Modern Wisdom - #850 - 2.75M Q&A - Women’s Value, Loneliness & Bernie Sanders
Episode Date: October 12, 2024I hit 2.75 million Subscribers on YouTube!! To celebrate, I asked for questions from YouTube, Twitter and Instagram, so here’s another 90 minutes of me trying to answer as many as possible. Expect... to learn whether I'll bring Bernie Sanders on the podcast, what I think about women's value to the world, why my forearms are this size, how to deal with loneliness, whether I'll release merch, why I'm a large emo kid, my advice for people going through a tough time and much more… Sponsors: See discounts for all the products I use and recommend: https://chriswillx.com/deals Sign up for a one-dollar-per-month trial period from Shopify at https://shopify.com/modernwisdom (automatically applied at checkout) Get a 20% discount on Nomatic’s amazing luggage at https://nomatic.com/modernwisdom (automatically applied at checkout) Get 5 Free Travel Packs, Free Liquid Vitamin D and more from AG1 at https://drinkag1.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
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Hello everybody, welcome back to the show. My guest today is me. I hit 2.75 million subscribers
on YouTube and to celebrate, asked for questions from YouTube community and Twitter and Instagram.
So here is another two hours of me trying to get through as many as possible. I expect to learn
whether I'll bring Bernie Sanders on the podcast, what I think about women's value to the world, why my forearms
are this size, how to deal with loneliness, whether I'll release merch, why I'm still
a big emo kid, my advice for people going through a tough time and much more.
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That's drinkag1.com slash modern wisdom.
But now, ladies and gentlemen, please welcome... What's happening people?
Welcome back to the show.
It is a 2.75 million subscriber Q&A episode and I'm in a brand new studio for the people that are listening, you know, can be able
to see it, but this is my new studio finally finished in all its glory.
And I think it looks absolutely beautiful.
I can show you here.
Look at this.
There's a London telephone box and a London bridge here and a see and hear and speak no evil statues. And I've got a thinking man thinking
and a guy Atlas holding up the world
and little dinosaur skull
and it's a secret little Easter egg of a hand climbing up.
And I love it.
I love the colors.
I think it looks, it's perfect.
It's our brand.
It's the teal, it's the orange.
The lighting's amazing.
So yeah, my director of photography made me a present
for 2.75 million subscribers.
Anyway, I asked the questions on Twitter
and Instagram and YouTube, and there were lots.
So let's get into it.
Jim Cooper, I love your podcast, Chris.
I'm sure you're not misogynistic,
but the statement women's value to the world in many ways
lies in their beauty and youth
comes across quite sexist and reductive to me.
Yes, swing and a miss by me there
using some imprecise language around a sensitive topic.
I think the response here was a bit surprising
because I must have brought up this exact cliche
in 30 or 50 videos in the past that men have historically been valued for
their ability to provide status and resources, while historically women have had a premium
placed on their age and their looks.
I've never said that it's optimal or desirable, but I would say that it's pretty reasonable
as a historical assessment of how society has judged men and women.
I mean, even now in the modern world, there's entire industries dedicated to serving these cliches,
cosmetic surgery and makeup and hair extensions and apps that airbrush your wrinkles away are all
playing into this need for beautification and youth.
The same as luxury car rental garages and online trading courses and pick up artists'
body language masterminds for men to enhance status and resources.
The point that I was trying to make was about male body image issues that society has typically
emphasised the importance of beauty and youth in women.
For men, stereotypically it's been less important.
And yet, men are on track to overtake women
in rates of body dysmorphia within a few decades.
I think it's an interesting pivot
that men historically haven't been valued
as much for their looks.
And that now seems to be changing.
And just because I talk about something
doesn't mean that I support it.
Analysis is not justification.
What I wanted to do was identify those previous stereotypes
and then highlight this new world in contrast.
And it seems like that came across
as me reinforcing the stereotype as legitimate.
And I get the sense that this is one of the problems
with the audience growing so quickly
because I think that I can just use
imprecise throw away shorthand references
to tons of previous conversations like I used to
when the show was smaller
and everyone would understand my broader point.
But the show is probably half a million people bigger
than the last time that this point got brought up.
So a ton of viewers have no context.
But then if I go through an in-depth reintroduction
of each reference every time that I bring it up, that's going to get clunky and repetitive
and arduous and patronise everyone like you never learn anything. So yeah, I'm going to
have to work on that. Hopefully that clears everything up and glad to hear that I'm not
a misogynist.
Shotgun Orphan, congrats on all your well-deserved success.
I discovered your pod in 2021
and you've quickly become my favorite person to listen to.
Thank you.
When are we getting t-shirts and other merch?
Please take my money.
Yeah, I've been wearing this three-eyed skull t-shirt thing
on some training vlogs
and we've got one with modern wisdom across the front.
I think we made maybe 20 of those.
And it was just for me and Dean
and a couple of the guys behind the scenes.
I would consider doing it, but I'm not,
I'm not a particularly good sort of seller of my own stuff.
I need to work on that, but soon, I guess, if I can find a way to do it
without detracting from the million other things
that I've got to do.
But it's nice to know that you like the designs.
They're pretty cool.
I really like them.
Lucas, I'm currently watching your Olympia prep vlog
with Chris.
What's going on with the autoimmune stuff?
I hope everything is going well.
Yeah.
I kept this quiet.
I have kept this quiet all year.
Um, I've been fighting with some health stuff.
I think I've hinted at it a little bit.
And to be honest, it's kind of, it's coming out of me, um, without me meaning to, uh, I
talk to friends and it's the thing that's on my mind.
It's been rough.
It's been like, by far the hardest year that I've had.
And then I've been trying to keep the show on top of it.
And I'm seeing a lot of.
Threat and anxiety and, uh, my resilience is lower pretty much everywhere.
Um, so I think I'm going to do a sort of fully dedicated episode,
or maybe even a series of episodes to talking about the stuff that I've been
going through gut dysbiosis, uh, like parasitic treatments, molds,
environmental molds, uh, EBV, like a pretty big list of things that apparently
are not super uncommon for immigrants that first moved to America because the environment and the food and a lot of the other stuff is unfamiliar.
And then maybe get some specialists on because it's a really big deal and the brain fog and
the mood and the energy has been, it's been tough. So I want to try and use it as a learning experience in one form or another.
Everything is moving forward as best I can.
I'm trying to not dwell on it and compensate where I can.
Uh, also, this is the most, my dog ate my homework excuse ever, but, uh, I've made
more speech errors in the last six months or nine months this
year than I ever have.
I would have never made that imprecision error with regards to women historically having
taken most of their value dot dot dot.
Uh, I would have never done that in the past.
I would have never, I accidentally called Ed Whitten, Ed Dutton on
the episode with Eric Weinstein.
I know this might sound like a little thing, but for me, somebody who is
usually pretty sort of 100% perfect on speech.
Ed Dutton is this guy.
He's like a spicy race and IQ researcher.
Ed Whitten is a theoretical physicist.
Like, I just wouldn't have made that error and it keeps on happening. I'm forgetting a racist, I'm not a racist. I'm not a racist. I'm not a racist. I'm not a racist. I'm not a racist. I'm not a racist.
I'm not a racist.
I'm not a racist.
I'm not a racist.
I'm not a racist.
I'm not a racist.
I'm not a racist.
I'm not a racist.
I'm not a racist.
I'm not a racist.
I'm not a racist.
I'm not a racist.
I'm not a racist.
I'm not a racist.
I'm not a racist.
I'm not a racist.
I'm not a racist.
I'm not a racist.
I'm not a racist.
I'm not a racist.
I'm not a racist.
I'm not a racist.
I'm not a racist.
I'm not a racist. I'm not a racist. I'm not a racist. it's been odd not talking about it and then feeling like I've got this
huge thing that's going on behind the scenes.
And then how do I, is it even that big of a deal?
You guys are here to just learn stuff and, and, and be entertained and educated.
Why should I burden you with something that's burdening me?
But then also you kind of, the truth will set you free.
Anyway, it's been, I've been thinking about it a lot.
And once I compile my thoughts in a brain that's full of mold, I'll, um, I'll talk to you more about it.
And maybe it'll be helpful and useful to anybody that's going through stuff.
Con Air, why are your forearms so massive?
Yeah, I, this has been coming up more.
I think it's because I've been doing more training blogs.
I guess I do have like pretty big forearms, but I honestly, it's just straight up genetics.
It's like, I've never done direct.
The first piece of direct forearm training I've ever done was with Mike Israel on a podcast
or training blog three weeks ago. It's the first training I've ever done was with Mike Isretel on a podcast,
the training blog three weeks ago.
It's the first time I've ever trained them.
So it's like that guy that's got massive calves.
You go, dude, what do you do for training your calves?
He's like, have good parents.
I don't know, have parents with big calves.
So they just are, maybe it's a tumor of some kind
and maybe this is what's causing
all of the fucking brain fog.
Maybe it's just filled with mold and autoimmune problems.
I'm not sure.
Z Griffith 23.
What's your relationship with caffeine slash nicotine and do you build
in intentional breaks?
Good question.
So for those of you who don't know, I did 500 days without caffeine a couple of
years ago, um, which was significantly harder than a thousand days without alcohol,
which I did the year before, finishing the year before.
And still now my favorite way to consume caffeine,
this includes new tonic,
is to try and do it every other day.
Sometimes when you can't,
because you've got a bunch of days back to back
where you really need it,
or you have multiple nights of bad sleep.
But honestly, my best use case
is just one day on, one day off.
If you have it today, you can't have it tomorrow.
And if you had it yesterday, you can't have it today.
That's it as a rule.
And it means that it keeps your tolerance nice and flat.
I was taught not that long ago
that I think it takes nine days of cold turkey from caffeine to
fully reset your baseline that adenosine system sensitivity that was from Menno Henselman's.
So blame him if it's not true, but you would be surprised at how quickly that sensitivity comes
back. Nicotine I'm not using. I haven't used that all that much. Nicknacks are nice, but
Nicotine, I'm not using. I haven't used that all that much.
