Modern Wisdom - #898 - Alain de Botton - How To Fix Your Negative Patterns
Episode Date: February 3, 2025Alain de Botton is a philosopher, author, and founder of The School of Life Healing yourself is one of the most transformative journeys you can undertake. From nurturing your inner voice to improving ...relationships, how can we embrace healing to not only grow personally but also show up better for those around us? Expect to learn where bad inner voices come from and how to hear a negative voice, why we struggle to connect with our emotions, if there is a danger of intellectualising challenges of emotion for smart people, Alain’s advice for obsessive people who want to let go a little more, advice for an anxious person dealing with an avoidant one, why we get stuck in unhappy relationships, how to improve your self worth and much more... Sponsors: See discounts for all the products I use and recommend: https://chriswillx.com/deals Get $350 off the Pod 4 Ultra at https://eightsleep.com/modernwisdom (use code MODERNWISDOM) Get a Free Sample Pack of all LMNT Flavours with your first purchase at https://drinklmnt.com/modernwisdom Get a 20% discount on the best supplements from Momentous at https://livemomentous.com/modernwisdom Get the best bloodwork analysis in America at https://functionhealth.com/modernwisdom Extra Stuff: Get my free reading list of 100 books to read before you die: https://chriswillx.com/books Try my productivity energy drink Neutonic: https://neutonic.com/modernwisdom Episodes You Might Enjoy: #577 - David Goggins - This Is How To Master Your Life: https://tinyurl.com/43hv6y59 #712 - Dr Jordan Peterson - How To Destroy Your Negative Beliefs: https://tinyurl.com/2rtz7avf #700 - Dr Andrew Huberman - The Secret Tools To Hack Your Brain: https://tinyurl.com/3ccn5vkp - Get In Touch: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/modernwisdompodcast Email: https://chriswillx.com/contact - Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Alanda Botton, welcome to the show.
Thank you so much.
Where do bad inner voices come from?
Well, the way I like to think about it is an inner voice is always an outer
voice that got internalized.
You know, we're very porous people.
The way in which we're spoken to becomes the way in which we speak to ourselves.
I mean, if that sounds too weird, think of language, right?
All of us arrive in the
world not speaking any language and by the age of three, four, five, six, seven, you know, we'll
have learned a lot of words. But the fascinating thing about human beings is we don't know we're
learning. So we can be doing other stuff like, you know, doing handstands in the garden or drawing
buttercups in the kitchen. And we're becoming expert grammarians.
Hundreds of words are entering our minds.
Complex grammatical constructions are entering our minds.
Now, the way I like to think about it is that that language analogy holds
true for emotional life as well.
So at the same time as we're learning a language of words
and declensions, we're also learning a language of emotions. We're learning things like what's a man
like? What's a woman like? What happens if you give something to someone? What happens if you're
vulnerable? What happens if you want to play? What happens if you say no? What happens if you say yes?
All of these are the syntax, they comprise the syntax
of our emotional lives. And it's an invisible syntax just as our grammatical syntax is invisible.
But it's there and it will operate throughout our lives and it will be immensely hard to
change. I mean, you know what it's like if you grew up speaking English and then you
want to learn a foreign language or you suddenly want to learn Italian.
Well, good luck to you.
You're going to be learning a long time.
It's not impossible, can be done, but I think it's helpful to think of how hard it is because
sometimes people get very impatient in their attempts to change things about themselves.
They go to things like, you know, I want to change how I relate to people, um, in relationships,
say, uh, and I've read a book and I've, I've been to three therapy sessions
and, um, I'm really annoyed.
Nothing works.
You want to go, okay, imagine this was Italian.
So you've, you've, you've looked at a book on Italian, you've taken three classes
and you don't speak fluent Italian and you're complaining.
So we do need some modesty here just in order to be properly ambitious.
I mean, as you know, you know, the root cause of sort of early despair and early
retirement from things is a false picture of what success demands in an area.
And I think in the area of emotional improvement or maturation, we sometimes
let ourselves down by thinking it's going to have an ease, which it won't have.
It's interesting thinking about how language shapes our experience of emotions and our
experience of the world that German, for instance, has a colourful number of ways to describe
certain emotions that you can't in other.
