out is that
they say things like,
I have nothing going for me. I have no advantages. I have nothing to my name.
I have no money. I have no network. I have no resources.
But using Rory Sutherland's reframing, it also means that you have nothing to lose,
which makes you incredibly dangerous. And I think people wildly underestimate how many
shots on goal you can take when you have
nothing to lose.
Whereas when someone has something to lose, they have to be more and more selective about
the shots they take.
And so you have the perfect conditions for taking risk because the worst case scenario
is baseline is where you're currently at.
And so that means downside is this, which means that it's like going to the casino and
playing craps,
but they say that you can just keep playing until you win.
But people are afraid to roll.
Reminder for anyone internally debating weekend plans.
If you don't want to go, don't go.
If they care whether you go or not, they don't care about you.
And if they care about you, they don't care if you go or not, they don't care about you. And if they care about you, they don't care if you go or not.
Just because you have free time doesn't mean anyone who asks for it is entitled to it.
I think the second part I want to start with, which is if you see that you have an empty calendar, most people assume that if someone asks you for that time, it's therefore theirs.
And it's only not theirs when someone else has claimed it, which means that your time only belongs to other people. And then you're surprised by the fact that your investment of time has yielded nothing for you
when you've given the only and most valuable asset
that you have to everyone else
who often give a very poor return on it for you.
And so in the beginning, if you don't have money,
the only thing you have is time.
And so that is the only thing that you,
it's the only currency you can
spend to improve yourself or get closer to your goals.
And so if that's the one currency you have, then why on earth would you give it away?
I think it's genuinely right to say that your calendar is a better measure
of your wealth than your bank account.
It's also the easiest way to know where someone's going to be in five years or even a year.
Awesome.
You just see what they're, where they're
investing their time and you can predict like
more accurately what their life is going to look
like in a year based on what they're doing today.
And it's a good thing, you know, for us, it's
hard for me not to put the business stuff into it,
but a reminder that the life that I'm living today
is a result of the work that I did six and 12 months ago.
And so if you're to look at my calendar six and 12 months
ago, then you might extrapolate out to what I'm doing today.
But just like people want the immediate reward,
they also see their current condition as a result
of the behavior they're doing today.
It's not.
It's not at all.
And so that's why I think having in some ways, a very vivid imagination of like,
this is where I think the, the benefit of quote visualization comes into play.
I don't see it as much as a benefit for like, Oh, I have to
imagine this thing to happen.
But I think it's more powerful to think I'm doing this thing today
and I'm imagining it happening.
So it's an approximation of the feedback loop that you want to have.
And so it helps you substitute and get through the period where
nothing's actually happening.
This is, it was so cool to learn this.
Going to the gym is one of the very few pursuits that you can do.
Where in the act of doing the thing, you get a brief window into what it will be like if you continue to do the thing.
If I go on Duolingo and try to learn Spanish, I don't briefly become much better at Spanish, like where I'm going to be at in six months or 12 months time.
But if I go to the gym and get a pump on, I go, Hey, that's me. Hopefully flat in nine months time.
Like how I look now at the end of the session is where I want to be toward
the end of this year and that reinforcement loop is so good.
I think I genuinely, no one's spoken about this.
The pump preview.
Yeah.
But like that I think is the feedback mechanism that makes the gym so compelling.
It's one of the reasons why it makes the gym so compelling.
You get this brief window into a future version of you and you go,
fucking dude, I look so, my delts look fucking awesome.
I can't wait for that to be how I look when I wake up on a morning.
And you go, okay, that's how I'm going to get that.
And that's why it's such a, it's so gratifying, right?
It works in the moment and it works over the longterm.
It works in the moment and it works over the long term.
So one of my closest friends or my closest friend, Dr. Kashi, and I talk about this.
But the difference between experts and beginners is that experts have more ways to reward themselves in a given condition. And so if you think about an expert salesman, there are so many interactions they can have
that they are good at,
that they can find rewarding and positively enforcing.
And so the goal is to develop enough skill
that your external environment and conditions
can deliver enough positive feedback
that it can become self-sustaining.
Give me a tangible example.
So if you're an editor and you edit videos for a
living, in the beginning you have to, you know, you watch a video and then you try the thing and
if it doesn't work, there's no, there's no, I mean there is a feedback loop, it's null. And then you
go back, you try it again and then you do get a positive feedback. Oh, I'd made that transition
happen. I made that color grading occur, whatever I I'm talking out of, you get the idea.
There are some roles like sales and editing where there's a lot of people who are music,
where people become passionate
because there's enough fast feedback loops in the beginning
where they can try something and then get good.
A master musician can pick up any instrument
and have positive feedback loops everywhere.
And so the more you master any skill,
the more ways you can win.
And so it allowed, and that's ultimately
what makes the rich get richer,
is that because everything is so positively reinforcing,
because they start to develop skills,
then they do more and more of it.
And as they do more of it, the rich get richer,
the better get better, the better become best.
And then everyone who's starting out is like, how on God's earth does this guy have this
work ethic?
But it's really that he has high levels of skill.
And I'm going to go into attention here, but I think it's going to be worth it.
So I think about everything in terms of skills.
And I have more or less divorced myself from the words like feelings,
psychology, intuition, whatever.
I've just, I've just taken it out of my vocabulary and simple character traits
and try to focus ruthlessly on what are the actions that I can take to become
patient. And if you say, hey, be patient,
what does someone do, right?
They have to figure out what to do in the meantime.
That's the definition of patience.
If you say, hey, be more charismatic.
The problem with that directive is that it's a bundled term.
And so I say charismatic,
but what it really means is 12 skills underneath of it. That means that when you walk into a room, stand up straight.
When you walk into a room, look everyone in the eyes.
When you walk into a room, announce yourself, speak louder, shake people's hands
and look at them while they're talking.
When someone talks, nod your head.
If you do all of these 12 behaviors or 15 behaviors,
people begin to describe you as charismatic.
And in the path of personal development, we want to become more of these things, but we
haven't chunked down the bundled term into the series of behaviors that create the description
that people will then call us later. And I think by breaking things down, then it's not like,
oh, I'm just not that insert character trait.
It's really, oh, I have not mastered these 12 skills.
And so by doing that, it demystifies.
Much more precise.
Exactly. This is from a business perspective, also really good for training employees.
So like, for example, on our team, I was like, Caleb was the first person who
did video with me that I ever enjoyed.
And so I was like, why?
And then somebody else came in and I was like, I'm not having as much fun in these
sessions and I'd like to recreate the conditions of success.
And so how can I make it so that I operationalize fun?
Exactly.
And so the most Alex Hormozi thing I've ever heard.
Hey, hey guys, let's operationalize fun for a moment.
And so we had to, but then this is the part
that everyone misses is that you then have to look
with a microscope and say, what are all the little things
that Caleb does that other ones, other people don't do?
And so it turned out when he was behind the camera
he would be nodding his head.
And if I said a banger line, he would stick his thumb out.
And so I'd get these many positive reinforcement loops while I was recording. And then as soon as Ianger line, he would stick his thumb out. And so I'd get these many positive reinforcement loops
while I was recording.
And then as soon as I was done,
he would come over and be like, dude, that was fire.
And then he would take out his phone
and have all of these really interesting followups
because I could see that he was actively listening
and he had thoughts.
And so then when we retrained the team, we said,
hey, when Alex is talking, nod your head slowly
so he sees that you're actively listening.
If he says something cool, do one of these,
give him a thumbs up.
And then all of a sudden, my recording sessions
without Caleb became as good as my recording sessions
with Caleb and we operationalized Calebism, right?
And so I could say, I just need you to be more like Caleb,
but that's not helpful to somebody.
But if I said, I need you to do all these things,
then I can operationalize that.
The reason I'm hitting on this so hard is because this has been such a core change in how I see the
world. And it has been so useful in terms of making bending reality to what I would like it to be.
Because there's this huge disconnect between what people want, how they describe what they want, takes for that to occur. And by being able to look with detail
about the character traits or the things that people
who are better than you at a certain thing do,
you can then stop being like, man, people think I'm a dick.
It's like, well, if someone says stop being a dick,
not helpful.
I mean, good to know that whatever I'm doing is not working,
but doesn't give me any active directions. And so we just try to break down at acquisition.com.
But in general, and for myself, what are all what is the 18 things that I have to do? And oftentimes,
it's significantly more things, but they're also much easier than you think. If I just said,
I need you to nod your head while you're going on camera, it's not that complicated to understand.
And so when you break it down that way,
all of a sudden it becomes, you wrap your arms around it
and you're like, oh, so this is what it takes
in order for me to be an exceptional videographer.
This is what it takes for me to be an exceptional podcaster.
I'm sure, and we call it like,
that's why I love living by checklists.
But right now, if you were to,
if I were to say, hey, what makes a good podcast?
You'd be like probably about 128 things or more, right?
But everyone on the outside says,
you're just so natural on camera.
You ask such thought-provoking questions.
Like, man, you just get the best guests, right?
And you're like, sure.
And so the thing is, I think this is the mysticism.
This is the unknown that the beginners or the people
or the very beginning of their path don't understand
is that there is no magic.
There is no mysticism.
There is no spirituality around this.
Everything comes down to behavior.
And by doing that, you can take out all of the hullabaloo,
all of the voodoo that unfortunately
is so prevalent on social media.
And so when you hear the podcast clips and whatever of people saying,
you just need to be more this, if they haven't described it by a behavior, it is useless.
And so this has allowed me to also separate signal from noise when I'm consuming content in general,
or if I want to learn something, I'm immediately thinking, well, what does this mean
that I have to do?
And if someone can't break it down into the behaviors,
then they don't know either.
And they may be very good at the thing,
but they may be very bad at teaching it.
And being able to separate those two skills,
because those are skills too,
being able to transfer a skill is a skill,
will allow you to audit who you're listening to so that
you can get the highest return on your effort because then you know that you're doing activities
that lead to the outcome that you want. We'll get back to talking to Alex in one minute,
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We have this big nebulous term of anything that's called confidence.
And then there's these component parts that confidence is made up of and only by defining those, can you actually bring it closer to you. Yeah. I think, you know, in terms of getting people past the paralysis of be
confident, like what the fuck does that even mean?
Where do I start?
What are the component parts of confidence?
And yeah, you know, breaking down any big thing into small manageable steps is
kind of the key to achieving large goals.
Breaking down nebulous concepts
into high resolution, very tangible,
very obvious individual skills.
I really like that.
I really like that.
I think it may be the single source of singles tough.
One of the largest correlates
to what has worked for me in my life.
Because a lot of this obsession around this,
and you probably know more about it off camera
than people can hear on camera,
has come from me fundamentally not understanding the world.
And so I put so much effort into trying to understand
when people would say, do like, stop being that way, way or you're really cocky or you're really arrogant.
And I was like, how do I not be that? And are you really distractible?
Are you really, you know, you're scattered. And these were all things that like,
you know, it hurts when you hear these things, but you're like, okay, but what do I do?