Knickknacks are nice, but I'm stimulated enough, frankly,
from like new tonic and just coffee as it is.
So I don't really need any more.
Vikram Wuppadrestha,
advice for subhumans below six foot
in the current dating market.
I guess that makes me subhuman.
I'm five, 10 and a half, five, 11.
I don't know, man. in the current dating market. I guess that makes me subhuman. I'm five, 10 and a half, five 11.
I don't know, man. Like I see guys who are not that tall
crushing it with girls all the time.
And I do think that the internet makes way more
of a meme out of height for guys than it is now.
There's a girl that trains in the gym with me who is six two.
She's got like an actual tall girl problem that she doesn't want
to date a guy that's shorter than her. And if you're six two as a woman and you want to wear
heels at your wedding, uh, you're looking at professional athletes. Like that's a, you know,
that's a high bar literally. Um, I don't think you need specific advice for sub humans below
six foot in the current dating market. Uh, It's the same as it's always been like.
Be nice, be as attractive and well presented as possible.
Be emotionally aware.
Present some status.
Don't be a dickhead.
That seems to work.
Alberto Nicule, your podcast stands out as the best looking one on YouTube
and the production quality is truly impressive. Thank you. I'm curious. Why do you invest so much into the
visual aspect, especially since many listeners may not pay attention to it? Is it a personal
goal for you or do you find it rewarding in other ways, either financially or personally?
Good question. So I don't know. I, I like beautiful things just because I like looking at nice things.
I think there's utility in beauty and there's so many complaints about the
modern world being sterile and transactional and people are just mailing
it in, whether it's in music or in architecture or in art or in movies
and doing the bare
minimum to get by or kind of feeding this chicken soup Instagram story bullshit to you.
And I don't know, I want a body of work that I look back on and think that was beautiful.
That was amazing. That was impressive. We really pushed the limits. I know it's funny,
Beautiful. That was amazing.
That was impressive.
We really pushed the limits.
I know it's funny.
The show sometimes gets criticized for how, like, why are you going to all of
this effort?
It's all style and no substance.
Like, bro, there is the first years episodes had no video at all.
And then after that, it was 300 episodes of me on Skype, literally at 720 P I'm
doing it, people have complaints for lazy content creators.
And then if you try and do something beautiful, they've got complaints too.
So I think the lesson there is that you can't really appease or satisfy
anybody or everybody.
Um, financially, it is a stupid idea.
Uh, it is a house deposit every single time that we decide to do one of these big sets of shoots.
It is an obscene cost, the single largest cost, this entire year, larger than all of the staff that work for me,
larger than any of the production fees, larger than anything, is the cinema shoots. That's it. Uh, rental houses, insurance location.
So I don't know. I hope for the people that like beautiful things, this is a place that you can come.
And I like beautiful things.
So hopefully for those that enjoy it, it's there for you as well.
And for the people who aren't that fussed, you can just listen to it
on Spotify or Apple podcasts.
Ryan J IG Chris. What's your daily nutrition plan?
All right, I don't want to be that guy,
but as part of this autoimmune recovery stuff,
I'm fully carnivore at the moment.
Technically, I'm meat and fruit.
So carnivore was like the hipster's keto, and then meat and fruit. So carnivore was like the hipster's keto
and then meat and fruit was like
the hipster's hipster's carnivore.
So I'm now that guy.
I'm now a combination of Jordan Peterson
and Paul Saladino and the liver King.
And I don't want to become an evangelist,
which is why I've not brought it up because
it's like cliche to be the guy that starts doing meat and fruit and won't shut up about
it. But that's my current nutrition plan. And I will come back to you in a couple of
months and tell you what I think of it. City bumpkin, will you ever get circumcised? These questions.
Um, I feel like adult circumcision is a really extreme, a very extreme procedure
to go through, uh, without a reason.
Um, I don't know whether that's now a sort of a trend thing.
Like when people used to guys used to get the top of their ears pierced, uh, or
nose rings or whatever.
Um, I do know a guy who got into a relationship with a Jewish woman.
And then before marrying her, after he'd asked the father, whether he could, he
had to, I think convert or transition, whatever it's called, uh, to become Jewish.
And part of that was adult circumcision, which is wild.
Uh, so I, I fear that I'm going to remain team foreskin.
Nick Kurtapal, do you ever feel lonely?
Uh, yeah.
Um, I did a lot in my twenties. You know, there was a note that I put in my phone, my diary once that I was, I just had
a low, low mood and I didn't really understand why.
And I was trying to work out what was going on.
And I just put, I think I'm lonely and wrote that in my phone.
And it's got better since I've moved to America, which is, I guess,
strange that you become less lonely when you move away from home, but I still do.
Um, it's weird, this sort of transition thing with the micro
niche degenerate fame thing with the show and detention and, and, and not really knowing how
to deal with that. And then feeling ashamed about like, why would I, why should I even
complain about this? Like what a bourgeois luxury to be whining about and then thinking, well, that's
not a very sort of, um, delicate way to deal with yourself. You're not treating yourself like a friend
that you're responsible for helping there. So it's like infinite regress of feeling guilty or ashamed
or sad that you're guilty or annoyed that you're ashamed.
But yeah, you forget when you move to a country
that speaks the same language as you,
but that you're not from, that you're still an immigrant.
And you wouldn't notice it the same
if you were in Thailand or Russia or
France or Argentina.
But if you move to a country where you speak the same language that they do natively, but
you're not from there, it kind of creeps up on you the fact that you're culturally displaced.
And yeah, I do.
It's been an interesting year of learning stuff and I'm working hard
at trying to beat that.
Kranick, since you did an episode with Bea Shapiro, why not showcase
the opposite perspective and how do you feel about the 2024 election?
Yeah, I don't know who the opposite perspective to Ben would be.
Yeah, I don't know who the opposite perspective to Ben would be.
I'm bringing on Crystal Ball from Crystal and Saga.
She's the left-leaning host from that show.
Anna Kasparian from The Young Turks, I think, will be on next week.
Trying to get Bernie Sanders on, been trying to get that guy on for ages,
but difficult to get a hold of, perhaps unsurprisingly.
Um, I kind of get the sense that the rebalancing of right versus left is a little bit hard to do because there isn't really a left leaning equivalent of Ben.
I mean, Brian class has been on the show ardently anti-Trump and
definitely from the left, uh, even Nate silver is from the left. Ryan Nate Silver is from the left.
Ryan Holliday has been on this year.
Scott Galloway has been on.
Destiny has been on.
A Democratic candidate for president,
Dean Phillips was on earlier this year.
So I've been trying to sort of do showcasing
the opposite perspective throughout the year,
but I know it seems like people from the right
sort of carry more weight somehow for this.
So I know offsetting it, rebalancing the force
can be a bit difficult.
How do I feel about the 2024 election?
It is a fucking car crash.
The way that the candidates have been going at each other,
the way that the press has covered it,
like the current sentiment in America is,
it's like meme universe.
If South Park made an election year,
this is what it would feel like.
Kamala Harris goes on Call Her Daddy,
Trump gets shot once and another assassination attempt.
And then like, it's been so, it's wild.
So how I feel about it is it makes for great TV,
but I'm glad that I'm in Texas where there's lots of room and I feel a bit safe down here.
And actually I'm gonna be in Australia
when the election happens,
which is probably the best place on the planet to be.
The original crash 007, do you have an inner monologue?
Oh yeah, I kind of don't.
I've heard that some people don't, some percentage of people
don't let me see if chat GPT what percentage of people do not have an inner
monologue.
Study suggests that 25 to 50% of people do not experience a constant inner
monologue.
This means instead of hearing a voice in their head, narrating their thoughts,
they might process information in more visual abstract or sensory ways. do not experience a constant inner monologue. This means instead of hearing a voice in their head, narrating their thoughts,
they might process information in more visual,
abstract or sensory ways.
Prevalence depends varying on how the concept is defined
and measuring different studies.
Wow.
I have no idea what it's like to not have an inner monologue
because my brain is singing fucking barbershop
with each other.
Yeah, it's been one of the biggest tasks that I've tried
to do to make the voice inside of my head, my friend,
to find like 25 to 50% of people,
it's just silence in there.
I don't know, what are you doing?
What are you thinking about?
I don't know, but yes, I do.
And you should be kinder.
Oli VAR, two different questions.
One, asking for a friend.
What is a good response to someone who uses the word luck to put down
one's achievements?
Number two, what is your connection with music?
I notice you wear bring me the horizon and parkway clothes.
Have you always been into metal?
Got any favorites?
I'll answer number two first.
This is architects.
This is an architect's t-shirt.
Uh, yeah, I was an emo kid, uh, throughout all of my teens and just never gave it up.
Listening to a lot of sleep token and neck deep bring me still now crushes
parkway, misery signals, uh, bare tooth.
New album is phenomenal.
Um, Polaris I've just got into them outstanding.
So that's what I listen to, uh, when I'm training, um, deep house, usually when
I'm in the car or driving in a bit of country at other times, and that's like
my three car garage metal deep house.
Fuck boy country music, uh, asking for a friend.
What is a good response to someone who uses the word luck to put down one's
achievements?
Asking for a friend, what is a good response to someone who uses the word luck to put down one's achievements?
It seems strange to me that the harder I work, the luckier I get.
I've always loved that quote.
BHZV1MN.
Hey Chris, congrats.
It is inspiring to see someone hit the J curve in real time.
Thank you.
Question, how do I deal with the fear
of not having people around me when I have finally made it?
I'm in an important phase of my life.
My relationship is probably going to come to an end
because of my tunnel vision on my goals.
There's this small voice in my head
that acknowledges the possibility
that I may never truly find the people
I would love to share my success with.
I have sacrificed many friendships too.
I know I have what it takes, but what if I end up alone?
I am 20 PS.
I was used to being alone until I improved myself and then found some people,
but now it appears as if I'm at another revamp point in my life.
So I think this lonely chapter thing that I keep harping on about is just such an unseen problem
that a lot of people face.