You said, well, does the fact that we have the word for it almost unlock that emotion
in a way that allows us to do self-investigation. Yes, I think philosophers watching this, philosophers of language may have
arguments prone in it, it's a big thing, but I definitely feel that the more words we have,
the more we can attend to what we feel, and in some cases, the more we can feel. I remember learning the word anxiety when
I was a teenager and thinking, wow, that's a really useful word. Probably nowadays people
learn anxiety a lot earlier. But in those days, it was a fascinating word to learn.
And the more one's vocabulary stretches, the more you're able to put a flag in bits of
your psyche that are perhaps painful.
And I think if you think about why people go to psychotherapy or even frankly what motivates
a lot of friendship, it's somebody else helps to give you a vocabulary for bits of your
mind and bits of your experience that have not till now, that have eluded definition.
And that definition is not merely,
it's not merely a fancy thing, it's a life-saving thing because the more you can define, the easier life gets.
Freud speculated that the origins of language
lie in an ability to bear frustration
so that if a child can think, you know, I'm currently
frustrated, but you know, mummy's coming back and I've got, and the person's got those words,
then that can help you to bear missing and also bear excitement or, you know, all sorts of things.
Things can become more bearable the more you can put them into language. And I think, you know, all sorts of things. Things can become more bearable the more you can put them into language.
And I think, you know, adults know this when we go about journaling, right?
You know, what, why, why is it so helpful to journal, um, to, you know, cause we
know it is all research shows that it is.
Um, what is it about translating a feeling into a word for that feeling?
That's helpful.
Translating a feeling into a word for that feeling that's helpful.
And I think it tames it, um, contains, and it narrows the spread of difficult emotions.
It's very ephemeral, right?
You've got these thoughts up here, moving around, floating about, and
then they have to be concretized and it, you're right, it almost feels like
it squeezes it through an aperture of some kind.
You say, okay, this is what I meant by that.
It's not this notion.
It's not this sort of ambient set.
It's somebody shouted up a noise in the next room.
It's like, Oh no, it's here.
Yeah.
I can touch it.
You can see it.
Yeah.
That's right.
And, and, you know, think of, think of relationships, couples, the more
their vocabulary for what they're going through increases, the more they can say. You know, I'm feeling this, I'm feeling, you know, when you do that, I
feel this, et cetera. And the enemy, you know, the sort of normal word is people who say
communication, but it's really language. It's putting language to feelings. And so much
goes wrong in life because we're unable to do it. It starts with ourselves.
We can't do it with ourselves.
It was a useful phrase that psychotherapists use to work disassociation.
It's a fascinating concept.
What would it mean to disassociate?
And the way it's understood so therapeutically is that you could feel an emotion.
It's so difficult, tricky in some way, and you then stop feeling it.
You disassociate from the feeling that's in you. It's still in you, but and you then stop feeling it. You disassociate from the feeling
that's in you. It's still in you, but you're no longer registering it. Tricky, tricky. And
the argument is always the more you can associate and the less you can disassociate, the better off
you will be. But look, there are many bits of life that are unbearable to us. Let's remember
this. There's a wonderful quote in Middlemarch, George Eliot, big, fat, 19th century novel,
where she says, if we could properly register the full sounds of life, we would lose our minds from the full richness
of existence. In other words, if you were sensitive to everything that's around you,
would sort of go mad. And I think if we think about what madness is, so-called, colloquially
called madness, if you think
of people with severe mental illness, very often what has happened is that their ability
to sequence thoughts has gone.
Everything is coming at them and they can't grade thoughts.
They can't say, this thought must go away now.
So they'll go, I made a mistake 15 years ago.
And if you're balanced, you'll go, well, that was 15 years ago.
And it's just, it's not, it's not a problem.
We can, we don't have to have it pressing down.
Um, if you're, if your reason is, is buckling often, everything that is
alarming comes at you at once, everything that is difficult at once.
And, um, so in a way I'm, I'm sticking up for the ability sometimes to take
distance from our feelings.
So, you know, I started off by going, it's really important to know what you're
feeling, but let's also remember at points, the ability not to feel the full
force of everything also belongs to health.
So it's, it's a double edged sword there.
What's your advice for how people can heal a negative inner voice?
We've got this odd artifact that we've carried with us, this inheritance of our
life, but kind of almost some previous life of ours.
Where should people begin if they want to have a more friendly inner voice?
Such a good question.