And so I would encourage you if you have either negative traits that you're
trying to get rid of or positive traits that you're trying to accrue or become
more like to simply demystify it by breaking it down into the behaviors.
And when you do that, you'll realize that though there may be many variables
in that there are lots of little things that it takes, They're usually not nearly as complex as you'd think. And so then you just start looking
at it as a checklist and saying, okay, people think I'm arrogant when I begin
my conversation, begin talking to them about how much money I make. Okay, so I
have two options. I can either be around people who like talking about money and
don't see it as arrogant, or when I'm around people who I think have a high
likelihood of that and I care about their opinion for some reason, then I won't
begin that way. And then all of a sudden, fewer and fewer people begin to describe you as arrogant.
Now, you are still the same, but people describe you less in those terms. And so, I'll give you a
different example. It's completely off the wall here. So, one that was really helpful for me was
defining love. And so, the problem with the English or all So one that was really helpful for me was defining love.
And so the problem with the English or all languages
is that there's many words that mean the same thing.
And so we can look up, you know, Webster, Dishonor,
whatever, but if you actually look at the definitions,
I think most words are actually poorly defined,
because if you just define them by what someone has to do,
then most definitions fall short.
And many of them, if you will find online or circular,
right, but like liking this and loving to me are a continuum.
It's not like I like this person, I love this person,
it just exists on this.
I hate to, I really like, cool.
Now, if I were to say, I love you,
what does that mean operationally?
So for me, I define love by what I'm willing to give up
to maintain my relationship with something or someone.
And so by using that definition, I was able to see, huh, maybe I don't love my family
as much as I thought, because I'm actually not willing to give up very much in order
to maintain this relationship.
And I might actually love my friend or I may love my coworkers a lot more than I love my family if we use the
definition of what I'm willing to give up in order to keep it. And then the more I thought about it,
I was like, oh, I love my goals more than I love anyone. I'm not willing to give up my goals
in order to maintain a relationship. And so I actually, when I realized this, I sat down
with Leila and I was like, Hey, I think I love my goals more than I love you.
How did that go down?
Great. Because she was like, my whole goal in life has been to help you accomplish your goals. And
I think the reason that we've had such an aligned relationship is that both of us want to help the
other person achieve their goals. And in so doing, then you're aligned and it's like, wow, I, I would give up
everything to maintain peace because if Layla is the person on earth that helps
me accomplish my goals more than anyone else and my goals mean more than me than
any, anything else, then I,
is now the conduit between the two.
Yeah.
She's like inception mind fucked you into.
Yeah.
And now some people get really uncomfortable by me saying that, but-
It sounds transactional in some ways.
And it is, but I believe in transactions and relationships in general.
For some reason in marriage, it sounds weird, but on a first date, the first thing you share is,
these are my goals, this is what I want to do. Is that at all interesting to you? Because if it's
not, if you're not aligned with where I'm trying to go, then maybe we shouldn't walk in this path together.
But for some reason later that no longer applies,
I believe what you apply on first date should also apply on 10 years in.
At least that's what's worked for us.
And if there's ever been a moment where we're like, hey, we feel off-kilter here.
This feels like it's conflicting with what we are earlier agreement,
then we reconcile it. Right.
And so I bring this up because there are so many terms
like loyalty, trust, and I spend a lot of time
trying to define these terms so that I can say,
not do I trust this person,
but how much do I trust this person?
This person is honest or not, no, how honest is this person?
And the only way that you can know someone is honest
is if they've had the opportunity to lie,
where it's not socially beneficial for them,
where they lose status by still being integrists
and saying what really occurred.
And so I have this massive list on my phone.
It's got all the terms that I refer to frequently,
but I would encourage you to define them
by what behavior you have to do.
Have you got your phone on you now?
Yeah.
Can you pull up one and give us a tongue
that you'd like to look at?
I'll give a phone one.
I have tons.
This is fun.
Waits words.
And that's one of the things that I appreciate is
anybody that spends enough time crafting words
and thinking about them precisely,
ends up having a very accurate view of the world,
because all of the fluffiness that comes about,
we mediate our experience through language,
and then what, you've got a shit-eating grin on your face.
Oh, I've just got so many.
Okay, well, pick one of your favorites.
I'll do three of them,
two of them that are related and then a third one.
All right, so this will be really good.
This will be nasty for the people who are listening at home.
So learning means same condition, new behavior.
So phone rings, answer the phone, you say ABC.
I say, cool, read this script instead that says DEF.
Phone rings, same condition.
You say DEF, you have learned.
Same condition, new behavior.
Intelligence is rate of learning.
It's speed, it's a measurement of speed.
And so it means how many times do you need to be exposed
to the same condition in order to change your behavior?
If I teach someone something, that script,
and then on the first try, they say, DEF,
and someone else, it takes five tries for them to say, DEF,
they are not as intelligent as the first person.
Here's why this is interesting.
Every person who's listening to this right now
has listened to a thousand fucking podcasts
and they're in the exact same condition and yet they have not changed their behavior,
which means one, they have not learned and two, they are dumb.
Which also means that if you can control your behavior, you can also control how intelligent
you are.
And so if you want to be a smart cookie, then it means that you just decrease the amount
of times that you do not change your behavior under the same conditions.
And so when I think about this, when I teach my team, when I teach anyone, I think in these
conditions.
And so every time you watch or you consume a piece of content, you read a book, if you
think what behavior am I going to change as a result of this, if the answer is nothing,
you wasted your time
and you pretended to be learning,
but you were really entertaining yourself.
And so that frame has been incredibly helpful for me
to speed up how quickly I take action
because I don't wanna be a dodo bird.
So that's two different ones, learning and intelligence.
One that I've been thinking a lot about with Dr. K and I, we go back and forth, is motivation.
So I'll tell you a story and then I'll bring it around. So I was at an event and a young lady
said, Alex, can you just give me 60 seconds of motivation? And of course it's like, you know, dance monkey dance.
And so I, you know, I took a deep breath
and I was like, define motivation.
And you know, she just like melted.
She had no idea, right?
I was like, so you're, you want me to answer a question
or make a statement about something
that you can't even define.
And so how would you have any idea
of whether or not I actually did it?
And so then I probably gave her the answer she really wanted, which was, let me define motivation for you.
So motivation is the equal opposite of deprivation. So we are, we are most motivated when we are deprived of something. I'm most motivated to sleep when I'm sleep deprived. I'm most motivated to eat when I'm deprived of food.
I'm most motivated to have sex
when I haven't had sex in a while.
Now, that logic carries for physiological needs,
but then you wanna get into psychological things
or intangible constructs.
So like, let's think about money.
By that same logic, you'd think,
oh, poor people should be more motivated
because they're deprived of money,
but that we don't see that in reality. Many poor people are not
that motivated. So it would then fall, and I've seen some incredibly rich people
who are wildly hungry for money, and so then it would follow that the
deprivation comes from our reference point because money is intangible. And so
it's how much do we perceive our deprivation around money? And so if all of my friends are billionaires and I'm worth $100 million,
then I have a $900 million deficit that I have to come up.
I'm $900 million poorer than the person who just is at $5,000 a month who wants to make $10,000.
I'm more motivated to make money than they are because I'm more deprived of it. And so in thinking about this, I then think, okay,
what am I deprived of?
That motivates me to go get it.
And also when I want to try and judge the behavior of others
or predict their behavior, I have to think
what things are they deprived of?
Because I have a much stronger predictive power
than trying to say,
how do I motivate this person?
Look at what they lack.
It's a much more accurate way to predict the things
that people are going to chase after.
It's operationalized.
What do they do?
So I found this quote from Timothy Leary
and it's really fantastic. I think that you'll like this.
Find the others. Admit it, you aren't like them. You're not even close. You may occasionally
dress yourself up as one of them, watch the same mindless television shows as they do,
maybe even eat the same fast food sometimes. But it seems that the more you try to fit in, the more you feel like an outsider.
Watching normal people as they go about their automatic existences. For every time you say
club passwords like have a nice day and weather's awful today, eh? You yearn inside to say forbidden
things like tell me something that makes you cry or what do you think deja vu is for? Face
it, you even want to talk to that girl in the elevator.
But what if that girl in the elevator
and the balding man who walks past your cubicle at work
are thinking the same thing?
Who knows what you might learn
from taking a chance on a conversation with a stranger?
Everybody carries a piece of the puzzle.
Nobody comes into your life by mere coincidence.
Trust your instincts, Do the unexpected.
Find the others.
There's many Matrix undertones here.
Um...
I mean, I think we might've, we might've covered this
on a past podcast, but, um, the idea that many people want to be exceptional,
but they're afraid of being an exception,
I think is such a, it's wanting an outcome
without the requirement that the outcome has.
And so we can't do the same thing
that everyone else approves of,
and then somehow get a different outcome
that everyone else does.
And so I think it's, that's why high agency for me
is something that I look for in other people,
which is, you know, asking someone,
why do you believe what you believe?
And we talked about this yesterday,
but if you have a belief and you can't explain why you believe it,
it's not yours, it's someone else's.
And most people walk around parroting other people's words
for the vast majority of their lives.
And so they basically act as recorders where they click recorded
at one point of their life and then they click play
at another time in their life and they're just clicking record, play, record, play,
record, play over and over again.
And...
The reason there's that, in my opinion,
that other self that's behind it
is because none of those words are yours.
And so, it makes sense that people feel alone
and they feel like they're acting
because they never say what they think.
And as a result, they also sound like everyone else because they were never themselves to begin
with. It's those first three lines, admit it, you aren't like them, you're not even close.
And it sounds quite sort of self aggrandizing or kind of narcissistic in a way to now you're considering yourself as being above other people.
I think I didn't think it's to do with that.
I think it's that so many people curtail themselves and optimize for a mean that may not exist.
You know, the reverting to a mean that's just a figment of everybody's imagination.
And the only reason that people coalesce there is because other people think that other people
are going to coalesce there.
You know, the Keynesian beauty contest?
Like same as that, basically.
I don't know what it is.
Oh, okay.
So a Keynesian beauty contest is people make judgments
on not who they think is the most beautiful,
but on who they think other people think
are the most beautiful.
And then knowing that other people know
that other people are going to make that
decision based on that, you end up with this infinite regress of trying to
predict things.
This is what's happening with politics, right?
It's not about picking the person that you want in your area.
It's about making the most tactical pick to ensure that overall accounting for the
other people and what they're going to choose that the person that you really
don't want in power doesn't get the seat in your area, but somebody else in some
other area.
So when you have this sort of recursive, but it happens socially too.
I say the thing that I think that you want to hear knowing that, you know, that
I could say the thing that I want.
But so what I say is some mediator halfway between what I want to say and what
I think you want to hear from me.
And it just ends up with people, nobody being themselves and everybody being some
weird simulacrum of what they think everybody else wants them to be.