And, um, it was certainly an area that I struggled with the analogy that I use for,
I think what you're describing is if you imagine personal growth or growing as a
person as kind of like, uh, being a rocket ship taking off from earth and you're
moving at a particular velocity and there's other people around you and some are ahead
of you and some are behind you and some took off at off from earth and you're moving at a particular velocity and there's other people around you and some are ahead of you and some
are behind you and some took off at the same time and you're moving along.
But if you start to overtake other people, you end up leaving them behind.
And this isn't a value judgment about who's better or who's worse or the people
that grow more intrinsic valuable, whatever it's simply that the language that
you use to communicate to these people and the things that you've got going on in your life and the type of challenges
that you're facing are at the altitude that you are at.
If you're just trying to work on your meditation practice for the first time
ever and are learning about how the GTD method for productivity works, that's
different to somebody who is balls deep in emotional regulation
and has been to two years of therapy.
The challenges that they're facing are just fundamentally different because the altitudes
have changed.
So one of the problems that you have is if you're a very quick moving velocity as a rocket
taking off, you're going to, like you said, you found people after you improved yourself
and now it looks like you're going to break through another time, that's something difficult
that you're gonna have to let go of.
It feels like survivorship bias,
like people that come back from war
and they don't feel like they should have survived
and they actually have, and you're leaving behind
a group of people that maybe you grew up with
or you became friends with, or you became friends with
at a really important formative point in your life.
And it's tough.
So I think it's just a, it's a price of doing business, a cost of entry to growing quickly.
And it sounds like you have tunnel vision on your goals.
You know that you want to achieve big things, but I don't mean to be
patronizing bro, you're 20 and you have, there are lots of people
very far ahead of you that you can end up settling
at their altitude with, just take time.
It sounds like you're thinking about things
that are maybe beyond your age.
So just have a little bit of faith
that you're going to be able to bring this into land
with a group of people that will care.
And when you find them, it'll be so worthwhile because they'll have gone
through the same things too, and you'll be able to resonate.
Chirran dig nine eight three, three.
I suck so hard at saying these usernames.
Tell us more about your childhood and how you overcame bullying and became
confident, deep questions today.
Um, so the became confident thing I think is a, probably a misnomer, uh,
competent, like I'm good at doing some stuff, but especially this year, I've
just been, riven with uncertainty and low self-esteem and have kept going, which maybe is good for
people who don't feel like they have much self-esteem or confidence to hear that even
if you don't believe that you can do it, you can still end up doing it.
But yeah, the became confident thing is at least based on recent experience,
not, uh, not fantastically backed up, uh, in terms of childhood and Ohio became
bullying, I don't know, like you just get through stuff, you know, it was rough
childhood, especially teenagers was, wasn't super fun being a social outcast.
It was never real aggressive, awful physical bullying over and over again.
There was some elements that were pretty like atrocious, but.
I don't know.
You're just a kid.
You're made of rubber and magic and you just sort of bounce through things, or
at least I kind
of did, even if I was unhappy.
Uh, and it's only in retrospect that you can see kind of how wrong things were or how
rough stuff was.
Um, the overcoming the bullying thing.
I didn't know.
I got rid of that chip on my shoulder maybe about five years ago.
Uh, you know, that I was doing things to prove other people that had doubted me or had mistreated
me or bullied me or whatever, um, wrong.
That was something that I overcame, I think largely just through achieving
lots of things that I never thought I would, um, after a while you have to
sort of admit to yourself that the fuel you're using is toxic.
And if you're still being driven by that kid in year nine, when you were 13,
that called you that name or whatever, you're giving that person an awful lot of
power over you, somebody that you hate or don't like.
Uh, and also it's not allowing you to get to any peace.
Like you're never going to be peaceful.
So yeah, childhood was, I mixed bag.
I played lots of sports.
Uh, I spent a lot of time on my own in solitude and
it came out of it in one piece, or at least in pieces
that were together, should I say.
And then in adult life, you spend,
some people kind of arrive all put together
and then some people kind of have to put themselves
back together and I was the latter. And still largely I'm doing it, but I know, hey,
here I am still going Lorenzo Pietra Piana four seven no seven fucking hell.
Uh, what should you do if you realize that you're striving for success is only
a compensatory mechanism for past trauma or an inferiority complex?
There are a lot of people just being seen by these questions.
It's a bit more somber of a mood today, both from the questions and maybe from me.
I know why I am.
I wonder if the questions are maybe because we're going into Christmas or
autumn or something like that.
People are starting to reflect on the year.
They're feeling a little bit more melancholy.
I don't know.
It's, or maybe I'm getting it totally wrong.
And that's like a unfair assumption.
What should you do if you realize that you're striving
for success is only a compensatory mechanism
for past trauma or an inferiority complex?
I think a lot of people, it is.
I think many people are trying to.
Prove to the world that they are valuable in a way that in the past
they felt worthless and the inferiority complex of if only I can become
sufficiently impressive, then maybe the world will love me.
Maybe if I'm create this grand cathedral of accomplishments and
accolade and status and money, uh, someone will pat me on the back
and tell me that I'm good enough.
I think maybe that's most high performers.
Maybe that's most successful people in the world.
And that's sad.
I think it's a, an ironic realization that many of the people that we admire
the most have the least admirable internal mental states that you literally
wouldn't trade the life that you think is dog shit for the one that you think
is amazing if you got to spend five minutes inside of that person's head.
Um, so what should you do if you realize that you're striving for success is
only the compensatory mechanism.
Well, you've seen through the first illusion, right?
You understand why that motivation is there and you can continue playing
that game and trying to fill internal voids with external accolades, or.
You can try and assess why that's the case.
If it was me, I would do a good bit of internal work.
I would maybe speak to a CBT person
or do some therapy or some hypnosis.
I would journal and I would try and work out,
okay, why do I think that I need to be successful
in order for the world to love me?
Why do I need to strive in order to create
this grand important thing in order to feel like I am sufficient? That I
need to offer the world something in order for it to love
me back? Why do I feel like that needs to be the case? And is
that true? Is that true? Why do I love other people? What are
the reasons? Like, why do I choose to be around the people
that I choose to be around? Is
it because of their success, their striving, how impressive they are, or is it that they're
funny and caring and hold space for me and are kind or gentle or reassuring or enjoyable
or energising or whatever? For the most part, I've asked myself this question too, or a
similar one, and for the most part, the people that I love to be around, it's got fuck
old to do with their accomplishments.
Literally some of my best friends, uh, the ones that are happy and not
striving and are not looking for this success to like endlessly filling this
hole, like the cookie monster, just eating new achievements, um, look
inside and work out why you think that success is something that you need to
do.
Uh, what are you compensating for?
What are your past traumas?
What's your inferiority complex?
And then decide whether or not you want to actually keep trying to be successful because
you're not choosing to be successful.
You're being compelled to be successful.
It's a compulsion.
Uh, and I don't think that that's necessarily what you want to have in life.
You don't want to be forced to do anything.
You want to choose to do the things that you want to do.
Justin Dunkley, one eight four eight.
Been a pleasure to feel as if we are a part of your journey since I
found you almost two years ago.
Thank you.
My question would be from your perspective, what do you think the
future of Britain is for younger generations growing up?
And what would you suggest to be,
what would be your suggestion?
What would your suggestion be to someone
who wants to leave for a better life?
Love you, man.
You're a true inspiration to so many
and seeing a fellow Brit shine the way in such a fashion
makes me driven for more.
I cannot read today, apparently.
What do I think the future of Britain is for younger generations growing up?
What would be my suggestion for someone who wants to leave for a better life?
I mean, if you want to leave, you got to leave.
I think there is no way to rework that game.
Um, I tried for a very long time to impact British culture.
Uh, and you know, we had a few thousand people that worked for the events company between the ages of 18 and 24, uh, personally coached maybe a hundred,
hundreds of young people.
Um, and they went on to do amazing things, but unfortunately, as anybody in the UK
knows, trying to find other people that are positive, positive, some, uh, have
agency are interested in trying to make change to themselves and to encourage
other people to make change as well.
It's a rarity.
encourage other people to make change as well. It's a rarity.
So first off, realize that if you're able to grow
in that country, it's a very impressive,
it's like lifting a weight on Jupiter or something,
that it is harder than typical to break out from the mold
because the tall poppy syndrome, the cutting down
and the sort of mockery that everybody encounters,
or at least everybody
that I know, um, is a big weight.
It's a drag.
Uh, so the future for younger generations growing up, I mean, the UK was, it had the
second highest number of millionaires leaving in the world in 2024.
China was number one with 15,000.
The UK was number two with about 10,000, but China's population, it's basically,
I think the UK is 3% of the population of China.
And yet it's 66% of the number of millionaires leaving.
And China is a literal communist dictatorship.
So I would love to see it change.
I tried for a decade and a half to have impact on
it, but I don't know. I'm yet to be proven otherwise, but hopefully I'm wrong. J LeBron777,
impressive as fuck. Thank you. Okay. Question. Any dream guests you'd love to have, but feel they
may slightly be out of reach for now. Any names you'd be able to drop tons.
Uh, Ryan Reynolds would adore to speak to Ryan Reynolds.
I think he's super cool guy.
I think it'd be really fun to talk to, uh, Larry and Sergey from, uh, Google
would be great Zuckerberg, Bezos.
Um, who else is like really, really out of reach.
I'd like to have a chat with Beyonce.
I think she'd be really interesting to speak to, to work out what it's like to
be that famous or like a Taylor Swift, Justin Bieber.
I mean, Justin Bieber at the moment with all of this P Diddy stuff, speak to P
Diddy, him and Sam Bankman Fried side by side in a jail cell.
We could do a three way conversation.
That'd be interesting.
Yeah. I didn't know, man. There's so many, just an endless list of people.
Let's try and get Bernie Sanders on for ages. That was interesting, but yeah, I, it'll be, we're coming up to episode 1000.
And I really want to do something like phenomenal for that period.
Maybe 999, 1000 and 1001,
just absolutely sort of break open all of the expectations.