I'd say you have to start by finding the inner voice because it
doesn't announce itself as an inner voice. So how are we going to, you know, we're not
talking here about literally hearing voices. Some people do, but we're not talking about
that here. What we're talking about is a way of speaking to yourself or a way of, you know,
a way of conducting yourself in your own mind that owes more to something from outside
than from inside and that is more negative, or we can put it this way, unfair to you and your chances,
your hopes, etc. So how do we detect this is even going on? Because I don't think it's necessarily
obvious. Here, I think that it's quite helpful to get people to do what are called sentence completion
exercises where you start off with a stub sentence and then you have an ellipsis, dot,
dot, dot. So men are, women are, life is, I am, I want, if, dot, dot, dot, because,
dot, dot, dot. And you say to people, right, here's a list of these things.
Without thinking too much, right, important,
important prompt without thinking too much to say the
first thing comes into your head, men are women are life is
I am etc. Or even beginnings of stories, story completion
exercises. When I meet someone that I dot dot dot just finish
finish that sentence. And what people will come out with is
fascinating. They'll go, you know, men are cruel. Wow, dot, dot, just finish that sentence. And what people will come out with is fascinating.
They'll go, you know, men are cruel. Wow, wow, wow, men are cruel. A person might even be surprised
that they've said that. And you say, okay, where does that come from? What led you to believe that?
And often what you'll find is a story that owes more to something outside than something inside.
you'll find is a story that owes more to something outside.
There's something inside, you know, or, um, you know, when,
when I meet someone, what will happen is dot, dot, dot, you know, um, they'll be very friendly to me, then they'll turn against me.
Wow.
Wow.
Where did that come from?
It's, it's going to be a specific story in the past that, you know,
is being carried forward.
Isn't it interesting that we're talking about maybe the thing people identify
with most, you know, the texture of their own experience, the landscape of
their, of their inner mind, but you're then saying, well, this may not
fully be self-generated, this might be something which you've absorbed from
the past, from society, from norms, from cultures, from the way that you've
compensated for past traumas, et cetera, just habits.
But it brings up an interesting question, which is, okay, so who are you?
Where are you in this?
Are you that voice?
In some ways you are because you're inexorably linked to all of the experiences you've had.
But then we have this sort of transcendent us, which is better.
It's the better us.
If only I could, it's the me without the compensation, the trauma, the et cetera.
Such a good question.
You know, we're not, sometimes we have this idea of, you know, the real me that is separate
from everybody else.
We are penetrated by society.
You know, think of how we're speaking, right? We're using
words as we speak to one another. Every one of those words is both spoken by us and was made by
other people long before we were even a rumor in anyone's mind, right? We are penetrated by society.
Every one of the words that I am using is the result of generations and generations of people
who've used those words, refined their meaning, et cetera,
and then given them to me.
So that's literally the language.
We're permeated by social language.
Even our biology, as we know,
our gut bacteria is both us and not us.
So the neat, Chris, Alain, we are these sort of entities
where you can put a strict circle around there,
we're interpenetrated by society, biology, history, et cetera. So then the question comes,
well, is there anything that's more me, less me? And I think here, absolutely, absolutely.
And I think that one of the journeys,
life's full of journeys.
One of the journeys that I think we all are on
is to start to separate out a little bit.
Well, I can understand there's a lot in me
that was just put there by society,
by the context in which I was born.
Which of those bits do I wanna keep or focus on?
And which of those bits do I want to keep or focus on and which those bits do not fully represent, you know, my values,
my considered choices, etc.
And this is where life gets interesting because people start
to say things like, well, where I come from, normal meant dot
dot dot.
But the more I think about it, the more I'm reflecting on who I
really am, the more I want to it, the more I'm reflecting on who I really am, the more I
want to ditch that and that and that.
This is a form of editing process.
Self authorship.
Absolutely.
And, you know, I think that the more mature someone is, I'll use that word because you
used others.
The more mature someone is, the more what they do, what they think, the values they hold, owe more to their own right, a very small child is often remarkably authentic,
which is why we adults in small doses, at least have such great time with little ones,
because they come out with stuff and you think, oh my God, I can't believe they've just said
that thing.
You know, they've just said that granny's nose is too big or that this restaurant's
boring or this very expensive thing is a load of rubbish, et cetera.
They'll come out with stuff that is non-normative. And that's very interesting because as an adult, you recognize
your own spontaneity that's been lost normally. So it's kind of bittersweet. You don't want
exactly the child's version of it because that would lead you into trouble, but you
want an adult version and it's very hard to get. And probably the high watermark of the opposite is when you're 14 and a half and you're at
school and your most fervent wish is to be like everybody else.