And if we go back to motivation, the question is what quote motivates people to
do this or to behave in this way.
And so most times it's fear of something, right?
And so they're afraid of something in their minds.
But when you actually play it out,
which is one of my favorite frames in the world,
which is let's take this to the hypothetical extreme
or let's play it out two more plays, two more turns.
And most times you end up getting way closer
to what you really want the moment after the bad thing that you
think will happen happens. And so we've discussed that there's so many amazing things that have
happened in my life and your life and many people's lives that happened immediately after they
get out, they have something bad happen that gets them out of that realm of just barely good enough
but not really. And so we have this fear of disrupting the just barely good
enough, but not really, but you're also already miserable. And so the fear of disrupting your
misery feels ridiculous. And so when you think about it like that, right. So when you think about
it like that, exactly. The only thing we have to lose is the current misery of mediocrity that
we're trudging through every day. And so worst case, you're just also still miserable,
but maybe you won't be mediocre anymore
because at least you won't be like everyone else.
But there's also a possibility that you are not miserable
and also not mediocre.
And by doing that, you might also just start seeing
who you really are,
because I think a great portion of our identity
comes from the proof that we give ourselves,
of the things that we've done and said in the past.
And so if we want to build towards a different version of ourselves, then it begins with accruing, stacking, evidence that aligns with that future self.
And so in some ways, break the plate.
Take the shot.
Get rejected.
Because when you do that, then again,
the worst case is you have a broken plate,
but you didn't like that plate to begin with.
Yeah.
It is astounding how many people want to be spectacular
in life, but also want to fit in and be normal.
Like by being normal, you are by definition, aiming for average. Normal people
get normal results. Weird people get weird results. You literally can't do what everyone
else does and not expect to get what everyone else has. By doing what everyone else does,
you guarantee average results. It's your brother, your mom, your friend, the one comment they're going to say.
You've changed.
Why are you doing another kick like this?
Oh, you're going to try that now.
Okay, here we go again.
And the thing is, is that it's not about them being right or wrong.
Again, it's about how right and how wrong they could be.
And so, for example, let's say you wanted to start a podcast in the past
and you did three episodes and then you fell off.
And then they think, I told you so, stop with these dreams.
Stop with this crazy content stuff.
You're never going to become an influencer or whatever your goal is.
Replace influencer with whatever your thing is.
The thing is, is that you are still closer, having done three than having done zero.
And so it's just about directional correctness and realizing that.
Criticizers are more often correct, but when it matters most, incorrect.
And so this is where frequency and intensity become flipped.
So somebody, I mean, from the investment world,
it's like, okay, if I take 10 bets and I lose nine,
some people might say, he must be a bad investor.
But the question is, how much did I lose on the nine
and how much did I make on the one?
And the best investors in the world understand
the benefits of outsized returns,
both on the upside and the downside.
And so, meaning the perfect way of betting
is having no downside and having unlimited upside,
you want to make as many of those bets as you can.
And in the beginning, that is literally what you have.
And so, the problem is you have a bet that you take, you make three podcasts, and you didn't stick with it.
And so then, criticizer gets one point.
But you lost nothing. You maybe even gained a little bit of skill.
And you gained some experience,
which means you're actually still better off
than you were when you started.
So it is a zero loss game by choosing to begin.
That's the thing about cynics.
Right 99% of the time and wrong 100% of the time.
I use this example
because I think it really drives it home.
So if you have judgmental parents
or judgmental friends or judgmental whatevers
and you date people and you bring them home,
if they say, I don't think this is the girl for you,
they're right every single time your entire life
except for the one person that you decide to marry.
And then they are absolutely wrong
at the time that it mattered most.
And the thing is, is they get to say
on your sixth girlfriend and seventh girlfriend
and eighth girlfriend, because let's face it,
you've been alive for a while.
I have a perfect, I have a perfect guess.
I'm right 100% of the time.
This rule, we'll see how long this one lasts.
And two years in, they're like,
see, you finally broke up with her.
I told you the beginning, it wasn't gonna last.
Well, it never fucking lasts
except for the one that's gonna stick, duh.
And the business never works until it's the one that does.
And the episode doesn't take off
except for the one that does.
And whether it's 10 or 10,000, eventually one does
because when you do more, you get better at doing.
Which is why not quitting is the best skill.
And the only thing that matters,
because by default with an infinite game perspective,
which I encourage everyone to have,
the point of the game is to keep the game going.
It's the only objective,
because even if I obviously come from the business world.
So even if your goal was to be number one at business,
it's like by what metric enterprise value,
growth, profit, revenue, all of a sudden,
okay, maybe it's richest man in the world.
Okay, for how long?
Look at the history of mankind.
Not one person has ever been richest man forever.
And so you get to touch the top,
even if you're that one guy for a moment,
and then it's gone again.
And so you can't have that as the end point
because it is by its very nature finite.
But the competitor whose objective is to continue to play have that as the, the end point because it is by its very nature finite, but the
competitor whose objective is to continue to play can't be beaten because by
playing he wins.
This is why I think a lot of people have chips on their shoulders once they get
to even a modicum of success because everybody that starts off has this huge amount of escape
velocity that's needed to be accumulated.
They're starting from total inertia, lifting off where the gravity's
strongest, going past all of these, the disbelief and the criticism and the
lonely chapter and all of this stuff.
So they've had to go through all of these trenches and get over all of these
hurdles, and then they finally get to the through all of these trenches and get over all of these hurdles.
And then they finally get to the stage where they're in a little bit more light altitude.
They're floating out there a little bit more and maybe their velocity gives them or their fuel gives them more returns in terms of their velocity.
And now people say, it must be nice for you.
You go, dude, fuck you.
Like if you could have seen how much criticism and hard work and lonely nights and all of this stuff when nobody was watching and I was, was unsure
of myself, chronically miserable.
And I criticized and all my friends took the piss at me.
And I did all of these things.
I had to go through all of that for you to now say must be nice.
And that's why, you know, Cameron Haynes, um, carries this rock up a hill and it
says poser on the back of it, 72 pound rock.
And he carries it up a really, really steep hill.
And he does it with, sometimes there's cameras around, but a lot of the time
there's no cameras around and, uh, he does that to it's the, the only work
that matters is the work that you do when nobody's watching.
He does that to, it's the only work that matters is the work that you do when nobody's watching.
The reason the goal isn't coming at you fast enough is because every person you've seen accomplish the goal, you only see it the moment they accomplish it. And the reason that it hurts
so much when people are like, must be nice. Oh, that happened overnight,
is because every time you fail,
no one cares and no one sees.
But when you finally win,
people take notice.
Discredited.
But it's the only time they notice
is when you actually win.
And so to even further reinforce the point,
the fact that everyone looks like an overnight success
means that the 10 years where they sucked, no one saw.
And so the fear that you have about people noticing
the fact that you fail is ridiculous
because they're barely gonna notice when you succeed.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think this is one of the reasons why tracking the journey,
this is something that Chris Bum tracking the journey, this is something
that Chris Bumstead has done very well.
You know, he's had his videographer Calvin with him for forever, essentially.
And, you know, tracking autoimmune disorders and depression and now his wife's
pregnant and having the kid and I got to go back and do, yeah, all of that.
I think one of the ways that you can at least lighten the load or bring it into land a little bit more effectively is to construct that story arc.
You know, the story of you sleeping in the gym and the cars go over the top and it makes
them loud noise and stuff.
That is an important part of getting people to buy into where you are now by
proving that you were there when the line was flat or the actually somehow
managed to break through the negative a number of times.
And, um, I remember I was watching Maisie Williams.
She was one of the, she was Arya Stark in Game of Thrones.
And, um, somebody asked her what she wished that she'd done differently.
And, you know, I think she starts on that show and she's 11 or 12 and it's all of
the most formative years of her life until she's 21 or something into decade
of doing this show and somebody asked her what she wished that she'd done differently.
And she started journaling, I think in season five and there's maybe
nine seasons or something, and she had no recollection of what happened
in the beginning and she really wanted that.
And I think that, uh, if there's a regret that I have with this show, it's that we
didn't track more of what was happening behind the scenes from the very beginning.
Partly for everybody else to show just how much shit I went
through to kind of prove that.
But most of me to remind myself of where it was.
And I'm sure that, you know, there's a couple of photos, you know, the bed
in the corner of the gym, like, fuck, I wish like I had that and I wish I had
this and I wish I had another one.
Uh, you know, if you'd had Caleb with you the whole time, imagine how fucking
I'd be poor and broke.
I never would have made it.
Probably in fucking hospital as well as being on the back of a motorcycle.
Um, but yeah, I think it's important.
I think it's important to track that, to track that journey for
yourself and for, for other people.
But it's such, it does piss me off.
to track that journey for yourself and for, for other people. But it's such, it does piss me off.
Like I wish that human psychology wasn't so easily manipulated.
Like when you see that trick, when you see the, well, if you go zero to hero,
even if you go zero to hero to zero to back to hero again, like, as long as you
can construct that narrative sufficiently strongly for people, you can just get
other humans to buy into you.
But it hasn't changed what you did.
It's just changed the way that you presented it to people in this story that you told.
So it, when you start to see things like that, it makes, I find it disenchanting
because it reminds me how fickle crowd mentality is.
it reminds me how fickle crowd mentality is. And it's why, uh, Ethan Supplee, um, big Hollywood actor weighed 500 pounds or something. And now he's two 60 and he used to play fat
guy funny roles. And now he plays jacked bearded biker dude roles. And the reason that his
transformation is so fantastic is that you know him from before and you know him now, but the dude that just gets in shape or that goes
through the silent, quiet challenge and didn't track the progress gets none of
the accolade despite going through all, or maybe even more of the challenge.
So much done, Pak.
Um, I'd say one of the strongest mental frames that has gotten me through my hardest times
is thinking this will be the story that I will one day tell.
And that means the harder it is, the bigger the dragon, the more epic the story.
And by consequence, the more epic the hero.
And if you think about the difference between winners and losers, winners define themselves
by what they made happen and losers define themselves by what happened to them.
And the difficult part of the lonely chapter is that the rocky cut scene lasts 90 seconds
in the movie and lasts five years in reality.
With no promise of it ever ending. No guarantee of glory. the rocky cut scene lasts 90 seconds in the movie and last five years in reality.
With no promise of it ever ending.
No guarantee of glory.
What's interesting about, and again, I don't like using the word psychology, but I'll say
what's interesting about humans is that our ability to endure is very robust if we know
that we'll make it out.
And so they've done my studies where they drop the mouse in,
and then they let it drown and it drowns really fast.
And then they drop a mouse in,
and then before it gets to the point where it drowns,
they pick it up and then they put it back in.
And the second time they put it in,
it can last like 20 times longer.
I think for the stats of something around,
will drown in less than an hour.
If it's taken out, dried off and allowed to relax,
it'll swim for a day.
An absurd amount different.