So I've set an expectation.
We'll see.
I'm trying to do something cool for that.
Mattel0999, you mentioned in a prior video that you have tinnitus. Many of us do, and it will be helpful to hear your comments on the subject and how
you've dealt with some of the annoyances that it brings.
Yeah.
I, I guess this is one of the reasons why I didn't bring up the health stuff
before that so many people deal with challenges that it, um, it feels like another necessity for me
to sort of make comments and talk about it.
And the problem with that is I'm still going through it.
I'm still trying to recover and like it's slow, really slow and tough.
And then trying to talk about your experience of dealing with a thing
while you're still going through it.
I like, I just don't want to be a Debbie downer to you guys.
I don't like feeling like I'm not on top of my game or like I'm, you know, talking
about all of this bullshit that I'm dealing with, but on the topic of
tinnitus, it sucks, uh, for the people that don't know, it's just like a
permanent loud ringing in your ears.
Uh, it specifically happens when there's lower volume.
So the reason that it happens, I went to go and see,
of course, I went to go and see an ear specialist.
The reason that it happens is your brain,
when it can't detect frequencies,
it tries to fill in the gaps,
kind of like how the optical blind spot
is filled in
in post-processing by your brain.
This is not too dissimilar, but for hearing,
and it just creates this quite loud buzzing noise.
And especially at times when you want it to be quiet,
like when it's silent on a night,
you're trying to go to sleep, it is awful.
And it's for me, brought on by inflammation,
it's brought on by my brain, not being very happy.
And, uh, yeah, anybody that lives with this chronically, which currently I am,
but like, you know, for your entire life, not just for nine months, fuck,
like it's so bad. It's so permanent.
It's like the hearing equivalent of chronic pain.
It always reminds you that you're there.
And the weird feedback loop is the more that you think about it,
the louder it gets and it reacts to cortisol, which means that if you think
about it and it gets louder, you get more stress because you can hear it more,
which means cortisol goes up, which means it gets louder.
It's vicious.
So yeah, I, um, I'm sorry that you're dealing with that.
And, uh, yeah, it's, I'm sorry that you're dealing with that.
And yeah, I've never heard anybody talk about it.
I've never heard anyone talk about it.
And then this year I've just been swimming in it
and it sucks, so sorry.
Poncho Yohanez, Chris Willex,
what's it like being friends with Alex Holmosy?
It's pretty cool.
It's intermittent, perhaps unsurprisingly,
he's busy and so am I.
So it really is like speed messaging memes
and stuff to each other,
and then not speaking to each other for a month
and then doing it again.
And then sometimes it's more frequent.
He's cool.
He's a good counterbalance to, um, feeling like a bitch and, uh, in the right doses
for me, he is a good influence.
Xander journey.
What is the true definition of work-life balance for you?
Not the guy to ask, bro.
Not this year.
Uh, I have been so far on the work end of work life balance,
much to the anger of the people around me
that keep on telling me that I need to sleep
or chill out more.
The true meaning of it, I think, is finding a way
to not just live life in service of work,
that a lot of the time we do things that are relaxation
because we think that it's going to allow us
to then go harder when we get back to work.
I'm not convinced that putting every single ounce
of your identity into a single pursuit,
your work, is the best way to live.
I think hedging your identity across multiple things.
Yeah.
You care about your company or whatever, but also you're a friend and you're a
part-time pickleball player and you like CrossFit and you're into eighties
jazz and you're a father and a husband, you know, like you're all of these
other things as well.
And I think that like the true definition of work life balance is having enough
life that you don't think about work life balance.
Um, the ancient Greek word for work was not at leisure as a definition, not at
leisure.
So work was seen as an aberration and leisure was seen as the set point.
And it seems now in the modern world that this has been turned upside down and
leisure is not at work or life is not at work.
So yeah, work life balance should be that you have enough life to not have to
worry about work life balance.
Anti break even tell us your simple hack on body language.
I am not convinced I have a hack on body language. I am not convinced to have a hack on body language.
I was told by lots of people that watch some of the vlogs that I stand very still.
And I reflected on that.
And I think what's happened is because I spent 10,000 hours in my 20s stood on the
front door of a nightclub.
I got very used to standing very still with my hands, three positions. Okay.
Like this in front of me, like that behind me, or like this on my hips or in
or hands in pockets, I guess three or four positions and I can just stand
there not moving for hours.
I like it.
I know a trained guard dog or something, but instead I'm looking for people's
stamps on their hands or VIP bands or something like that. I have a trained guard dog or something, but instead I'm looking for people's stamps on
their hands or VIP bands or something like that.
I have no hack for body language.
I'm not even sure that it's a thing.
Mirroring and like holding masculine frame and all of that stuff.
I'm sure there's better and worse ways to sit being crunched over.
I think if you're sat upright and you're looking around, that's, and you're awake, that's usually a good start.
Red HH7FD, if you could give one piece of advice
to the young version of you, what would you give?
It's the same one, the same one all the time,
which is fear less.
I think a lot of my life, both now and in the past,
is driven by fear, worry, anxiety, vigilance, being concerned that things are going to go wrong or that you've done wrong. This sense
I've had for a long time that someone's mad at me and I don't know why.
So fearing less, I think about that would be a good place for me to start. And one of the interesting things that you realize with this question, what
advice would you give a young person of you, a younger version of you is that.
If you ask yourself that question
and you get somewhere close to an accurate answer of it, that thing that you wish that you could tell
a younger version of you is almost always
the single most important thing
that you need to tell the current version of you.
I'm yet to hear an answer
where the person has totally sanitized themselves
from the issue that that thing would have fixed.
So think about what you would tell yourself 10 years ago
and then apply it to your life right now.
Yeah.
CJ Wolf ST1QI, do you think it's humanly possible
for you to get through a podcast without saying
downstream?
Well, definitely not now.
I don't know whether I've said downstream yet so far, but now you've made me fucking
say it.
So I can't use this as an example.
Do I say it that much?
Do I say downstream all the time?
I might do.
Now I'm worried that I say it fucking every other sentence.
I'm going to try at some point soon, CJ, CJ Wolf, but you've thrown me a curve ball by
making me say it today.
So not this time.
Smoking groove.
Does any part of you miss the nightlife scene?
Do you know what it is? I've been reflecting on it more recently
and I do miss like the memories.
I miss working with the boys, building something.
I miss the interplay of the team of staff that we had,
you know, 10 to 20 managers that were very, very, very tight
and then 200 to 300 staff every year.
I loved it. I really tight. And then 200 to 300 staff every year. I loved it.
I really did.
And in retrospect, it's sort of one of those things
where you can only realize how beautiful it was
with a bit more perspective.
I certainly miss working with my business partner, Darren.
I mean, just a phenomenal shrewd,
like savage of a business person who,
you could drop him, you know, like one of those, person who, uh, you could drop him.
You know, like one of those, uh, throw me to the wolves and I'll come back. The leader of the pack.
It's like throw him into any industry and he'll fix so much of the operations.
So I certainly miss working with him.
And, uh, it is fun, but I do not miss the late nights and the drunk people
and the loud music and, uh, fair play.
The club promotes, they keep it going into your late thirties.
I mean, I salute you.
Jake, are you red pilled?
If not, how many steps removed from red pill are you?
I don't know how to answer that question.
Um, the red pill fucking hates me.
Uh, the Manosphere
absolutely does not take me as one of their own. I have never identified
myself as those things. I seem to sit in this amazing sort of balance where
people on the left or people that are sort of more ardently feminist, like
fourth wave feminism, see me as a misogynist and then people on the right
or people that are red-pilled in the manosphere see me as a cuck. So I'm like, I'm ideologically
spit roasted by either side of this. I don't know. No, I don't. If red-pilled means understand
evolutionary psychology and mating dynamics. Yes.
If it means anything else, I don't think so.
Gan core.
Can I get a VIP for Riverside mate?
People won't get this reference.
I wonder how many people in the audience will get this reference.
Maybe less than 0.1 of a percent Riverside was one of the big events that we ran for half a decade. We did maybe quarter of a million entries more probably through that venue on a Saturday.
And I ran the VIP along with the rest of the event.
So yes, you can certainly if it's still open, I will see you there on Saturday. Sagacity sweet science.
Why don't you challenge your guests?
Uh, I'm trying.
Uh, I tried with Nate Silver.
I tried with Shapiro.
I tried really hard with Cali means.
I thought that was me giving it a really, really good crack.
I tried with the therapist lady where my mold brain doesn't want to let me
remember her fucking, what was she called?
Bad therapy, Abigail Shrier.
Um, it's a skillset that I'm building up.
I'm working hard at sitting with discomfort.
Um, I did one thing that was pretty proud of on the Will Tennyson episode,
which was he was telling this, uh, story.
He was getting emotional, uh, and you want to step in to stop the thing from happening.
You want to fix the other person.
And I have a compulsion where I feel like other people's
emotional state to my responsibility.
So as a people call that people pleasing or what, or you could call that just being a
good person, I dunno, uh, pathology or, uh, like charity, but sitting with the discomfort
of emotion is something that I'm really learning.
I learned it first from the Theo von episode that he did with Sean Strickland,
which is just amazing sitting with that, giving him space and then telling him
what I thought, which was that I was sorry that he'd gone through it.
That was, I thought that was really, I was happy that I did that.
And I was proud of the way it went.
Um, when it comes to pushing back against ideas and all the rest of it, I do, I
think I'm trying harder, but there is, uh, always more to be done.
Adam, who was your toughest guest and what would you have done differently
if you'd been Mr. Dawkins?
Great interview, by the way.
I, well, I mean, it feels like you're begging the question
a little bit there.
Dawkins wasn't an easy one.
Firstly, Homeboys 80.
Secondly, he's kind of disagreeable in any case.
Thirdly, we basically had the same conversation
the night before.
So thank you for enjoying it.
But that was a tough one.
Prematurely blowing my load in front of 1200 Richard Dawkins fans.
And then 16 hours later, sitting down to be like, right, I've shown all of my cards.