You want your parents to be like everybody else.
You want your name to be like everybody else.
You want your appearance, your haircut, et cetera.
You cannot bear difference.
And then slowly, slowly you individuate, you know, um, and, and that's a very exciting
journey.
Seeing I don't think anyone, everyone, anyone individuates in all areas.
So I think the first choice is what are the areas that matter a lot to you?
Um, I'm interested in individuation, but when it comes to clothes, you might have noticed,
um, I kind of, you know, it's a really interesting area, but I just, I'm just in individuation, but when it comes to clothes, you might have noticed,
it's a really interesting area, but I'm just leaving that one for another time. I'm just not engaging with that. Similarly, food, fascinating area, very interesting, not quite on my radar yet,
but other areas, what I'm reading, very opinionated, very individual.
So I don't think all of us can do it in all areas, but we choose.
And that's also part of what makes someone an individual.
I love the idea of children being unencumbered by sort of expectation in that way.
And yeah, trying to find the balance between what would the mature childlike version
of ourselves do or say in this moment? Where have we found ourselves to
swayed by the opinions of others, by expectations, by societal norms, et cetera.
Do you remember that story of Picasso who was going around an art school,
little kids were doing art and some kid was sort of scrolling, you know, mummy, whatever, and this kid was seven. And Picasso said famously, when I was his age, I was painting like Raphael,
you know, one of the great Renaissance artists. And it was sort of true, I mean, young Picasso.
And then he went and it's taken me all my life to remember how to paint like this.
Unreal.
And it's taken me all my life to remember how to paint like this. Unreal.
Now, he didn't, you know, an adult painting like a child is not a child painting like
a child.
It's something different, you know, which is why we people go, oh, a child could have
done that.
Well, when a child does it, it's one thing.
And when an adult does it, it's another thing.
And I think it's quite different.
And I think that's why, you know, when you look at Picasso, and there are lots of artists
and lots of figures you could sort of draw that analogy with.
But, you know, when you're looking at a painting that Picasso did when he was
90, what do you mean 90, you know, at the end of his life and it, it's got elements
of stuff that a child might do, but it's gone through, you know, that this guy
has been doing so much other stuff.
So he's got deeper reasons.
Did you ever read his dark materials by Philip Pullman?
No.
Okay.
Trilogy of children's books, ostensibly, I guess.
This was my favorite series when I was a kid.
And in it, the protagonist Lyra finds this truth teller, it's called an
alethiometer and for some reason, this particular device, it takes an entire lifetime of
study to be able to read it.
And as a child, she can do it immediately.
So it's this beautiful arc and it was the first time I ever thought about it.
And Pullman takes you through unconscious incompetence to unconscious competence,
to conscious incompetence, to conscious competence.
And one of the final scenes of the entire book at the very, very end, uh, she goes back to the, uh, uh,
nunnery where she was being raised five years ago before the story begins.
And, uh, she's lost the ability to read it.
She hits puberty and it's kind of this fall.
It talks about kind of the awareness that her and her partner now have.
And she says, I can't read it anymore.
And the nun turns to her and she says, uh, my dear, it's going to take you an
entire lifetime, but the depth of knowledge you have will be greater than it ever was
before.
And it's that arc and conscious incompetence, unconscious competence,
conscious incompetence, conscious competence.
And that finishing side, something that's been earned, you found your way there
through effort, agency, self authorship is, is, yeah, it's, it's special.
Yeah.
And I think, you know, it's, it's interesting, isn't it?
When, when people who've read a lot, thought a lot, et cetera, come out with
stuff and it sounds very, very simple.
And I think our society gets a bit puzzled by that because the because the sort of obvious respect goes to people that
speak in a very dense way and you can't quite understand what they mean. So, you know,
philosophy, discipline, I started out in, you know, the heroes there, like Wittgenstein,
Hegel, Kant, etc. It's very, very hard. Not superbly accessible. To make headway. And then,
you know, you turn to the East, you look
at Eastern philosophy. You look at the poetry of someone like Basho in Japan, medieval Japan.
It's so simple. It's, you know, it's four words on a piece of paper and very easy to go
very easy to go mumbo jumbo or child's play or whatever. And to be mature enough to go,
okay, I'm going to bear with the anxiety that this is
very simple sounding, simple sounding.
In the East, the idea is that poetry,
for example, can sound very, very simple.
The point is that it's an interaction between the reader and the work.
So not everything is in the poem or the saying.