And so if I were to say,
hey, I need you to hold your breath,
but I don't tell you how long,
20 seconds in, you might be thinking, this is stupid.
Is he gonna stop?
Is he gonna wait for me to pass out?
And all these stupid thoughts go into your mind.
But if I say, I need you to hold your breath for three minutes, your lungs might burn,
but you can see that there's this end that's coming.
The difficulty with personal development and entrepreneurship is that you don't know
when the end is coming, but you still need to fight like the second mouse who gets out, gets dried off, and gets put back in.
And the only certainty that I can give you
is that it's the same thing that every other mouse,
every other person who got through that period went through.
And you won't die.
And if you do die, you won't care.
Because you'll be dead.
BLAIR LAUGHS
And so, best case, you win. win, worst case it won't matter.
It's the same mentality.
It's the same reason why Uber works.
The reason that Uber works is partly because you can get a car from anywhere,
but the real reason is that you know when the car's going to arrive, you
know, remember back in the day, you'd ring a taxi and then just wait.
And you go away.
I mean, he's some far away.
I don't know how far away.
And then it ends up coming along.
We've mentioned it a couple of times today, a frame that I've used an
awful lot over the last year or so is this is the price of doing
business.
So reframing things from bugs to features, you know, you need to get into one of my nightclubs
10 years ago, there's an entry fee at the door and this is the cost of doing business.
I remember Facebook got this, the biggest fine in tech history, maybe 10 years ago or
something like that.
And they find some scene numbers, absolutely huge number. And somebody worked it out that
it was like half of one quarter of one territory's profit. And you think, well, I'm aware that
in sort of absolute terms, this is a massive number, but in relative terms, they can just
go, okay, well, we'll just factor this into the P and L and go through this. So thinking about the byproducts of things that other people see as a.
Luxury that you have a reduction of privacy that, that comes along perhaps
with increasing the size of your platform.
And you go, okay, well, I can shout and scream and rail against this.
People saying must be nice. You know, that's a good one. Fucking hell. That's a difficult one. Okay, well, I can shout and scream and rail against this.
People saying, must be nice. You know, that's a good one.
Fucking hell, that's a difficult one.
I'm going to get people saying, must be nice
because I just got a promotion at work.
And that's unfair because I worked hard for that.
And I want them to say to me, well done.
I know that you probably went through tons of hardship
that I didn't see.
Or, wow, you've really changed the texture of your mind due to all of
that meditation that you did.
Um, I'm sure that 500 mornings in a row sat on a cushion in your
bedroom in butt fuck nowhere, listening to Sam Harris speak in your
ears was really, really tough.
They're not going to say that.
They're going to say, well, I mean, it's all right for you, man.
You just don't seem to get angry that easily.
You go, dude, you know fucking nothing about me.
You have no idea how hard it was for me to get from where I was to where I am now.
But instead of seeing that as you cannot change what other people are going to
say, because that is the natural human response to minimize progress that other people have made in order to shorten the gap between you and them.
Because if it's due to hard work, that's something that they could have done.
If it's due to natural innate talent or genetic predisposition, that's something that they have no control over.
So it shortens the gap of work and worth between you and them.
So it shortens the gap of work and worth between you and them.
So instead of seeing it as, oh my God, this is malignant and a personal curse and so fucking unfair, you just go, this is the price of doing business.
If I want to be a mindful person, people are going to say to me, dude, you
just seem so calm all the time.
I wish I was like you.
I wish I was built like you, but you know, I just had too hard of a childhood.
Or dude, you you're doing so well at work.
I wish that I didn't have the kids or I didn't have those restrictions or that was built like you, but you know, I just had too hard of a childhood or dude, you, you, you're doing so well at work.
I wish that I didn't have the kids or I didn't have those restrictions or that
my parents had taught me more about business.
It's just the price of doing business.
You know, a fun frame with that is when someone says must be nice, you can just say, yeah, it is, Or someone says, man, you must have exceptional genetics
to have the body you have,
and it just happens so easily for you.
And you're like, yeah, it's sweet.
And the thing is, is that if we think,
if we were to just say, like, if we lean into it, right,
to some degree, by leaning into it,
you also eliminate a competitor,
if you want to hear my ugly side,
because if I just affirm the fact that they think it happened
overnight or that it was genetic or whatever.
It makes it more out of reach.
Right. Yeah.
I've thought, I did, I've thought about this.
So this is such a good point, such a good point that
somebody telling you going David Goggins mode
and somebody saying, this is how hard I had to work to achieve this thing.
Look at how hard I had to go through
and look at all of the setbacks I had
and look at just how in the red I was
before I got to the black, before I got to the green.
Just look at all of these things.
People see that as a threat.
People see that as a humble brag,
but what it is is a treasure map.
This is where I was and this is where I went.
And me with all of my inefficiencies and deficiencies and setbacks got from there
to here, you aren't even as far into the red as I was.
So all of the talk, I understand why hustle pawn kind of gets a cringe pushback
from the world, but what it actually should be is an unbelievably empowering message that anybody can get from
wherever they are to wherever you are.
The much more disempowering one was yeah, man, it, you know, it
just comes to me easily.
So yeah, if you really want to fuck somebody up, tell them that
it's ineffable, tell them that it's ethereal and astral and you can't get here.
One of my favorite ways to help someone overcome an excuse
or a limiting belief is to tell them, I believe them.
And so if I'm like, hey, why don't you double your prices?
And then they give four reasons why they can't double their prices.
And then I'll say, then you'll fail forever.
And then they're like, well, no, because X, Y, and Z.
And it's like, great.
Glad we got there.
That's like your thing about only one person can be in the angry boat.
One person can only be in the negative boat.
Yeah.
It's unbelievable how powerful that is.
Yeah, it's unbelievable how powerful that is.
What's interesting about a lot of the discontent that we have around how people judge our success or achievement
is that we have this unspoken demand that they have a visceral understanding of everything that we went through without having been there.
And the problem with that is that if they understood
everything, then they would have a complete understanding
of how to do it themselves.
And so it's making an impossible demand of strangers
to somehow be successful already
so that they can appreciate our success.
And also removing your competitive advantage.
And so it's interesting, this is just for everyone who's listening, is that,
Chris, you can probably attest to this, is that of the people that I've met in my life who've
been extremely successful at any endeavor, there's this kind of, and I want to make a video about
this, but it's what people say in the back room.
And there are these common things that we say to one another that other people wouldn't
believe.
So we're like, they just don't get how much actual work it is to do a podcast like this.
You don't actually get that what 100 hours of preparation for one one-hour event looks like.
You can understand it conceptually, but when you actually set a timer and you only use that
timer and you pause it when you stop working and you do 100 hours of work, all of a sudden,
by the end of that hundred hours, you have a very different understanding to the very granular level of what it takes to be great
at anything. And that's a hundred hours, not 10,000 hours, but a hundred hours with feedback.
And so everyone's like in the back room. They want this magic pill. They want to know the secret,
but there is no secret. It's just hard work. But I think the thing that everyone who's listening
lacks is the context on how hard hard work is,
not in that it's complex, but just in that
it's a continuous and unending focus on one thing
and noticing the details that separate mediocrity
from greatness.
And if you're like, I don't know what the difference
between those two things is,
that is the opportunity that hard work reveals,
is that it takes watching 10 hours of you presenting
and then taking notes at every time that you say um,
or that a transition between slides is unclean,
or that the audience kind of gets lost there,
because I can see that there's no reactions to that,
I should probably add a visual there.
And then when you go slide by slide, realizing that,
okay, I can put a thousand slides together
for 90 minutes of presenting
if I really put one thought with one visual per slide.
And every one of them, and I love this description,
it's like a coat of paint.
It's like you just put another coat of paint
on the skillset or the achievement
that you're working towards.
And most people expect that the pencil wireframe
that they do on their first shot is hard work
because that's the hardest they've worked,
not the amount of hard work that is required
in order to get the level of outcome
that they say they want or that they expect.
And so there's a divorce in reality because they don't have the context from which to
make a judgment because they've never been great at anything.
And until you get great, because as soon as you get great at one thing, you realize just
the tremendous amount of hours and work that it takes to be great at one thing.
And then there's this oh shit moment
that I can express personally,
which is you realize that there's so few things
that you can be great at.
And then the discipline comes down to saying,
what are the two or three things
that I can be really good at in my life?
Because it will take me five to seven years
to be exceptional at this one thing.
And so like, even like making content,
a lot of people see my stuff now,
but I just had a friend send me a video
that he interviewed me before I made any other videos.
And I showed, I sent it to my team.
And he was like, dude, I watched it.
And he was like, and it was you.
But then I like, I covered the face and he was like,
I mean, it's your voice,
but he's like, your clarity of thinking wasn't there
in the way that you articulated. And the thing is, is it's, it's a,
if to the untrained eye to a beginner,
they look at that video and they look at my current videos and say,
I don't get why he blew up because it's the same dude,
but the master or the expert level can say,
I can give you a hundred different things that could have been better about his old videos
compared to his now videos.
And it's the granularity of that feedback
that allows you to see the discrepancy
between your current and your desired.
And I think that once you actually give yourself
the reality glasses, not the woe is me glasses,
but think, no, really, if I had to do this, what are,
what are all of the things that I would have to improve?
Then you see how incredibly long that list is.
And then you take this deep breath and that list is the hard work.
It's starting at the top and then wanting to cross the first one off after your
first day, but then realizing you still haven't done it well enough to cross it off. And you're like, wait, I have to do another day
and I still haven't quote made a dent in this list. And then you do it another day and a third day
and a fifth day and a fifth week. And then all of a sudden you're like, okay, I think I've got the
first one done. And then you still look at this list, but along the way of doing that first one,
you realize 20 other things that you could add to that list for every one that you cross off, you create 10 more
because you start to win in the weeds.
You start to look at a higher resolution.
And that's the never ending cycle of excellence.
It makes great things seem closer than you thought and further than you thought at the same time.
At the same time, 100%.
There's no perfect way to live your twenties.
You either live them up and become an underskilled 30 year old,
or you work them up and become an underlived 30 year old.
You just have to figure out which you'd rather be,
accept the trade-offs and know that there are no do-overs.
And door three, if you consider work, life, then you get to do both.
That one ruffled a lot of feathers.
Well, it's because people look back on the twenties and realize that they are one or the other.
All right, I'm going to lean into this. I am okay. I had a conversation with my team about this and I said,
I am okay being a beacon of relentless hard work. I'm okay being the guy who says,
fuck your mental health. I'm okay with it because I've given it a lot of thought.
I think that there is the other side is wildly overrepresented and
I'm willing to sit on the logical extreme because I think it will help more people and
There are more people that I have met in my life who are dissatisfied by their live it up 20s
than dissatisfied by their work it up 20s.
Because most of the time in your 20s,
you have no idea what you want,
but knowing what you need to do to work
and move ahead is fairly straightforward.
And so you can take the known
and make progress on the one that you have high confidence
that you can make progress on.