Do I have any more cards that do have anything else that I can talk about without going over
the old stuff?
That was, that was a, it was a bit of a battle.
Rahul, when's the next episode with Mr. Holmosy coming out?
He was just on, he's been on twice this year and was twice last year.
So I think he's, he's, he's benched, he's chilling out for the time being some point,
probably first half of next year he'll be back.
Peyton below do.
Did you have a backup plan or was it all or nothing for the podcast?
Uh, so it happened in stages that when I first started the podcast, I was still
running Voodoo,
my events company, I was still modeling.
Was I DJing?
It stopped DJing.
But you know, I had a lot of different things going on. I had my properties in the UK and was just like learning about me.
Um, so I was living perfectly comfortably, but then the move to America,
uh, that was all or nothing.
And I never really spoke about it at the time,
how much of a risk it was.
I guess I never also thought about it all that much,
that I just knew that I was happier out here.
So I wanted to just go and it kind of didn't really care
what I was risking, but I'm so risk averse
for the people out there that are just terrified
of taking risks, like I'm so risk averse for the people out there that are just terrified of taking risks.
Like I'm here with you.
Uh, but I reached whatever unbelievably high threshold I needed in order to be
able to convince me that I should, uh, actually commit to this decision.
Yeah.
If I'd come out here and the podcast had gone wrong, or if it does go wrong, still,
like it's not like I've reached escape velocity
with finances or status or business, anything like that.
Like I still need to work every single day
in order to keep this thing going.
And if it doesn't work, I'm gonna have to go back to the UK
with my tail between my legs looking like a right knob.
So yeah, it was when I pulled the pin,
I exited my last company, I couldn't go back.
Couldn't be like, oh, hey, would you mind having me back
in the company that I just left?
I would, I don't know what I would have done.
I don't know what I will do if that happens.
So fingers crossed it doesn't.
Check 82.
Hey Chris, I've been watching you since the beginning and I'm so proud of your accomplishments.
Thank you.
Can you give an update on your experience in therapy?
I'm a male therapist in training and I'm a happy positive figure in the men's space is
talking about therapy.
It makes my blood boil watching some amazing friends struggle through their life in their
thirties and forties and feeling so low.
We have a crisis on our hands.
Thank you for promoting mental health on your channel.
Keep it real, bro.
Thank you.
I appreciate that.
Um, so I did therapy twice a week for around about the last year, maybe with
travel and stuff, about nine months.
And I've actually stopped now.
I've taken a little break for a while, partly because again, this is how it's
like the talking about the health thing fucking just falls out of you.
Only way that you can say it is to be truthful.
I need more time per week to focus on the stuff that I need to do in order to be
able to recover, which is like IVs, sauna sessions, fucking
charcoal, like tablet shower bullshit.
After you go in the sauna, like this, just it's complex.
There's a lot of shit that I need to do in order to be able to get my health back.
So, uh, I had to sacrifice something, something had to break and I was taking
two hours to get to and from a therapy twice a week.
So it was four hours a week at the perfect time at the end of one of my days, two of
my days.
So I stopped my experience with therapy was I learned more about myself in therapy in
the space of nine months than in five years of meditation. That's not to say that either are better or worse, but from a
self-knowledge, self-understanding standpoint, it is phenomenal.
It's like inviting somebody into your house and you've lived in this
house your entire life and they start walking around pointing out rooms
that you didn't realize were there.
Like, what's that door?
Where does that door lead to?
You go, holy fuck, like I didn't even, and you open it and there's all of this stuff
in there.
You go, holy shit.
And then you realize that the back of the kitchen that you didn't know about leads to
this corridor that you've just found out about.
And that leads into this and everything starts to connect and make sense.
And yeah, it's an iron stake of perspective
sort of stabbed through the middle
of a lot of your assumptions about yourself.
It's very good, but it's rough.
It's not easy because you can't hide away
from the things that you use bravado
or momentum, self-deception,
ignorance, willful ignorance to just cover over.
You can't smooth things over in that way.
It just, there is really nowhere to hide
if you're doing it right.
So good, but to be used with caution would be my advice.
Ben Rose 2329.
What's been your favorite books that you've read this year?
Okay, this is an easy one.
Fucking hell.
So what have I really enjoyed?
Meditations for mortals by Oliver Berkman.
That's his new one that just came out and I got to read that early. And then he came on the show and I fucking love that man.
He's so great.
Meditations for mortals highly recommended.
You read it once a day for four weeks.
So there's like 28 small chapters and it's fantastic.
So that's one.
Um, I read seven eaves again, which is just this outstanding sci-fi book.
I went through a period where when I was feeling sad on a nighttime, I was comforting myself
with chick novels.
So I read The Housemaid.
That's actually pretty good.
Andrew Michaelades or Alex Michaelades book, The Silent Patient.
Also really great. Good twist at the end.
Started trying to read Verity by Colleen Hoover.
It's just loads of sex scenes.
So I bailed out of that.
But also I read that I really enjoyed
The Anxious Generation by Jonathan Haidt was good.
Ted McKenna's Spiritual Enlightenment Now
is just so fantastic. Every time that I think about the path that you're on from an enlightenment perspective and spirituality,
it's like the most objective look that I've ever had.
The least woo esoteric look at just what enlightenment is from a person who seems pretty
fucking enlightened. Um, I've read some other stuff on night times as well that I can't remember.
I'll come back to you. Nile Berry, two Oh two. Who are your favorite bodybuilders past and present
would love to see some of the nineties early two thousands legends on the pod. Love your recent
vlogs man. Unbelievable work ethic.
Thank you.
Uh, favorite bodybuilders.
I mean, Ronnie is an absolute legend.
It kind of makes me sad to see him now.
You know, it's this guy that used to be just this man mountain behemoth.
And now he's got to kind of gently walk himself from bench to leg press.
It's, I mean, the guy still just seems so fucking positive,
which is amazing.
Dorian, legend.
He was a little bit before my time.
Who else?
Like, it would be interesting to see where
some of the old animal athletes are.
Like Branch Warren.
I think he, didn't he fall off a horse and hurt himself?
Branch Warren would be awesome to speak to.
I know that a bunch of the guys who listen to the pod,
Ben Pukulski in particular has reached out.
It'd be cool to speak to him because he's pivoted.
Everyone's gone in different directions,
spirituality or business or something else. But yeah, there's some.
Techie8036, legend. Last time you told me about how you fixed your back problems. This time,
please be kind enough to give us the detailed start to finish of how you increased your
testosterone. All right. Yeah. So I talked about this last year. I worked with Marik Health and now working with Function
and they are blood testing companies.
I think the first thing is that you need to work out
what's going on inside of your body.
So you need to get your bloods done.
You can't fix any of it.
People talking about just like randomly increasing
their testosterone levels and they have no idea what the testosterone is.
Um, so certainly for me playing around with like FSH and LSH and what's
your sex hormone binding globulin.
You don't just get to sort of throw a one size fits all hammer at the problem.
Oh, you can do that and it'll probably reliably give you results, but there's
lighter, more precise ways to do it.
Uh, all of that being said, I'm not convinced that I'm the best person to and it'll probably reliably give you results, but there's lighter, more precise ways to do it.
All of that being said, I'm not convinced
that I'm the best person to talk about
increasing testosterone because this year,
with all of the stuff that I've been going through,
that has been a big problem.
So I think the only reason I've held onto any good condition
is because of training a lot consistently.
But one of the problems that comes along
with chronic inflammation and
autoimmune, uh, is it's not fantastic for testosterone cortisol and
testosterone and not friends.
So, uh, this year has been.
Again, a, uh, a difficult one.
I don't mean to be a fucking such a Debbie downer today, but the alternative
is that I just don't tell you what's been going on and uh yeah I'm not I don't do that
Geneva Arthur 8747 been listening since early 2020 my number one podcast ever
since thank you I'm a 51 year old mum of three and I've learned so much from you
and your guests which has helped me in this phase of my parenting journey with
grown kids aged 16 to 23 currently.
Your podcast isn't meant to be a parenting podcast,
but I'm a better mother due in part
to so much of what you've shared.
Wow.
Thank you.
One question, when will you finally get
a golden retriever puppy?
I need a dog.
I feel like all of my whining and all of my bitching about like
things are hard and I'm tired and my brain doesn't work would basically be fixed if I
had a nice little golden just here. So maybe that's the answer to all of these questions.
That being said, I do get to hang around with a new dog called Monroe. He's beautiful and
I get to see him relatively frequently at the house.
So I've got a little bit, I'm slowly inching myself toward that.
But given that I can't look after myself right now,
puppy might be a bit of a big ask, but soon.
Bradekis Finch, what do you do in those times where
even though you know you're doing the work
and making the right choices for your future,
you have that nagging sense of,
what if this is it for me and there is no more?
What right do I have to expect anything more for myself?
It's hard sometimes not to feel like Will in Fresh Prince
asking, what if I never get my life together?
Semi-related note, thought on bare-toothed surface
as a positive metal album,
it very much feels like if Modern Wisdom was a record.
I mean, first off, the Beartooth thing is phenomenal.
And what's the new song?
Attention?
My God, so good.
So yes, everybody should go and listen
to Beartooth, The Surface, especially the track ATTN on that.
What do you do in the times when,
even though you know you're working hard,
know if you have this nagging sense of what,
if this is it for me and there is no more.
I don't know, man.
I think expanding your time horizon here
is pretty important.
It's hard because of the people that you listen to,
if you're listening to podcasts like this
and reading introspective books and doing journaling and self work and all the rest
of it, your comparison group is so skewed.
You are comparing yourself with the smartest, most introspective, most balanced people in
the world.
And you're watching all of these YouTub's and podcasts and, and reading these books and trying these practices.
And you're comparing yourself to perhaps literally the number one person in
whatever this domain is that you're trying to get better in, and you're
permanently going to be in their shadow.
You have posited an ideal and by design, you're going to begin comparing
yourself to that ideal, guess what?
You're going to fall short.
By design, you're going to begin comparing yourself to that ideal.
Guess what?