You bring yourself to it, and therefore, the ultimate impact of that work is a collaboration
between you and the work.
Fascinating.
So the Western view might be to go, there's not that much in there and it's the artist's fault.
Your job.
Whereas in East, the view is, well, it's a collaboration. So if you're not seeing anything,
it's because you're not bringing enough of yourself. So very interesting to get lots of the
arts. And we think of that Enzo in just a circle. This is the whole
of life. Whole of life. You're just doing a circle with your brush. And amazing, amazing
the courage to say, okay, we're going to go with this. The whole of existence is this
circle. And if you meditate profoundly enough on this, you will see the world,
not just in a grain of sand, but in a circle, et cetera.
And we really meet a fault line here in the Western understanding of depth and
profundity where this takes a bit of time for the Western mind to kind of get to
grips with that.
We're like, come on, is this a joke?
Are they, you know, they just peddling as something?
Yeah, probably not.
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Why do you think we struggle to connect with our emotions fully?
Come on, let's be honest here with the audience.
We know what emotions are like.
They're not just lovely cuddly things.
They're absolutely terrifying a lot of the time. Think of what it takes. Think about love, right? So,
people, we think that people spend their lives looking for love. And half true, that's a half
truth, is spend a good deal of time running away from love as well in all sorts of forms.
We are as assiduous in our escape from love as we are in our pursuit, perhaps more so.
Why?
Because it's terrifying.
It's especially terrifying if you come from a childhood or a young world where
there was some kind of disruption in your attachments, in your, you know, in
your experience of love.
The next time you then meet love as an adult, half of you is just wanting to run away.
And I think people don't still not fully appreciate enough the strength with which we are going to resist love if our earliest experience of it was in any way, in any way difficult.
And this explains a great deal of the misery of the world.
It's very interesting to think about how much we try and push away the thing that we're also wanting, like how we are complicit in creating the scenario that was so terrified of having happened.
I've been thinking a lot about second order emotions, third order emotions.
So, um, you have a thing that happens, you feel agitated and then you begin
to tell yourself a story and you become stressed at your agitation and then you
become resentful at your stress about your agitation and then you become anxious about, and that additional layering,
this kernel that we began with,
with regards to the emotion sort of explodes out.
And before you know it, you're feeling an emotion
that's not only the thing that started,
but it's an entire universe away.
And this is now the problem, not this.
That's right.
And I'm not sure if I understand you fully, but is it really the case that you
are not accepting the primary emotion?
You know, so let's say, uh, you go somewhere, it should be nice.
You're disappointed.
You can't be disappointed.
It's meant to be nice.
You can't, you can't accept that disappointment.
And then you're angry with yourself for feeling disappointed.
Um, and then, you know, and, and on it, whereas if one could just go, okay,
maybe it's, it's all right to be disappointed.
I mean, it's not, it's not brilliant, but, but there it is.
Or I'm feeling sad.
Okay.
Well, that's not, wouldn't be what I wanted, but let me not be sad
that I'm sad or angry that I'm sad.
Well, I think this is why we have certain signature emotions
that are feel like home base.
There's ones that we're intimately familiar with
and there's ones that scare us a lot more.
And a unsatisfactory, but familiar emotion
is often more safe to us than a slightly novel,
more exotic, but scarier one.
And also I think happier one. I mean, you know, but scarier one. And also, I think happier one.
I mean, you know, just a minute ago, people escaping love,
people also escape happiness.
I mean, the way I think about it is that very often we're in a
situation of, it's like being a prisoner, you've been in kept in
jail for a very long time, your diet's been restricted, it's not
been much fun, then the gate opens and you're allowed to walk
out. It should be a great day.
Fantastic.
You're free.
Now, you know, we know what happens.
Uh, let's say you've been on calorie restricted diet.
Suddenly someone says, you know, here's a buffet.
You can eat anything you like.
You don't want to eat it.
You can't, you can't digest it.
You can't process it.
It's too much.
So, you know, something similar goes on in our attitudes to, to happiness.
Often, I mean, it's useful to say to yourself, ask yourself in the And something similar goes on in our attitudes to happiness often.
I mean, it's useful to say to yourself, ask yourself, in the circumstances in which I
grew up, what did it mean to be happy?
And for some of us, it meant upsetting a parent.
It meant challenging the dominant mood in the household.
It meant taking away attention from somebody else.
It meant danger.