And then along the way, gain perspective
on what are the things that are actually important
to you in your life.
And you may find out often that there are far fewer
of those things than you really originally thought.
Because what you thought live them up in your 20s was,
was actually your mom and your two homies
who are both mediocre and you don't care about their opinion
now when you're 30 anyways.
But what a waste of a life it would have been to quote, live up your mom's dream
or your friend's dreams to then only get to your thirties and realize you didn't live it up.
And you also didn't work it up.
And now you have neither.
I think a lot about, you know, the first day that I sat down at university, my first ever seminar I sat next to my what would be future business partner for 15 years.
So I'm skint.
I say to him, I'd spent all of my money partying during freshers week.
The first week I'd spent my entire maintenance loan, which was supposed to be food and everything else for the rest of the term
until fucking Christmas.
And it's September the 29th.
It's a big week.
It was a good week, um, which I could not survive now.
And I think, uh, I think back to sort of the, the time that I spent and the endless hours, I'm not
kidding.
And I don't talk, I don't reflect that much on the club promo stuff, maybe to
my detriment, I should do it more.
Uh, I've spent between five and 10,000 hours stood on the front door of night
clubs.
I've spent at least 3000 hours stood on the front door of the same nightclub
only on Saturdays. Right. I didn't miss 202 Saturdays in a row. I took four day holidays
from Sunday to Thursday so that I could come back to come and do this thing. And I look back at my
twenties and I think, you know, was that how much was living, how much was accumulating skills. And the grass is always greener with this because in hindsight, you think, well, you
know, you imagine that you could have gone back and still accumulated all of the insights
and the skills that you really value in yourself.
That would have still happened, but that you would have got to maybe have more variety
or you would have maybe the fun or the whatever the thing.
And when I look for me with my constitution
at what I value most in myself,
almost all of those things have been accumulated
by having a 20s and now a 30s
that has been dedicated to work it up,
not to live it up, to four-day holidays
in between those things.
Now, remembering that now is not forever,
I think is really important.
Again, you're on the outlier right-hand end
of the distribution for work.
Most people are gonna pull themselves back across
in terms of balance between work and play,
but you can periodize what you're doing right now.
You can accumulate all of that work, all of that experience, all of that
explore time to work out actually, I don't like doing admin stuff.
It turns out I'm really great at creative or I really don't like traveling.
It turns out I'm really great at routine.
All of those things.
There's like a buy-in you remember CrossFit you do the, you do a buy-in thing.
You go, it's a one mile run and then it's this workout. You have to do that buy-in. Let's say everyone has to do that buy-in, you remember CrossFit, you do the, you do a buy-in thing. You go to one mile run and then it's this workout.
You have to do that buy-in.
Let's say everyone has to do that buy-in.
Doing that buy-in when you're 25 is way easier than doing that buy-in when you're 40.
Right.
I finally work out who I am in the world because you start to accumulate
all of these better directional assistances.
You're moving in a more directionally accurate way earlier,
which means that you make more progress over the long term.
So in retrospect, I'm glad that I did work it up 20s
and I'm glad that I did work it up 30s as well.
So I'll say two things that might be helpful.
One is you obviously know my stance
if you're listening to this on work-life balance,
but maybe as a concession
for you, your work-life balance obsession may just be too narrowly focused on the present and not
extended into seasons. And so you can have work-life balance where I work for three years and then I have
a more chill year. And I think that most people think about work-life balance where I work for three years, and then I have a more chill year.
And I think that most people think about work-life in terms of their split of the day rather
than their split of the year or the decade.
So I think that you can have a much better outcome on both sides if you were to split
it up on a longer time horizon.
So good.
I mean, everybody knows what it's like to go through every January, intense
period of diet five, I fucked it at Christmas again, too much chocolate, too
much, too much dinner and you go, okay, well, what are you going to do?
I'm going to work hard.
I'm going to focus on my diet and my training for a while.
And then I'm going to hold those gains for a period or I'm going to build a
business.
Okay.
My health is probably going to take a hit for a little while.
Or I just got out of a relationship.
I need to go dating.
All right.
Well, I'm probably not going to be able to spend so much time at work, or maybe
I'm going to be sleeping later.
So my, my fitness is going to knock off a little bit.
All of these things happen for periods of time.
And yeah, remembering that now isn't forever is.
And that's such a great frame, like a hyperbolic discounting and inability
to be able to imagine that this is not the way that it's always going to be.
And that's good for good things and for bad things.
This isn't the way it's always going to be.
So I better enjoy this win.
This isn't the way it's always going to be.
So I better not get too disheartened by this loss.
You will come, but that's the, the beautiful thing about this sort of hedonic renormalizing.
You go, good things aren't as good as you think they are.
Bad things aren't as bad as you think they are.
So if you use that extended frame
as a way to approach different types of goals,
I'll break a very standard one,
which is that people measure the amount of calories
that they need to eat per day.
The very few people measure the amount of calories
they need to eat per week. And so people will measure the amount of calories they need to eat per week.
And so, people will blow the day and say, well, screw it, I messed up today.
I might as well have a pizza on top of it because I had chocolate and I went off my diet or whatever.
But if you have a weekly outlook even, then all of a sudden you're like, oh, well,
I can have a pizza tonight. I'll just like skip most of my food tomorrow besides protein.
Or I'll have a wedding weekend
and know that this whole week I'm gonna be light.
And so I have, you know, 13,000 calories
for the next seven days that I can work my way through,
which gives me a tremendous amount of flexibility.
And the thing is, is that the further you extend
the time rise and the more flexible you can be
with your achievement of it,
as long as you only get the few things that matter most.
And so it allows you to focus and prioritize on those few things that move the needle,
rather than be overly obsessive on such a small narrow window of time that is irrelevant
anyways.
So there's a coordination problem that happens when you try to balance too quickly.
When you try to have a little bit of fun and a little bit of play and a little bit of fun and a little bit of play, whether it's task switching, whether
it's just sort of the cognitive effort of your personality, like your identity.
Is I'm gym guy for three months.
Hooray.
I'm work guy for three months.
Hooray.
But when it's I'm gym guy this morning, I'm work guy this afternoon, it's tough.
It's tough to do that.
So yeah, kind of the same as you get diseconomies of scale as a business grows
because there's more interconnectedness and communication between each person.
The more use there are going on inside.
So this is an argument for sort of aggressive periodizing.
I'm a hyper proponent of one single narrow focus.
I'll define two more terms since the audience didn't ask for it.
Sadness is a perceived lack of options.
It's why it feels like hopelessness because you don't know what to do.
You don't know what options are available.
You see none, which is why it feels like there's no way out.
Anxiety is many options, but no priorities, which is why you feel
scattered, but you can't decide.
They feel very different, but fundamentally,
those are the difference in the conditions
that make people feel like they're anxious
or they feel like they're sad.
And so when we're working through
what you were just talking about with,
okay, I wanna be gym guy and I also wanna be work guy,
we have many options, but a lack of priorities.
And so we have anxiety over the fact that we're
not making progress on any of them because we
have not been able to say this comes first.
And so we think about what priority means.
It means prior.
It comes before everything else.
And what I think a lot of people have a hard
time doing is being okay with saying no and
saying, okay, I will allow myself
to just not get fatter rather than get fitter
during this period.
And what's interesting about most skills
is that the amount of effort that it takes
to maintain a skill versus the amount of effort
it takes to grow a skill is like one 10th
the amount of effort.
And so this is where the effort arbitrage
is so important in terms of allocation.
And so if you do a four out of 10 on 10 things,
you will make progress on none.
You will make the same amount of progress
that you could have made if you just did one out of 10,
which is none, you just don't regress.
But the extra three points that you save on the nine,
you could put on one other item and have a 10 out of 10 or
a 13 out of 10 in effort. And then after every periodized chunk of time, have a big W or win
that you can look back on and say, I did that and therefore I am. And so I think that that's how you
step up the mountain of progress when you're trying to work on many different skills,
quote, at the same time. It's just that the, at the same time is over a year, not over a day.
George told me, told me this while we were on mushrooms in Nashville,
fucking brilliant. So I'm there watching.
That's the hook.
Got to get people in the door. And the 4th of July, George turned to me and he said,
general ambition gives you anxiety. Specific ambition gives you direction.
There is nothing more anxiety inducing than I want to be better and I don't know
what at, and I don't know how.
Like just think about that for a second, sort of embodied that I, it's sort of a
chasing, it's a lean in and it's, it's
tight and sort of your shoulders are up and there's a ringing in your ears and
you have no idea.
It's like a threat.
You've heard a noise in the forest and you have no idea where it's come from.
Specific ambition gives you direction.
And I think the concept of specific versus general ambition ladders up to
bundled terms.
I want this big thing, but I haven't broken that thing down into what I can actually do. Once you get specific into the actions, you don't have a lot of
anxiety because you can see what is required in order to get it. And so to circle the loop
back on sadness, which is because some people who are listening to this may be sad, so this
is for you. To get out of sadness, and I've been sad many times in my life, the thing that's helped me get out of it
is realizing that a perceived lack of options is what causes sadness, not a lack of options,
a perceived lack of options, which means that all I have to do is figure out what I need to do.
And figuring it out becomes the option. And so then I have clarity on the one thing that I need to do to pull myself
out of this moment of sadness, which is, oh, I just have to figure out what to do. And that is how I
get, at least for me, have gotten out of my sadder periods. Controversial take. You really can solve
a lot of male problems by getting in shape and making money. You still have problems. They're
just smaller and you have more resources to handle them.
The world is there for the taking,
for anyone who can learn from their mistakes,
do what they say they were going to do,
and stick with it, even if it's not sexy.
What used to make a man acceptable
now makes you extraordinary.
The bar for winning has never been so low.
Show me two groups of men that need to learn a new skill or achieve anything
where the men that are in shape and have learned to make money do worse than an
identical group of those men who are out of shape and have not learned to make
money. And it's a skewed purposefully test because the skill of getting in shape requires many other skills.
The skill of making money has many other sub skills.
And so the real question is, give me a group of more skilled men and less skilled men, and I promise you the more skilled men will do better.
And so for anyone who gets offended by that, you're a moron. And so the idea is all men and women
benefit from learning more skills.
There's no world where being more skilled hurts you.
What about the bar for winning has never been so low?
If you think back to college, when you were a freshman, you think, wow, this is so hard or whatever.
And then by the time you're a senior, like, man, these kids are so soft.
And so we remember things as harder than they were.
But I also think that there is a thread of reality, which is that the younger generation
is softer.
And I think we are softer
than the generation above us. When I think about the guys who were storming Normandy,
and I think about the people who'd be attempting to do that now as a class,
I think that we are softer. And so the thing is, is that if you can barely decide to take any
action at all, and peel your eyes away from your phone for just a moment,
it's so much easier to beat everyone else because most people are overweight, they're distracted,
they're poor, they have so few skills because it has never been easier to start a business,
to make money, to get in shape.