You're going to fall short.
I think if you expand your time horizon and you start to look over months and years, rather than days and weeks, you will begin to see that what feels like.
No more progress.
And that this is all that there is for you, that you actually have been making consistent
progress throughout that.
And the alternative is stopping trying to get better.
This, what I think it is very much is a fear.
This fear that this might be it, that things might not get better.
But one of the ways that you can guarantee that things will not get better is to stop
working at them.
There are very few problems in life that a little bit more attention won't help with.
That doesn't mean work harder.
Always, uh, attention can result in you actually needing to take a little bit of a foot off the gas, but it's paying attention.
Right. actually needing to take a little bit of a foot off the gas, but it's paying attention.
Right.
And paying attention also includes expanding your, your time horizon and realizing, God, look at where I was two years ago and look at where I am now.
And you, you have every right to wind that things aren't coming as quickly as
you would like and that the required pace of progress that you need in order to
stay motivated is not where it's at. So motivation is waning. That's fine. you would like and that the required pace of progress that you need in order to stay
motivated is not where it's at.
So motivation is waning.
That's fine.
You're that's a, that's okay.
But fuck me.
You've got here.
Like you've done an hour and 20 minutes into listening to me harp on about introspection
and, and, and lonely chapter and, and health problems. And you are learning things from people, not me, other people who are able to
change your entire life.
And I really, really feel like just being less hard on yourself and, and not
feeling that things aren't going to come your way. I'm pretty much adamant
that the outcomes that you are supposed to get in life are the ones that you're going to get.
And over a long enough time horizon, people usually end up getting what they deserve.
And that for somebody that asks these kinds of questions, I think will be exactly what you want.
I think will be exactly what you want.
Joe Sheard, do any episodes stand out as ones that underachieved in viewership compared
to the value it provided?
Conversely, did any do really well
that you didn't think was your best work?
That's interesting.
It's hard with the best work thing
because I can be surprised by the performance.
It's like underachieved in viewership.
Do really well, that wasn't your best work.
What creates viewership and best work is not the same thing.
So really, really great episodes,
often don't do lots of plays,
but that's not what drives the viewership in any case.
So for instance, Tulsi Gabbard came on earlier this year and destroyed the
internet, 6 million, 7 million plays.
Uh, was pretty surprised by that in retrospect, maybe shouldn't have been,
but still kind of was, um, great episode.
Interesting.
I thought that she was an engaging speaker.
Uh, but Oliver Berkman, which is one of my top 10 episodes this year.
Awesome.
So cool.
Exactly why I started this show, this sort of precise self-deprecating view of the human
condition and productivity and life and what it's all about.
I knew that that was never going to do huge plays, but that did really well.
Like it didn't underachieve him in viewership, but as far as I'm concerned,
it provided all of the value that I wanted to.
So yeah, the Oliver Berkman one,
I wish I could gift that to everybody that listens.
It's so fantastic.
And Tulsi would be too, or I'm like, wow,
that came out of nowhere.
And then the Eric one, Eric's popular, but fuck me,
that last episode just went to the moon.
And then the Eric one, Eric's popular, but fuck me. That last episode just went to the moon.
Coal Tome five, saw the new much design, any updates?
I really probably should just get my act together
and get this sorted.
But I've said, I mean, people have been asking for this
for like two and a half million subs.
So I probably just should stop staving things off
and actually get around to it.
Lalo Barber 83, have you ever considered updating a list
of 100 bucks you must read?
Yeah, I should do that too.
That's a little bit old now.
That being said, I believe in those books
and I believed in those books when I
wrote that list. And even if I was to update it, I'm not, it's not like I would swap out
all 100 because there are a hundred books that you should read before you die. Maybe
30 would change or 50 would change perhaps, but the sum like the Almanac and Naval Ravikant
is not going anywhere.
Centralism by Greg McEwen is not going anywhere. Red Rising's not going anywhere.
I know that's not a bad shout.
I'll, I'll consider it.
And if I can make it better, and if I disagree with more than 30% of it,
I'll consider doing it.
Carpe Diem GG1HG.
What would you say to a young man who was very lonely that looks up to you as an idol?
I'm sorry that you're very lonely and I know how it feels. show provides some solace, like a little, I don't know, oasis of comfort and, uh,
some compatriots, even if they're virtual and on the other side of the internet
and a community of people who actually are into this stuff as well.
And it does feel, I remember from listening to, you know, Peterson 2016 or Sam Harris or whatever it is, if you're living
in, but fuck nowhere, nobody around you that seems to be
interested in the stuff that you're interested in can be a
very isolating, uh, experience.
And it can kind of actually be even more isolating because you
know, that somewhere out there, there's people that are
interested in the things that you're interested
in, but they're not here. And the fact that you know that they're there almost makes it feel
like more your fault, more real or something. But I'm sorry, man. I hope that I get to see
you at one of the live shows or that you find your tribe. I promise that there are people out there that are interested in the
stuff that you're interested in.
And you're worthy of finding them.
Ethan 0056, Hey Chris, congrats.
Love the show.
How to deal with the lonely chapter and loneliness while pursuing your goals.
I've been working toward my goals for the past few years, but I
lost all my friends this year.
I'm quite young and struggle to find meaningful friendships
and relationships.
How to find meaningful friendships and relationships
while pursuing your goals and coming up,
really appreciate you again, congrats.
I'm definitely seeing a trend here,
this sort of lonely chapter, loneliness.
I'm growing, my friends are falling behind
and not coming with me.
And I have to make this odd trade between wanting to change myself and
wanting to be accepted and there's this tension and then I feel this
guilt about leaving them behind.
I'm young and struggle to find meaningful relationships and friendships.
Being honest, dude, when you're young, meaningful friendships and relationships
are hard to find.
So don't see that as a personal curse that is endemic.
It is built into the age that you are at,
which is one that's young.
It takes most people a long time to actually start
to really care about the meaning that they put
into their friendships.
And I didn't really think about that until I was 27, 28,
and so much of it, especially with my industry was And I didn't really think about that until I was 27, 28.
And there's so much of it, especially with my industry was transactional, it was transient.
It was friendships of fortune and convenience.
So half take it as a compliment for the fact
that you're young, but have progressed quickly. Half take it as a compliment for the fact that you're young, but have progressed quickly.
Half take it as not a personal curse, but an accepted problem that any mindful, introspective,
thoughtful person has to deal with.
And then take solace in the fact that there's so many other people.
So I keep itching this fucking mustache, which needs to go.
It needs to come off.
Take solace in the fact that you're not the only person that's asked this question.
How many other people, three other people, five other people from.
I know there's like 2000 questions every time that we do this and then they get,
they get stripped down.
So many other people are dealing with this as well.
So it's not just you.
And the challenge that you're facing is not one
that only you have to go through.
And everybody that wants to get to the other side of it
and is where you are, has to go through this.
You have to go through it.
So go through it.
Dylan Burch, congrats bro.
I've listened to hundreds of hours of your podcast.
Thank you.
What's one, the number one productivity tip
you can think of and if possible,
the scientific backing slash reasoning for it.
Thanks so much.
Keep it up.
Scientific productivity tip is a little bit difficult.
Certainly from a learning perspective,
memory is repeated recall, not repeated exposure is the best tagline.
You're going to have to recall that number of times if you want
to be able to learn it, but the way that the memory system works
is not by seeing a thing a lot of times.
So if you were to read a page once and then try and recall
what was on the page, you will remember way more than if you read
that page 10 times.
It is all about repeated recall, not repeated exposure.
Secondly, I guess there's a nice breakdown
of procrastination.
You can sort of break it out into a series of steps.
Like, do I know what I need to do next?
Do I know how I need to do that thing?
It kind of helps you to overcome a lot of the time,
at least for me, the science of procrastination
seems to suggest that most of the time
when you're not doing a thing,
you don't know what you're supposed to do.
So it's an ill-defined next step.
And if you do know what to do, you don't know how to do it.
So if you get over those two things,
typically procrastination tends to fall away,
at least for me when I'm being my gold standard self.
John Omler.
I'm really curious about when and how you go
into metal, metalcore.
Not to judge your book by its cover,
but I wouldn't expect someone with your background
in the nightclub scene to enjoy that particular genre.
Also, thanks for turning me on to Sleep Token.
I can't get enough of taking you back to Eden.
Fuck yeah.
That's what I'm here for.
This entire podcast is me just trying to slowly get people
to listen to Sleep Token.
Yeah, I guess I've been wearing metal shirts
on the show more because I can finally dress myself
and decided that I was going to dress
like 14 year old me dreamed
he could have dressed, which is to have a ton of different metal band t-shirts.
Um, I've.
God in, I was listening to this music when I was 13, 14, 14 ish 14, 15 was when I first
started getting into it.
And then especially throughout college and all throughout uni.
throughout college and all throughout uni. I mean, I went through the full gamut from Job for a Cowboy
to a Venge Sevenfold to Every Time I Die to Bullet for My Valentine to Atreyu and then bring me and, you know, and then sort of phased up into now what this slightly more melodic, slightly more mature sound is. The Polaris is of the world, the sleep tokens, Bill Murray.
Um, that I know it's, it's, I love it.
I love it.
I'm never going to stop listening to it.
So I'm, I'm glad.
And Polaris is album from last year.
Highly, highly, highly recommended.
Get it on Zion S 45.
What were you like as a teenager?
Uh, pretty uncool. Zion S 45, what were you like as a teenager?
Ah, pretty uncool. I think pretty socially inept,
not exactly a charmer and like not worldly,
it was very unworldly.
Didn't really understand how the world worked at all.
I really wish, I know there's no, I think zero video of me from when I was a kid.
I have no idea where that would have even come from.
I really wish that I could show the difference between then and now, you
know, like people bring up videos of Sneaker or whatever and he's 13 and they
compare it with his Red Pill arc
and his fucking Islam arc. Unfortunately, because I was 13 like 20 years ago, that wasn't around.