And that's odd because we
think why would it be dangerous to be happy? Well, but there are all sorts of risks associated
with it. And so in our deep minds, sometimes in adulthood, we simply cannot accept the
circumstances of our lives and therefore go about spoiling them so that we put them
more, you know, there's a wonderful paper called something like a criminal psychotherapy
paper, criminal in search of an offense, a sense that you've done something wrong.
If you carry that from your past and you think, how am I going to get rid of that feeling?
Oh, I know, I'll do something wrong.
And then I won't feel that feeling anymore.
Sometimes, you know, it's a bit like that.
It's like saying, um, I'm feeling happy, but I shouldn't be happy.
What should I do?
Oh yes.
I'll make myself unhappy or, you know, I'm feeling loved.
Someone's offering me love.
That's not normal.
Yeah.
Don't I don't recognize that feeling.
Oh, what should I do?
Oh, I'll drive them away.
Yeah.
I'll, um, I'll, I'll, I'll go and be rude to them or go and have
an affair with somebody else or whatever it is, something to spoil something that's nice.
So the impasse to spoil is really the happiness and love are hard to bear.
I suppose if reality is not delivering our model of the world, our expectation of the
world, our prediction of the world, we have discordance between the two.
And there are two things that we can try and do. We can try and bring our model of the world, we have discordance between the two and there are two things that we can try and do.
We can try and bring our model of the world up to reality, or we can try and
bring reality back down to our expectation.
Exactly.
Beautifully put.
Is there a danger of intellectualizing challenges of emotion for smart people?
People that like to read and consume YouTube channels like yours or podcasts
like mine, and like mine and.
We like to investigate ourselves.
We want to understand ourselves and the world around us.
And maybe we've even got the theory from evolutionary psychology that explains
why this is adaptive and, and, and that we're ancestrally, we are made up of.
How, how much is that a prophylactic against us actually having to feel things and how can we better break through this intellectualizing of emotions and rationalizing of them away?
Let's start with compassion.
You know, we are the way we are, you know, for poignant reasons, not, you know, we didn't get to be that way.
You know, think of the bookish child, you know, think of the child who's reading a lot.
Often it's because life around is quite difficult. Now, it's great to read, it's good to read,
etc. But if you spend all your time in books, that's often a sign that things are challenging.
And so often people who excel at intellectual pursuits, etc., are in flight from an overwhelming situation, I'd wish
them well. In time, the overwhelming situation could get a little less intense and they could
get a little more of reality into their intellectual world. I mean, I'm describing myself. Perhaps you
want to try and see reality
for what it is. And if you're warding it off with intellectual structures, let's say thank
you to those structures. I think it's really important. Whenever you look at people doing
stuff that seems a bit suboptimal or a bit strange, they're reading too much, they're
jogging too much, they're trying to make too much money, whatever. They're feeling too much, they're feeling too little.
All of these departures from so-called health normality, et cetera, always ask yourself,
why are they doing it? And it's normally a defense, it is a defense against a situation
that was very difficult at some point. They learned that defense. And even though it would
be optimal now to let go of that defensive
structure, they're still clinging onto it because that's what feels safe.
It feels safe to make jokes all the time.
It feels safe to be very serious all the time.
It makes it feel safe to be depressed.
It feels safe to give up.
Um, it feels safe to try and win at all costs, including your own health, etc.
All, all these are defensive structures that once kept us safe, that I think in order
to evolve, we almost want to say, thank you.
Thank you to your younger self for working this out, for finding a way of coping
with reality, but could we learn to cope in a slightly different way?
So great.
Well, I'm interested just taking that one step further in the difference
between knowing ourselves
intellectually and knowing ourselves emotionally.
I think even in my less equanimous moments when I do journaling, I find myself writing
more of an essay than a personal inquiry.
And yeah, the difference between knowing ourselves intellectually and
knowing ourselves emotionally again, for the cerebral minded praying at the
altar of cognitive horsepower people.
Um, it's a coping mechanism.
It's a way to distance yourself from this.
Yes.
And I think, I think our minds it's, it's, it is much easier to have the headline
than the meat of the topic.
And very often we reach a sort of an uncomfortable state
of half knowing ourselves and we think,
oh, I've covered it, right?
I know in my childhood there was this
and then there was this, then there was that.
And you kind of go to the headline, tension with my dad or tricky with my mom, whatever it is.
And we think, oh, I've got that. I know it now. Let's go back to the Eastern Enzo circle, right?