It's just also never been easier to do nothing.
And so in a world where it's never been easier to do nothing,
doing something becomes extraordinary.
Yeah.
The bar genuinely never has been so low, which is, it really does blow my mind. Sort of the self-defeating cynicism mindset.
And I think also that's why the idea of the lonely chapter resonates so much with people
because it literally is like taking the red pill.
If you see this version of the world where you go, I can impact my outcomes.
I can learn a thing, apply a thing, and then I change as a byproduct of doing that. As soon
as you take those steps, you realize almost all of the people around you who have parts of their
life that they're not happy about, are kind of making a choice for it to be that way.
Now, it may be an uninformed or an ignorant choice
because they haven't taken said pill.
And then you go, oh, fuck,
that means that all of the things I don't like about me
and I don't like about my life are my responsibility
because I can change it.
But given that you've got generalized cynicism everywhere,
as opposed to thinking, I'm despondent, this sucks,
I wish that the world was more hopeful.
You can still think that and also go,
that means that my competition has never been weaker,
more vulnerable, more fragile.
The ability to set myself out from the pack has never been easier.
I think people struggle a lot with the concept that something can be both painful and empowering.
It's this hurts, therefore it's bad.
When taking full accountability of your life with all of the deficiencies that you have may be the
most painful thing that you do when you look at yourself in the mirror and say,
this is my fault.
But in saying, this is my fault, those are also the first two steps of progress because
it's my fault, not anyone else's, which means it's my responsibility and my action that
can change that.
And I think that marrying short-term pain with long-term progress is one of the
first connections that most people who are on that path have to make.
This is the lead indicator of what will be the lag indicator that I want.
People get frustrated not achieving what they want because they assume that
they're going to jump across a cavern in one leap.
But if you picture your goals, like you're trying to build a bridge across that
crevice, and every brick that you put on that bridge is progress, and each one of those bricks
represents a skill that you need to learn along the way, it just takes all the way until you get to
the other side that you can actually walk across. And so the walking across is the outcome. It's the external perceived achievement.
But if you can reframe your progress as what are the hundred things on this checklist? What are the
hundred skills that I need? The micro skills that I need? Then you can have much faster feedback
cycles of wins that you're achieving along the way. And I think if you can define it that way,
then you can feel like you are winning, A, more often, but B, with higher intensity,
because as you win, skills stack on top of each other.
And so I give this example a lot, but I like it, is that...
If you are, you learned how to do math, that's a skill.
Great.
If you then learn how to do accounting,
that's a leveled up version of that skill,
but you require it. You have to know how to do math before you can do accounting.
Once you learn how to do accounting, you can learn how to do transactions and structure deals.
And then all of a sudden you can become a CFO. And if you learn how taxes work and insurance work,
then all of a sudden you become and you learn how to work, then all of a sudden you become,
and you learn how to raise money.
All of a sudden you can be a rainmaker.
But the thing is, is that the gap between rainmaker
and I know how to do math feels very big.
But if you look at all of the micro things along the way,
you might not get your first major deal done,
which is what everyone in the, man,
he did that deal and made $20 million on one signature.
Must be nice, right?
And it is.
But if you break those things down into the requisite skills
then you can make significantly more progress along the way.
And I think that is more positively reinforcing.
And I'm just, I'm sharing this because this has been
a perspective that has served me so well in my life
because the goals that I have now take many years to come to
fruition. Like I'm working on a goal that in the next probably 18 months, I will have been working
on for 13 years and it will probably come due. And the crazy thing is, is that the bigger your goal,
the bigger your timeline has to be. But the even crazier thing is that the bigger your timeline, the easier it is.
If I said, you just have to learn French and you don't speak French,
and you have to do it by tomorrow, it's impossible.
You're not going to do it.
There's no way that you're going to be able to do it.
But if I said you have to learn in a decade, you're like, oh, I could easily do it.
You could probably learn 10 languages in a decade.
And so all of a sudden, the goals that you have can be significantly more
achievable and you can feel like you're consistently making progress
by moving out your timeline.
But because people are so short-term minded, because they can't just stop
scrolling over and over again, they actually make it harder for them to achieve
their goals because the only goals that they deem acceptable are ones that are
on an unrealistic timeline and so they doom themselves from the beginning.
How to avoid tons of problems in life.
Go to bed on time.
So I love these.
I wanna find single behaviors
that have many positive outcomes.
So if you think about leverage as
what you get for the effort you put in,
if you have lots of leverage,
then it means you can do one thing and get many big outcomes, right? Or one very big outcome. That's high leverage.
If you put a lot of work in and get a very little bit out of it, you have low leverage.
And so the highest form of leverage I think of are what's one behavior or one skill that I can learn that then has many, many downstream impacts. And so for, and this is specifically, I'll say for the 20-ish year old,
so 20 to 30, 20 to 35,
if you can simply go to bed on time,
you avoid drinking and getting into DUI,
you avoid early pregnancies,
you avoid messing up your work
because you don't sleep well,
because you show up hung over the next day
and then you don't get the career advancement that you want
or you get the judgements from your coworkers
from the fact that you're responsible because you drink,
even though it might've been responsible drinking,
but you still smell like booze because it's in your system.
If you go to bed on time,
it's less likely that you'll get mugged.
It's less likely you'll be in a car accident.
There's all of these downstream impacts
from one single behavior.
And you also have better quality sleep in general
if you go to sleep at the same time every day
over and over again.
So that means that you have life extension,
things that happen, you look younger.
And so now five years, 10 years later,
people are like, wow, you look so good for your eight.
There's all of these things from one central behavior,
which is just
fucking go to bed on time.
And so if you want the action for this, you set your alarm for when you go to
bed, not for when you wake up.
If you set your alarm for when you go to bed, you will always be able to wake
up naturally at whatever time to wake up.
And it's very difficult to oversleep when you go to bed at nine, because you
can get eight hours of sleep and still be up by five.
What are some of the other behaviors that fit in that category?
Do you think?
Oh, the, the, the mega bang behaviors.
Give me one that a friend gave me one of the things, uh, buying a dog was his.
So, um, externalizing your sense of self, having something which gives you unconditional love,
your step count has just quadrupled at least.
There is a sort of degree of responsibility.
It's sort of early onset, furry child rearing that makes you a better parent in future,
just downstream from this one decision and essentially infinite number of good things happen.
Are you grinning at me for my team smiling?
Cause they know that there's probably like one thing that I
tell everyone not to do.
Get a dog.
Yeah.
Wow.
Why don't you want them to get a dog?
So I think that getting a dog for the reasons that you outlined makes sense
for living life satisfaction.
Like if you don't walk, walking a dog is a good thing.
If I already walk, I don't get that benefit.
If I have interpersonal relationships
and an outside version of awareness of self,
then I don't necessarily get the benefit.
But there are significant costs to having a dog,
which for me, from a making money perspective,
because that is the game that I like to play,
it costs a lot.
Dogs cost a tremendous amount.
And so they cost you not being able to go to events.
They cost you having to break up in the middle of the day
to go home to let the dog out.
They cost actual money.
The amount of total time that you spend walking the dog, if you already
work out is most of the time just wasted. Now you could say, Hey, I'm listening to
a podcast. Fine. But if it, but it will interrupt deep work for the most part.
And so I, so to give you context on how extreme I am about this, uh, Layla, uh,
bought a dog and then I, uh, got her to give it away. What sort of dog was it?
King Charles Spaniel the little.
Nice, strong British dog.
Yeah, super nice dog, nothing wrong with the dog.
Good dude.
Racist decision.
Yes, and so we just gave it to somebody else in a good home
and it's very happy and you know what?
It probably forgot about me instantly.
What else? What are some of these other big bang?
I mean, there's obviously the exercise, because like, if you
think about the, what are the, what are the big things that,
cause the dog one was downstream from, I mean, for me, a big one
there is exercise.
Like if you walk.
It's fitness.
It's like physical and psychological health.
Basically.
Yeah.
So it has multiple there.
Um, I would say eating your body weight and grabs a protein per day. So if we think about
lean body mass is one of the big predictors for long-term health and things like that. There are
only three things that are anabolic, hormones, resistance training, and protein. Like if someone doesn't eat protein,
then they start eating protein, they have more muscle.
Like you don't have to exercise.
If you just eat more protein, you gain muscle.
Cause you lose less muscle because more of it comes
from your diet than eating away the muscle you have.
Like that's it.
Like those are the three things.
And so like you can do one of them.
And the nice thing is for most people who want to operationalize this, there's this big idea.
And I'm not going to get into food and fitness
stuff because dear God, but people think I have to
eat healthy and it's this big amorphous thing.
But if we chunk it down, it means that you need to
pick two things that you like to eat in the morning
that have the macros that you need to hit.
And you can try as many times as you want
because you only need one or two that you actually like
and then you can stick with it.
This is one of the best insights that you had about diet
which is people overcomplicate trying to deconstruct
what a diet consists of.
But if you actually look at what you eat across a year,
it's probably five meals on rotation, maybe less.
I think I've probably got three good meals in my locker.
You know, my Gordon Ramsay would be fucking ashamed of us coming from the same country.
So, okay, we'll just optimize those three meals or those five meals.
And that's it.
And the thing is, is that a lot of personal development things, business
things are a lot like that, where they feel like an elephant
when you are trying to break down this mat.
Like, I have to learn nutrition.
There's five meals, 10 meals max
that you eat 90% of the time.
You just need to shift the dynamic of those meals.
Even the restaurants that you go to,
even the way that you order your food in the restaurants.
That's it.
And so that would be one that I would say is a super high leverage.
One thing you can do is just change the three to five meals that you eat most
commonly to be the ones that are more aligned with what you want.
And go to bed on time.
And go to bed on time.
I mean, shoot, if you go to bed on time and you do that.
King of the world.
King of the world.
This is one from me. Having a clue is overrated.
There's this funny myth that people actually know what they're doing.
I've spent time around some of the richest, smartest, highest status people on the planet.
And let me tell you, it's idiots all the way up.
Normalize saying, I don't have a clue.
I'm going to work out how to do it anyway.
Having a clue is overrated.
One of my green flags for intellect is someone being able to say that they don't know.
Like it's almost inverted at this point, because I
think at some point during school, if a teacher
calls on you and you say, you don't know, you're
punished for that.
And so we have such a repetitive cycle
of both having it happen to us and watching people like us
have a punishing experience that it's very,
very hardcore taught to us to never say that we don't know.
But that most basic lie
trains us over and over again
to never say what we actually think.
And if we don't know, then that may be one of the easiest ways to start telling the truth.
It's kind of the same as the, if I can't trust you on no, I can't trust you on yes.
I love it. Yeah.
It's the exact same energy.
Not knowing is really powerful because then learning becomes the only clear directive.
And so if we know what learning is,
which is same condition, new behavior,
then it's like, what do I need to change about what I do
in order to learn this thing?