Pretty uncool and spending a lot of time on my own. Karlyn Sanchez, I read the Red Rising
trilogy and the Kingfiller Chronicle books because you recommended them
along with Tim Ferriss, I think they were great recommendations.
Fuck yeah.
Got any more?
Seven Eaves.
Dude, I love Seven Eaves.
Read it at least three times now.
I think that's fantastic.
The Forgotten Highlander by Alistair Urquhart.
Also great.
That's real life nonfiction.
What am I reading at the moment?
Lexicon I've got, I went through my chick novel phase
earlier this year when I was feeling sad about myself.
I can't remember the rest of this.
I don't think I've done a massive amount of reading
from that side.
I read a tax topia, which was pretty cool,
but though Red Rising and Kingfellow Chronicles are just outstanding.
I read the narrow road between desires, which is the new novella
that Patrick Rothfuss wrote.
Uh, I tried to get into a bunch of other stuff, but I've swung and
missed a few times this year with nonfiction.
Josh tuft, YouTube.
Do you ever worry about talking about things
you are not well versed in
and how do you overcome that fear of saying something wrong?
Well, as the first question for today highlighted,
I do sometimes say things wrong,
especially if my brain isn't working correctly.
Do I worry about talking things I'm not well versed in?
I think you can usually get away with that if you identify
that you're not an expert.
Um, the internet doesn't have a, a particularly good forgiveness
mechanism for people playing with ideas.
And this is Eric Weinstein's idea of an accuracy budget,
that if you restrict only experts to speak on the things
that they are experts in, nobody else is allowed
to talk about or play around with ideas outside
of their type domain of competence or whatever.
What you end up with is a situation where no one can ever
play with ideas in the way that precisely
sort of cross-domain learning is supposed to work. So I know I'm trying to, I'm purposefully trying
to get out over my skis and come up with new ideas. I came up with this thing to do with
Ozempic a little while ago. And I really enjoyed this evolutionary psychology perspective on
why thin people seem to be very critical of widespread as Epic use.
And my theory was that, uh, people who were able to easily get thin, reduce
down the status associated with being thin.
Previously, it was something that was difficult to achieve and required willpower.
Now it just requires an injection once a week
over simplification, obviously.
See, now I'm having to caveat everything
in case I fucking put my foot in there again.
That I thought was an interesting take.
Is it right?
Probably not, but I like playing with it.
And I tried to caveat within that post,
which was I actually use the word bro science theory.
So talking about stuff that you're not well versed in,
just state up top, look,
I've got no idea what I'm talking about,
but here's a notion that you should consider.
I think you can usually get away with that.
How do I overcome the fear of saying something wrong?
Be around people who are forgiving of your ideas.
Like you wanna be around people who are like,
oh yeah, that's interesting. I think it's total bullshit,
but that's not a bad take. That's the perfect environment to be in. Quote, Brainiac 2593,
how to deal with the guilt of ghosting all your friends and acquaintances. I'm an introvert,
but for the last 10 years, tried to be more extroverted, accepting invitations to gatherings
and giving much of my time and energy to help friends since the last six months been extremely recluse from everyone
as I recover from burnout and work on my business feel like a fake who manipulated them through
a performance of kindness not through though not malice.
Yeah, that's a difficult one.
Um, anything you necessarily need to ghost them.
My advice here would be to just say, hey, I'm really working hard on my business
and I'm fucking dealing with burnout.
I'd love to catch up at some point in future.
The fact that you're an introvert who for a full decade
managed to be more extroverted and overcome it, suggests to me that you have a lot
of capacity and at the moment, maybe you just need a bit of time to recover. So I would just
tell them, like, be truthful. Hey, I'm working on some stuff on my own. Would love to catch up, but
I just need a little bit of space. I've had to do that this year. Like it's been really bad.
An hour and a half deep into this.
I can talk as much as I want.
Um, I've had to do something not, not too dissimilar this year, although it wasn't
because I made myself more extroverted.
Uh, one of the really sort of.
Unenjoyable challenges of some of the health stuff I've gone through is it
impacts your mood and your extraversion and your bravery as well.
Sort of your courage to go out and do things and your desire to be around people.
Uh, so I've ignored texts or not replied to text for ages because I was embarrassed
to say that I don't want to come out or can't come out or that it just feel too
rough or, or I didn't know, just, I didn't want to see
people, I didn't want to hang about and I want to still keep the show going.
And I want to, you know, keep this momentum and keep learning and doing
all the rest of this stuff and something had to give and a lot, to be honest,
this year, a lot of that was social engagements and spending time with friends.
So a lot of friendships have had to drop.
Um, and a lot of the time with that, I just had to say, Hey man, like
I'd love to hang, but I'm just, I'm sort of going through it at the moment.
So like, I'll loop back to you when things are better and most people,
well, everybody actually was like, fuck dude, like, I'm so sorry to hear that.
If there's anything I can do to help, let me know.
So for the friends that I didn't get around to replying to, I'm sorry.
And for the friends that said, I hope that everything gets better. I appreciate you.
And I think that your friends would say something not too dissimilar as well. Nobody wants to
force their friend out. He's got burn out and is recovering from it and he's building
a business like what to entertain them, like to wind roll you out like some dancing monkey. Those aren't friends. Uh, who won one.
How did you deal with loneliness in school?
Yeah, really digging into my fucking past traumas here.
Aren't we?
Um, how did I deal with loneliness in school?
To be honest, I just don't think I knew that I was lonely.
I mean, I was, I was alone all the time.
All I did was be alone.
I was alone in my room playing.
I was alone in the schoolyard.
I was alone in lessons.
I was alone walking home.
So I played sports, which was good because sports force you onto a team.
And I was good at sports, which was also great because people kind of want you
around, even if you're socially kind of, uh, useless, um, if you're, uh, useful,
uh, in a sporting environment, you're functional, um, people keep you around.
So that was good. I guess I made myself, I made myself useful.
And I wonder whether that's a lesson that kind of followed me
a little bit into adulthood, which is in order for the world
to love you, you need to be useful or competent or impressive
or whatever.
And that goes back to one of the questions from before,
which is how many people striving in success
is very tied to this need for validation,
this sort of compensatory mechanism.
I dealt with it by not knowing that it was a problem.
And yeah, I think in many ways,
it makes you very robust as an adult because you're so used
to being on your own.
You don't like, oh, moving to a new country and not knowing a single person.
Fine.
I can get to know more people more quickly than I did for the half decade that I was
in school.
Yeah, it's weird.
Kids are resilient, man.
Like it seems like the more that I learn about parenting styles and stuff, unless
you do something really, really atrocious to your kid, for the most part, they end
up coming out like pretty fine.
Or at least I did, um, after a lot of work.
That's not to say, see, I'm now I'm caveatting again, in case I fucking get in
trouble from the internet and it gets clipped.
Not saying that you can neglect your child and that's an optimal way to raise them.
What I am saying is that parents who are concerned about not being perfect or about their children
going through difficult things, I think that they are more resilient than we all give them
credit for.
And if we look back at our own childhoods, what we realize is that we dealt with stuff
that we were very, very, uh, we, we wouldn't want our kids to go through.
And yet we came out not totally shattered into pieces, maybe just a little bit fractured.
Realistic management.
How do you stay grounded with all the demands of your newfound success?
The grounded thing, to be honest, is pretty easy.
I'm not around many people.
I don't have a particularly big ego,
much to the, perhaps, surprise
of people that don't know me well.
But no, I've never struggled with ego.
I think being so self-critical,
it's like, it's weird.
Low self-esteem or low confidence is a good proxy for humbleness.
Like it does keep you humble.
How can you ever get too big for your boots when you don't ever believe that you're worthy of the things that you've done?
So it's like, it's certainly not optimal, but functionally it ends up doing, uh,
uh, not too different of a service.
Um, one of the more difficult things has been working out whether people want to
be sort of in your life or around you because they like you as a person or
because they think I know that there's some status to be associated with hanging around with you, which even that like, what am I a
fucking rapper with like some Montage?
What's it called?
Entourage of people.
So even mold brain, uh, this entourage of people around me.
Um, I don't think that I have this.
I dunno, orbiters blast radius paradise thing, uh, that would
inflate my ego to that point.
So, uh, and also I still work with most of the people that I did each new member of staff.
I don't think anybody's joined and left.
Mormon Ben assistant who joined four years ago is still with us.
Dean that was with me six and a half years ago, still with me and each different person
that comes along that I hang around with, They keep my feet on the ground. They
definitely don't sort of believe any fucking hype. Only the paranoid survive 444. Congrats
Chris. Any new dating advice? Have you been having any luck finding a woman with similar
interests and depths to their consciousness? Maybe I'm simply looking in all the wrong places.
Have you been having any luck finding a woman with similar interests or depths to their
consciousness?
This is going to be a fucking hard question for me to answer, isn't it?
Um, personally, not being a massive priority.
Just trying to hold my life together this year has been a full time job.
So any new dating advice, finding a woman with similar interests and depths to
their consciousness, if you are the sort of person that cares about the way that
somebody else thinks, I think.
Allowing, allowing yourself to not, at least as a guy, allowing yourself to not, at least as a guy,
allowing yourself to not be distracted by pretty girls
is a really, really good idea
because there are so many times
where there will be a hot pretty girl that you think,
wow, like, you know, maybe this is exactly perfect.
And then you realize that you don't have anything in common.
I'm sure that it has to be the same for girls as well.
Some bloke that they go on a date with,
they're like, you're really handsome.
And we have nothing in common.
And I am kind of losing brain cells by talking to you.
You just need to cut and run from those, I think.
I know that it's seductive
and I know that they look pretty
and I know they smell nice
and I know that they like flick their hair
in a cute way or whatever,
but they're not for you,
they're for someone, but it's not for you.
So like have the courage of your standards in that area.
Now, if you start to get yourself into the realm of,
well, they need to be PhD level or above,
and they need to be this BMI,
and they need to have this boob size,
and they need to be this age and all the rest of it,
you're starting to set very high bars.
But what it sounds like is that you're struggling
to find similar interests, steps to consciousness.