And the East says, meditate for hours repeatedly on the thing that looks obvious, the thing that you know.
So they're saying the whole of life is that circle. So look at that circle and keep coming
back to it. And the more you look at it, the more you will see in it. And the Western approach
is a bit too impatient. It'll say, all right, yeah, it was tense with my dad. I know that.
I'll go, hang on, hang on, hang on. That's an enzo of its own. It was tense with my dad. You could meditate around that
for an hour a day or an hour a week or whatever. You can keep coming back to that. It's never,
there are so many things still to be discovered there. It's not dead. And so I think I'd almost
want to excite those who are listening to think, okay, I think I know something.
Do I really know it?
Might I go back there?
Our real experiences tend to be so much richer than our workaday sense of them.
Think about a holiday, right?
Say have you ever been to Greece?
Oh yeah, I went to Greece.
All right, have you been to Santorini?
Yeah, I've been to Santorini. Okay. So we think ever been to Greece? Oh yeah, I went to Greece. Um, all right. If you've been to Santorini, I've been to Santorini.
Okay.
So, so we think we covered that one.
Person's been to Santorini.
Hang on.
First of all, our minds are amazing mechanisms of capture.
You know, we've got cameras around sound equipment, et cetera.
Nothing beats the human mind for capturing absolutely everything.
Um, often the time to explore this is sort of twilight of
your mind, as you're going to sleep or waking up. If you say to yourself, yeah, Santorini,
what was that like? What was it really like? And you realise, oh my God, I remember there
was a tiled hallway that led to a blue door. I actually remember there was a flower in
a little vase and there was light coming in from, I think it must have been from the left. And actually, if I looked to the right,
there was a little window, et cetera. And it's all there. It's all in your mind. Just
waiting to be asked, waiting. This is the famous, can I talk about Proust? Marcel Proust,
great French novelist, early 20th century, et cetera, came up with this famous idea of
the Proustian moment.
Some of you'll know it, some of you won't.
It's basically a moment when you take something sensory, like a sip of water or a smell.
Imagine the smell of concrete after rain or the smell of snow just after a snowfall, et cetera, and suddenly you get that sensory experience and a world opens up.
You think, oh my God, I'm five years old again
and I've just gone outside of the garden of the yard
where I grew up and there was a brick wall
and there was that exact smell and I'm there again.
And suddenly your world becomes so much richer.
And these are just little moments of expansion
around a topic like after a snowfall or first
air spring or Santorini, whatever it is.
So in other words, many of the things that are in our minds in intellectually compressed
forms can be expanded with the addition of, I mean, you know, the sort of fancy trendy
modern word is meditation, but you know, some
people don't get on with the word meditation.
Let's just say by giving it some time, by allowing an experience to assume its proper
shape.
And we do rush past our experiences.
Things are very compressed.
And that's why at the end of an average day, my goodness, how much we've seen, how much
we felt, how many little things cross consciousness.
If we were able to give some of that space, how much lighter we would start to feel,
but we, we live so much and we experience so little, we see so much and we notice
so little.
What would you say to the obsessive person who wants to learn to let go a
little more, A lot of
what I see in the circles that I move in is a need for control, a desire to limit down the potential
paths that the future could go down, to sort of constrain how unpredictable reality could be.
And I think the optimization, life hacking, productivity world is very much a part of this plus a denial of death.
If I can fit more life into less time, then maybe it's kind of like living longer.
Yeah.
But yeah, that, that need to control that obsessive sort of requirement to be able to wrangle reality as you wish.
Can people learn to take their hands off the wheel a little bit more easily.
Well, I think, I mean, I think, um, the simple answer is that these people are
running away from something, um, which is painful and difficult, et cetera.
And they're not allowing themselves to think about it.
They're not even allowing it inside consciousness.
So think of the, think of mania. When we say
so-and-so is in a manic mood or so-and-so is doing something manically, what we really mean is that
they're doing something in order not to do something else, normally not think about something or feel
something. And we all end up in certain points in manic states where, you know, we're, we're scrubbing
the kitchen just a little bit too assiduously, or we're jogging a bit too hard, or we're
scrolling our phones a bit too much.
And really the question to ask ourselves at that time is a very simple one, which is if
you weren't able to do what you're doing now, what might you need to think about or
to feel?
And the answer is there waiting for you.
If you can bear, it could be a very, very awkward question to ask yourself.
In other words, you know, if you weren't able to clean the kitchen manically or if they're
joking, et cetera, but you just sit with something, what do you need to sit with?