It also allows us to say, many things are not worth learning because they
probably won't affect my life in any way.
Well, think how much you pity the person who like, it is literally the worst.
If you imagine a quadrant of knowing and not knowing and thinking, you know, and
thinking, you don't know the worst quadrant to be in is thinking, you know,
whilst not knowing.
Right.
And that is every single person who isn't prepared
to say, I don't know and internally doesn't believe it.
I've already got the answer for that.
You know, they are unable to transition across
into white belt or beginner mentality.
They're always in the, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, I know about that.
I know about that.
I think Mark Twain said,
it's not the things we know that kill us,
but the things that we think we know, but just ain't so.'"
A lot of self-work can be summarized into
thoughts aren't true, feelings don't require actions,
things aren't good or bad, they just are.
Our greatest enemy is ignorance. To change your life, change your surroundings.
Our actions, not our pasts, define who we are.
I think that's pretty much probably 95% of self-work.
I stand by my statement.
Thoughts aren't true.
Feelings don't require action.
Things aren't good or bad, they just are.
Our greatest enemy is ignorance. To change your life, change your surroundings. Our. Things aren't good or bad. They just are.
Our greatest enemy is ignorance to change your life, change your surroundings.
Our actions, not our pasts define who we are.
And I could unpack all of those.
So let's start with ignorance.
So I am not a moralist, but if I were a moralist, then I would say that ignorance is the only evil and therefore knowledge is the only good. And so, most atrocities, if we define them that way,
that humans inflict on one another comes from ignorance. We don't know something about the other person or the other party. And if we had absolute context on why someone does what they do, if we lived their life,
then we would have absolute knowledge on it and then we would be them. And so then we probably
wouldn't try to hurt them because we would be them. And so I see the pursuit of knowledge and
it's corollary how I like it, the pursuit of learning, changing
our behavior to be my ultimate purpose in life.
Because if I think about myself as going through life, then I want to learn as much as I can,
which is changing my behavior, ideally suited to the direction that I want to go in.
As for the, if you want to change your life, change your surroundings.
If we want to behave a certain way, then we want to increase the likelihood that a behavior occurs.
And so BF Skinner said this, and I just love this. It's like my most savage quote of his.
He says, people say, you can lead a horse to water, but you can't make it drink. False. He said,
if I dehydrate the horse, I salt its mouth, I put it in the heat and I put its face one inch away
from water, I can veritably guarantee that it will drink. And I think about that visual all the time when I think about myself as the horse.
And I think to myself, what is the behavior that I want drinking water? And what is the salt in my
mouth? And what is the dehydration, the motivation for this behavior that I can create? And so I am
not a believer in free will. I believe that we respond to the conditions that we've had and
then we learn behaviors as a result of those things. And so, for example, I could get everyone
in here, the entire crew to get naked. Guarantee you, I could do it. All I would do is I'd just
crank up the temperature and I'd wait. And eventually everyone would get naked. It would
happen. And so everyone has this idea that they have this free will, but that's what would happen eventually. And so if that's true, then we have significantly
less control and at the same time, more control over our behavior if we can stack the deck in
our favor. And so part of the reason going to bed at 9 PM is so powerful is because we're changing
the conditions so that we can change our behavior. If all of your friends are poor, Harvard did
that long study and said that the the number one correlate was your reference
group, which is who you compare yourself to. Also note, not who you spend the most
time with, it's who you compare yourself to. And so if you want to change your
life, change who you compare yourself to, number one. But part of who you compare
yourself to is who you spend your time with, or who at least you consume the
most of. So if you're doing this then maybe you spend your time with, or who at least you consume the most stuff.
So if you're doing this, then maybe that's a good thing, or maybe it's a terrible thing
because you're comparing the wrong people.
But either way, if you want to get fit, if you get around fitter people, you will be
deprived of fitness because you'll be the least in shape person.
And then all of a sudden you'll be more motivated.
If you are poor, but you're the richest of your friends or
the same level of wealth as your friends, then get around people who make more money.
And then of course people say, but I can't get around people who make more money. Okay.
No one else has ever done it. No one who has had it worse than you has ever figured out
how to do it. You're right. Right. Of course you're not right. So shut the fuck up. Thoughts aren't true.
Oh, I mean, how many things do we think every day that are just false? One,
they can be factually false, but also from the reactionary perspective, I'll give you an example. So someone miscommunicates and wrongs me in some way.
I get angry and think I should wrong them back.
Now, that's my first thought.
If I then say, what does that behavior increase the likelihood of occurring as a result?
What do I want to have happen as a result of my behavior? Well, I want them to
apologize or I want them to just not do that again. Well, then me reacting back to them increases
the likelihood that they will retaliate. And so in doing what my first thought was, I increased
the likelihood of the negative occurrence that I'm trying to avoid. And so thinking through what happens after that thing
in interpersonal dynamics
and also from a business decisions perspective
has helped me so much.
Like I've had, I'll give you an example
of one that happened not that long ago.
Somebody reached out to me, relatively big account
and says, hey, can you read my book?
It would mean the world to me if you left me an endorsement. And I said, out of respect for you, I won't
just ghost this message or give you a halfhearted answer and then just hope that you forget
that I said yes. I'm not going to endorse your book, but you're welcome to send it to
me. I will probably just flip through it
because I have a lot of other books that I need to read
that are more closely related to my goal.
But I appreciate the flattery that's implied
in you asking me to do that.
Before I wrote that message, I was like, okay,
what do I want to have happen after I send this message?
Now, if I say, if I just ghost him,
then I will probably have a null outcome
and he'll probably have a slight negative
because he'll remember, but he'll be like,
okay, fine, that was his way of saying no.
But if I compliment him,
thank him for the compliment with me
and also tell the truth,
I'll probably get somebody who in the future
will know that my yes means something
when I choose to do it.
And so it's thinking like two steps ahead of what happens after I say this thing back
and how do I increase the likelihood of that second move, not the first move.
And it sounds silly to say, because people are like, oh, of course, but like, I don't
think most people do that.
And it has helped me so much.
And even like with interpersonal damage,
with my marriage, with Leila.
If I want Leila to...
to talk to me a certain way,
then if I punish her when she doesn't talk to me that way,
what she'll really do is she'll avoid talking to me in general.
And so it's like I have to find a time when she does that thing so that I can immediately reward
her so that I can increase the likelihood that it occurs. And so I think about this all the time
with most of the dynamics that we have. And so, um, anyways, I'll just stop on that tangent, but.
I think, uh, this is something, especially over the last year that I've,
as a rehabilitating people
pleaser, big people pleaser, uh, being able to make your needs known, being
able to make demands, uh, is a real skill.
And it's a, it's so strange given that pursuing your needs is maybe one of the
most fundamental human things that there is, But I kind of realized that especially people that you respect in a sort of
social dynamics way, people don't want to hear what they want to hear.
They want to hear what you actually think about a thing.
So, so many times someone will ask your opinion.
What do you think of the Oppenheimer movie?
What you think they want to hear is whatever they think, which is, oh,
wasn't it great?
Did you watch it?
And I'm actually, yeah, I did.
Did you get Sour Patch Kids?
Yeah, I did.
Uh, but what they actually want to hear, if you were to say, do you know what it
is, man, like, I don't know, it was just a little sort of drawn out for me and all
of the visual effects felt a little bit more.
I haven't seen it.
I don't fucking know.
But what you think people want to hear is not what they actually want to hear.
They want to hear what you think.
And that requires you to tell the truth.
And oddly enough, that means that telling someone what they don't want to hear ends
up with a bigger net positive for you than actually giving them the thing that they
wanted for the business owners or for the advertisers in the room or the people who
make content, by the way, this is the ultimate hack is just tell the truth.
Because when you do that, you will by definition make very unique content because everyone else is so afraid of thinking or saying what they actually think.
And so you can stand out without trying to stand out.
The problem is that the vast majority of people who quote, make content or try to quote, add value, just regurgitate what they think adds value
rather than just saying what they really think.
Also the benefit of experience, right?
Because it's the only way that you can stress test whether or not this thing
that you're trying to talk about is an actual thing.
And you also get an extra perspective on that too, when you know that this is
what most of the people say about a thing and I have tried it and this is my perspective on not only the thing,
but why other people think that this thing is a thing given that I know that it doesn't work.
Feelings don't require action. Very similar.
I think this one is super powerful for, well really relate all phases, but especially the beginner.
So if you're a beginner, you have to separate
you feeling something and you acting on that feeling.
Because you may feel hopeless many, many times,
but you need to continue to do the activities
that are aligned with your goal.
You may feel hungry, but you need to not eat the cookie
to stay aligned with your goal.
You may feel angry, but know that retaliating at your coworker
has no likely positive outcome.
You may hate your boss,
but undermining them in front of the team
may make you feel good in the moment,
but again, destroy your long-term career prospects.
And so I think creating a gap.
And so I was talking to one of our CEOs
who was having a little bit of stress issue,
and I said, I want you to think that you're a Yeti can.
I want you to think you're one of these cans that has a vacuum between both walls.
I was like, you got your feelings on one side, you've got your internal temperature, you've
got your external temperature.
And I was like, I just want you to do this.
Just create space and space within the context of behavior is time, which is when I feel something
and I have the desire to act on it, you can,
at that moment, you have the lowest action threshold,
which means that you're the highest likelihood
of behaving or doing something
is when you have this feeling.
And so I want to make as logical of decisions
as I possibly can.
Hopefully we're all aligned on the fact
that logical decisions in general
work out better than illogical decisions. And so if we make logical decisions on a regular basis, then we'll have longer term outcomes.
If we want to increase the likelihood that our decisions in general are logical,
then we want to create space between when we feel and when we do.
And encapsulated in one sentence, it's just because you feel something doesn't mean you need to act on it.
And if you have an idea that you want to act on
because of a feeling, if it still feels good
in the morning, then do it.
But I've never regretted taking time before acting
when I was angry, but I sure as hell have regretted
almost everything that I've done
immediately the moment I felt angry.
Things aren't good or bad, they just aren't.
Oh, this is the judgment they have on themselves
about what they believe they're supposed to do or supposed to have achieved or that this
condition or this thing that happened is good or bad or it should have been good or it should
have been bad or and the story of the boy with the horse in the village. I'll tell it in 30 seconds, which is,
dad gets kid a horse and everyone in the village says,
that's amazing. The old man says, we'll see.
And then the kid is riding the horse and he breaks his leg
and everyone in this town says, oh, that's so horrible.
And the old man says, we'll see.
And then the army comes to town to take all of the young men
to war and the kid can't go because his leg is broken. And everyone says, that's amazing. And the old man says, we'll see. And then the army comes to town to take all of the young men to war and the kid
can't go because his leg is broken and everyone says, that's amazing. And the old man says,
we'll see. And the thing is, is that as we continue to play out the timeline of life,
we can't know if anything is good or bad until the day we die. And the day we die,
it won't matter because we'll be dead. And so it means that at the end of the day,
all of the things that occur simply occur. And for me, reminding myself of that, that I think this is bad or I think this is
good, it limits the peaks and it also limits the valleys and saying, this just
is, and I think it's in my opinion, absolute acceptance of the world without
casting judgment on it.