Okay, optimize for that. Don't optimize for the other stuff. If you start optimizing to find similar interests, steps to consciousness. Okay. Optimize for that.
Don't optimize for the other stuff.
If you start optimizing for the other stuff, you will sacrifice these and maybe
you'll come across a unicorn and they've got absolutely everything, but don't get
distracted by pretty girls and pretty guys when you're looking for people with
similar interests and deep consciousnesses.
That's my advice.
Eduardo Munoz Oficial. What is the best way to manage the painful cost of
being exceptional? I mean, how can you follow through with your purpose and goals, taking
the necessary actions to achieve them and not doing what everyone else does, when the
only proof you have that you're doing the right thing is entrepreneurship and self-improvement
content on YouTube? This is the other side of the lonely chapter. So part of it is the social side.
And the other part of it is the uncertainty
that the actions you are taking are going to lead
to positive outcomes at the end of your life.
I mean, I don't have a title for my book.
And the amount of people that bring up
this lonely chapter thing is wild.
The lonely chapter for a book,
kind of sounds a bit miserable, but it's definitely resonating with people.
So I know I, I maybe, maybe I should do a more deep dive on it, but yes, you're doing
all of this stuff.
You're learning all of these fucking productivity techniques and you're watching these YouTube
videos and you're listening to these podcasts and you're taking these online courses and you've
got Skillshare and you've got read wise and you're doing spaced repetition and
morning routine and, and you have no idea if it's going to work.
But the thing is no one has any idea if it's going to work.
That is a painful cost of trying to do things with no promise
that they're going to succeed.
If you knew that it was going to work, there would be no risk in doing it
because it would be certain.
So everybody has to deal with this.
This is the thing.
This is why I use this term personal curse.
It was what I wrote for myself.
You're not, you haven't been given this bespoke idiosyncratic challenge
that only you have to face.
This is what every person who gets from a place that they are to a place that they
want to be has to go through because you need to try things with no promise that
they are going to work.
There's no confirmation of glory or success or accolade or prestige or anything on the
other side.
None of it at all.
You're just, it's, and it's not even like your David Goggins with broken legs,
running a fucking Navy SEAL hell week.
It's mundane daily,
just uncertainty and like ambient malaise as you're
reading another book on meditation and you're sitting down with your eyes closed,
listening to Sam Harris tell you to fucking listen to your breath. You don't know that it's going
to work, but that is the challenge. The challenge is no certainty. That's the way it is. And
the painful cost of being exceptional is getting through that uncertainty. Hm. Monk hi nine four one.
How scared should I be of mold?
Ah, yeah.
Okay.
So this was, I guess, another element of the litany of health
problems I've had this year.
Uh, much of it, at least in part was brought on by the past house that I was
in the previous studio, which is why we're in a new studio, which isn't killing me.
Hooray.
Um, ah, fuck. past house that I was in the previous studio, which is why we're in a new studio, which isn't killing me. Hooray.
Um, fuck.
I don't want to like put the shit up everybody because so many houses, especially what's
called subtropical temperatures will have mold for loads of people.
It's not a problem.
So how scared should you be of mold for loads of people?
Not at all. Um, but for some For loads of people, not at all.
But for some people, for people who have a disposition for autoimmune problems
or for other people who work themselves quite hard
and are maybe running their immune system
a little bit ragged,
I'd get your house tested.
And if you are tired no matter how long you sleep,
and if you are dealing with brain fog,
and if you feel like your mood is never up,
no matter what you do,
that happiness is something that is a heavy lift,
naturally when it shouldn't be and it wasn't previously,
I would get your house tested from old mold and I would get an immune marker
test done.
Um, there's a number that you can get done quite easily and I would check what's going
on in your blood.
So for many people, it's totally not, totally not an issue if you've got mold in your house,
but for some people it's just get out.
Don't try and remediate it.
Just leave your house.
Kwin9292. When you have an academic like Eric Weinstein on the pod and he's branching out
in all different directions, hitting topics and concepts you might not understand or heard
of, do you then go back over the interview and take a deeper dive into these things to
educate yourself further? If so, how do you do it? Do you make a note and then take a deeper dive
into reading or watching the docs?
I love the show, let's go three million.
Thank you.
I have done some of that, especially on the episodes
that I really want to go back over.
I usually, Eric's a good example
because I have no fucking idea where he's gonna go.
So I can't really sort of detect it.
Oliver Berkman, for instance, I'll go back and listen to that, but I've done so
much prep and I understand his work so well, I think that I, I know where it's
going to go.
I don't really need to remind myself after I can just sort of luxuriate as it
goes along.
Weinstein is much more like riding a very unsafe roller coaster car and holding
on for dear life and hoping that you
don't get thrown out. So I don't take a ton of notes after the episode. Remembering that
doing three a week means I already need to be thinking about the next one. Um, but I
do revisit them and I do enjoy listening to guests on the show because I made the show
for me. Like they're all people I want to speak to by design.
So yeah.
Ryan's Spalding.
What's the underlying theme behind every interview you've done?
Like does it seem like there's a particular mindset
or advice that's common in most,
if not all of the interviews you've done?
So there's two questions, I guess. If not all of the interviews you've done.
So there's two questions, I guess the underlying theme is just how to understand yourself.
Uh, that's the thing I wanted to learn when I first started the show.
Um, I didn't understand myself.
I didn't understand how the world worked.
And I hoped that if I spoke to enough people who did that maybe it would help.
And I think it has, uh, the particular mindset or advice that's common in most,
if not all of the interviews that I've done, it does vary, but there is this sort
of sense of letting go of sort of relinquishing of control, uh, a reduction
of fear, um, that I think is, is very common across a lot of the episodes.
People learning to not fear so much about the outcomes
that they're going to get in their lives,
but working harder.
So it's this odd blend, right, between the two.
It's this beautiful, you can do it, you can work harder.
And also the outcomes that you're going to get
are going to come along no matter how much you fear or vacillate about them. So even in that,
there is a paradox, which I think is why continuing to go over the same kinds of topics
is interesting because each time it gives you a new perspective and gives you a way to manage
perspective and gives you a way to manage the distinction and the tension between these two things.
Snow Bear U2I. Will we ever see a Modern Wisdom cinema production episode? Bernie Sanders. His episode on Joe Rogan is still one of the best JRE episodes to date. I love Bernie on Rogan. I thought
that episode was fantastic. Like I said, we've tried to bring him on. I would
love to speak to him. I think he's super interesting. I mean, think about all of the different
things that that guy's seen. He has been like competitor, outcast, independent threat,
then like back in the tent.
But I would, why I'd really love to know.
I don't know how much you can talk about this.
Think about the social politics internally inside of the democratic party.
If you're a guy who basically tried to, he was the Trump of the left, right?
He tried to sort of flip the, I'm aware, not specifically, but like,
look, caveatting, don't get me in trouble. I promise.
Um, he tried to sort of flip the table over.
He was as, as, as close to that.
I think as you're going to get on the left of a, of a disruptor in many ways.
I would love to find out, does he think that he was sabotaged?
You know, it seemed like he had all of this momentum going in and then, and
then it doesn't happen and God, I mean, yeah, he's great.
I think he's like a fascinating individual.
I would love to, I'm really trying to educate myself
about the best meaning parts of the left.
I think the ways that the left gets it wrong
are so memed, especially on my side of the internet,
that it's very obvious and it can sort of cause me
certainly to be like hyper sensitive to them.
And like, oh, there's that thing again.
Am I right?
Okay, what is the left in its absolute best light,
not from Libs of TikTok,
not a takedown from the daily wire?
What is the absolute sort of best foot
that they can put forward?
And given that people are struggling with cost of living,
what does Bernie Sanders think about immigration?
I have no idea.
I have no idea what he thinks about immigration.
It's the biggest talking point for the right.
I'd love to know.
So Bernie, if you're listening,
two hours deep into a 2.75 million Q&A episode, call me.
R. Jones, ES7UR,
is sobriety still easy for you
or is it a daily slash regular challenge
and have temptations?
As a fellow Brit, it's the hardest thing to kick
because it's pretty much in our blood
as much as betting shops. Hard harder than cigs, I reckon. Yeah, dude, I, um, like I wish
that I could sympathize with you, but honestly, I don't ever think about it. Don't ever think about
it. Um, I did, like I say that six months, three times, and then a thousand days once.
And it just broke.
Two six month periods broke it.
And then the thousand days just annihilated it.
Um, there's no part of me that ever feels the compulsion to have a beer, but I remember what it was like.
I remember what it was like as a British young dude, 22 or 21.
I was working at the AA doing
outbound telesales.
Was that 20?
I think it was 20 or 21.
Outbound telesales.
And there was a summer where I would get this Friday afternoon itch.
It would be 1pm, 2pm.
And there would just be this desire to have a corona.
And then to go and get on it with the boys.
That's how it was.
It was like an itch, a gravitational pull toward a beer.
And, uh, it's nothing like a dependency because I was only doing it every
other week or something.
I just really wanted, there was some times it every other week or something.
I just really wanted, there was some times where it really called to me.
So I promise you, if you work at it, you may need to change your friend group.
You may need to go monk mode for a little while.
I promise if you stick at it, you'll just something snaps inside of that.
Link that you have between having a beer and having fun.
And sometimes having a beer can be fun,
but the only way to have fun is to have a beer,
that gets severed.
So yeah, I hope that that helps.
Wow, that was two hours.
Look, I appreciate you guys listening to me
start to open up about this stuff.
And I really think that I'll have the opportunity
to hopefully teach people who are dealing
with some of the health problems that I've gone through
or are worried about or need to learn about them.
I really hope that that's something that I'm gonna be able
to do more of on the
show. Appreciate you being patient because it is like, I'm learning out loud in real
time here, trying to get things right.
Going to make errors, going to not be as transparent as I would like to be and
then have to fucking retcon and say, Hey, I've been ill for however long or whatever
I've been dealing with.
So thank you for your patience.
Thank you for your support.
It's three million next.
My lord.
All right, I've waffled enough.
Appreciate you.
Bye.