And it's difficult to do because we all want to make judgments and we have to
make judgments in order to live.
We have to approximate this is a good decision, bad decision.
This is a decision that will increase the likelihood
that what I want to have happen will happen.
But most of the good bads that we have that are coming up
are not for our own benefit,
are not aligned with our goals.
They're aligned with one person that told us something
when we were seven years old and then we incorporated that
and we say, oh, this is bad.
Because someone else, when we were a kid,
like you hit your head and then you look at the adult
and the adult says, that's bad.
And you say, oh, it's bad, I'm gonna cry now, right?
And so there are so many thousands and millions
of those tiny judgments that are passed on to us
that do not serve us.
And so for me, it has been more beneficial
to whitewash everything and then actively rebuild
what I believe to be good or bad based on
those things.
But with a baseline reality that none of it is.
It is kind of narcissistic or solipsistic to believe that you know whether a thing is
good or bad.
Means you know the future.
You know what the outcome of this is going to be, right?
There's this story that I couldn't believe it was about September 11th.
So I didn't realize this, but the night before September 11th actually had quite bad weather,
I think.
And it meant that people getting home from baseball games got home way later.
And then you'll remember the morning of September 11th, it's beautiful blue clear skies.
So had that storm been only 12 hours later,
the whole world would have been different, but it wasn't.
There's this story of a guy who was going for a meeting
and I think it was his birthday.
The lady that he worked with had got him
one of these illustration ties,
sort of gaudy, hideous thing with drawings all over it.
And he was wearing a shirt that clashed with it. And she gifted him this as they had coffee on the
morning of September 11th, early, down in Manhattan. And she says, look, your shirt's wrinkled and it
really doesn't go with this tie. Wear the tie, it'll make you feel confident it's a nice present
for you. So he goes back to the hotel.
She goes to the North tower.
She dies.
He's alive.
How on earth are you supposed to say giving that tie was good or bad?
You have no idea what's going to happen downstream from the things that are cut.
So I know this guy who has a podcast and years ago he like snapped his achilles and could barely walk.
And so the crazy thing is, is that many people in that time would have been like,
this is the worst that could have possibly happened. But because he had snapped his
achilles, he was like, well, I have to make the best of this. I have to do something. I might
as well stick with that podcast that I said I was going to start.
And then years later, he began with top 50 podcasts in the world.
And I think an amazing frame is you can make anything that feels
circumstantially negative in the moment.
If you ask the question, what would make this thing the best thing ever?
And so I would argue, maybe you would agree, that you snapping
your Achilles was probably the best thing that ever happened to you because it got you here.
And right now, you probably have your version of the snapped Achilles that's going on in your life,
but there's also the version of the top 50 in the world podcast
that is waiting for you to take action as a result of your snapped Achilles.
I always had this problem with people who said it was meant to be, right?
Because retrospectively, you're kind of taking your agency out of the situation.
So for instance, me saying, I'm so glad that COVID happened and shut all of the
nightclubs down, which forced my business to close so that I could focus on the
podcast so that I would restart playing cricket so that I would snap my Achilles
so that I would then move to America and then blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
But I actually think that that's quite a disempowering frame
to put around things because it goes,
it totally takes away the difficulty
that you had to overcome.
You know, if you're in a car accident
and you break your femur and you say,
it was meant to be because I met my partner
who was the nurse that looked after me
while I was being rehabbed back to health.
You go, okay.
Or on the flip side of that, you managed to be sufficiently
charming to get a partner while you had a snapped femur in the hospital.
That wasn't meant to be, that was your agency.
So retrospectively, you want it all to be on you and known.
And in advance, you want it all to be completely up in the air and unknown.
I think the high-atency frame allows you to break your Achilles and say,
what will I do to make this amazing? And I think that's where the magic happens,
because then everything serves you.
Our actions, not our pasts define who we are.
Victims see their past as their fate. Champions see their past as their origin story. And so a lot of people
are living through their origin story right now, or they're living through the very reason that
they will never be successful, but it could be the exact same situation. And the only difference
between either character is the actions they choose to take, which
means that if you're using Joe Rogan's frame, waking up in your main player character today
in this moment, as weird of a contract as this is, the past doesn't exist.
Just gone.
It's not anywhere.
And so the only thing that we absolutely have control over is the actions that we take right
now.
And it's a weird eraser of time to when you really start thinking that like it's only
existing chemicals in my brain, but it doesn't exist right now to think about the past that
way.
But in some ways it's also very freeing because it means that I get to start with no baggage.
And in some ways for me, it makes the present feel light.
Because you're not carrying anything into it.
Have you seen that Tim Urban illustration of the tree of time, these sort of branches?
So it starts off with life and there's only one black branch that is the
particular path that you took.
And there's all of these green ones that you haven't taken.
And then it gets to now there's a line where it's now, and then it
turns to every
branch is potential right so you had lots that could have been only one that was and now you have
lots that could be and an unlimited number that may be all together and that's it is it you're
right it's light when you think about that frame it makes the present moment feel well it doesn't
matter it doesn't matter what happened yesterday it, well, it doesn't matter. It doesn't matter what happened yesterday. It doesn't matter what happened when I was a
kid, it doesn't matter.
It only matters if you make it matter.
So Jean Paul Sartre, someone screenshotted
this from a book.
I have no idea what the book is, but it's a
motherfucker.
I have led a toothless life. A toothless life.
I have never bitten into anything.
I was waiting.
I was reserving myself for later on.
And I have just noticed that my teeth have gone. A lot of people wait for perfect conditions to start, but don't realize that starting
is the perfect condition.
And the part of that quote that I like a lot from Sartre, little French, Sartre, is your teeth can get sharper and stronger too, so that he's saving himself to use his teeth,
but he could have had all of his teeth at the end if he had been using them the whole time.
And so we have this idea, I call it the fallacy of the perfect pick,
but thinking that you're going to have this one shot, this one pick of this one opportunity, this one podcast, this one, whatever that's going to take you all the way,
but it's the habit of biting that takes you all the
way, not where you choose to bite the first time. And
I obviously now have a huge history of this and you do too,
which is we have learned to
just bite and know that our teeth will get stronger and we will learn how to chomp down
along the way and waiting to begin never got anyone anywhere.
Yeah. Had I kind of became obsessed with this belief
that one day light's duties will be out of the
way and then you can finally start doing the
thing that you want to do what you're meant to
do.
Uh, Marie Louise von Franz says, she calls it
the provisional life.
She'll love, there is this strange feeling that one is not yet in real life.
For the time being, one is doing this or that.
But there is always the fantasy that sometime in the future,
the real thing will come about.
It's also known as deferred happiness syndrome,
the common feeling that your life has not yet begun,
that your present reality is a mere prelude to some idyllic future.
This idyll is a mirage that'll fade as you approach, revealing that the prelude you rushed
through was in fact the one to your death.
There really isn't any other time.
And the more, you know, like this is one of the, I guess, melancholy realizations of getting
older that you actually think, you know what it is? There are things that I can't do now
that I could have done before.
It is going, for both of us,
it is going to get linearly harder to build muscle
for the rest of time.
It's never going to be as easy as it was
10 years ago to build muscle.
And you go, okay, well,
that's an argument for starting sooner.
And the same thing goes for becoming
more psychologically healthy, for becoming more balanced,
for becoming more wealthy, for investing in good habits,
friends, oh God, Christopher Hitchens,
it is a melancholy lesson of older life
that you can no longer make old friends.
Like find your people now, find your people right now
and become friends with them.
Find your habits right now and start doing them.
It's never been easier to get a muscle
than it was 10 years ago.
It's never been easier to make money
than it was 10 years ago,
but it'll also never be easier than it is right now.
It'll only get harder.
And so that's actually like a pretty strong impetus to do it now.
It'll literally never get easier.
Alex Holmosy, ladies and gentlemen, dude.
Yeah.
I appreciate you, man.
These fugue state episodes are fun.
Where should people go?
Do you want to keep up to date with what you've got going on or what?
Have you got any cool stuff coming up?
Um, yeah. Why should people go? Do you want to keep up to date with what you've got going on or what, have you got any cool stuff coming up? Yeah.
I mean, I've got my next book coming out that's in, you will know about it, but it's within
the next six months or so.
It'll be coming out.
So very excited about that.
Been working on that one for six years.
So it's finally, finally ready.
Have you finished writing that?
Yeah.
Cool.
Because the last one was a little closer to the wire.
Oh yeah, this one I said, fine, I'll tell you the story.
So I wrote this book first.
And so I'll tell you the sub headline,
which is how to make money.
And I, after finishing that book and being like,
this is my masterpiece, I then was like, oh no,
they won't be able to use this unless they know how to advertise because you can't use all of these
things about making money until you get someone to know who you are. And then I was like, oh shoot,
they won't be able to advertise unless they have something to advertise, which is an offer. So I
ended up writing this book first and then realizing that I had to write offers two books away and
actually release that first, even though I'd written this other book.
And then I had to write leads to bridge the gap between offers and this book.
But this is the book that I've been waiting for everyone to read and consume because I think it will make the most people the most money bar none.
Did you have a problem given that your writing ability will have probably improved over the other two books?
Have you had to go back and sort of catch it up a little bit? Oh, I rewrote it nine times in the last year.
Fantastic.
But the first draft was done.
And so the ninth draft, which is now in publication or not in publication,
but is a finished product, is now done.
Heck yeah.
What else?
Anything else?
I mean, we're just, we're continuing to invest in portfolio companies.
If you're a company that's looking to scale, you can go to acquisition.com.
And if you were a beginner, just learning, figuring out how to make your first dollar,
I'm a co-owner of school.com, S-K-O-O-L.com.
You can start for free.
It's a cool setup that we have to help people do it.
And right now, 54.1% of people who
start a pay communion school make money.
So we have put a tremendous amount of effort, Sam and I,
into trying to remove all barriers and all friction
for people who are getting started so that they have
literally no excuses.
It's a way better strike rate than OnlyFans.
I don't know what their strike rate is,
but we've worked really hard to,
if you saw the amount of detail,
I mean, maybe you heard some of this from the podcast,
but the amount of detail that went into like
where buttons go and what things we remove
was actually a big one, was how can we so pair this down
so that people don't get overwhelmed
because the number one reason people cancel
or decide not to do something is overwhelm.
And so we're like, okay, how can we funnel action
into the clearest possible steps that people go,
step one, step two, step three,
and then all of a sudden they're like,
oh, this actually worked.
And so it's been really cool to see the thousands of people
who have made their first dollar,
which is what I make
all my content about it, to begin with. And so it's been the ride of my life. It's been awesome.
I can. I appreciate you, man.
Thank you.