You know, the old saying, don't just sit there, do something.
Don't just sit there and think, do something.
Well, imagine, you know, don't just do something. sit there and think, reverse it. You reverse it. And what is it that
you need to think about? Yeah. Yeah. The coping mechanisms that we have and the
inventive ways that we come up with alchemizing and justifying. Well, a lot of the time people
will say, it's better to be addicted to the
gym than be addicted to drugs.
I don't think that's a particularly controversial statement.
Yeah.
If that's the binary choice, then yes.
Of course.
But then I realized recently, but maybe over the last year or so, I spent a lot of time
meditating toward the end of my twenties and trying to turn myself out of the adult infant
into maybe an adult adolescent.
And, um, most people would look at meditation, you know, sort of an
emotion arises inside of you.
You notice it, you release and allow like that's, you know, a common sort
of tempo that you have brilliant.
You know, you, you, you are no longer as at the mercy of this particular emotion.
Uh, but it was only when I started doing therapy, uh, as first ever suggested by
Charlotte, one of your ex staff from your school of life, uh, it was only after
doing quite a lot of that, that I realized that even meditation or maybe breath work
or going to the gym or whatever it might be is still another way of not having to actually
investigate where that emotion has come from. And meditation particularly, or something more like
breath work perhaps, is a, not nefarious, but it's a very, it's so close. It's internal. It feels sort
of self-investigative. It's mindful. You go, this running 50 miles a week, but there is another strategy, which is not forcing you to turn the eye back down to.
Where's this coming from and why does it keep on arising?
And if you have this very good strategy to release these things as they move
through you, uh, that will, that cycle will continue.
And I don't think, I think that's a very good strategy to
really get the idea of what's going on.
And I think that's a very good strategy to release these things as they move
through you, uh, that will, that cycle will continue.
And I don't think, I think that, uh, those emotions are worth even investigation.
So, so Chris, how do you define therapy or how do you, how do you define what
therapy might, might bring you that's a bit different from meditation?
I mean, my, my, I did, uh, twice a week psychotherapy for the last year or so.
Um, and it was, I've said this before it, I learned more about myself in a year of
twice weekly psychotherapy than I did in 1500 sessions of meditation.
And if you could characterize what, what was different, but how therapy operates.
You have another party investigating your statements, the language that you use.
I use the analogy that it felt like, um, living in a house your entire life.
And then one day just inviting somebody else in and they're walking around and
they start pointing out doors in a house that you know intimately well every inch. And they start pointing out doors in a house that, you know, intimately well every inch.
And they start pointing out doors that you never even knew existed.
And you go, what's that over?
And you go, and you open the door and you realize that the back of the kitchen actually
leads into, I always wondered how those two things came together.
And it's this sort of odd, it's very humbling.
I found it very humbling experience to see somebody else who knows me for a hundred hours point and say, what about,
what about that?
I think, I think one has to be really, I mean, that's a beautiful way of putting it.
Um, I was be totally relaxed about that and just say in the same way that you,
you can't see the back of your head.
It's just one of those things.
Um, it's not, it's not, you know, we're just, we can't see some very obvious things.
I mean, a therapist, a trained therapist can see within minutes,
things that have eluded someone for their whole life.
Um, very humbling, very humbling, but, but, but, you know, someone can
do it for the therapist as well.
It's everybody is like this.
We're just, that's how we're wired.
And best thing to do is laugh.
It's, it's, it's funny.
I mean, it's funny how inept we are.
Um, but as everybody's in on the joke, we can laugh together.
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You said, uh, talking about the emotion thing just from before.
And I think that this sort of comes into when you're regulating, opening up with
someone, whether it be a therapist, a friend, a partner, or whatever, the sort
of need for comfort and reassuring kindness.
Look, you can say these things.
Yeah.
I'm not running away. I don't find
you despicable. It's actually kind of interesting. Maybe it's charming for you to do this.
I mean, this is really very much at the core of what we could understand by the word love.
Think of it in childhood, a loving parent, right? The child, the young child gets an experience that who they really
are is acceptable to someone else. So, you know, little child will go, I hate the teacher.
And the parent, good parent, is able to bear that even though it's not perfect. The parent
is able to go, oh, okay, well, wonder why? What's, you know, why? Why they upset you?
Sounds like they might have upset you. Rather than someone who
go, don't be so silly, the teacher's the teacher and they work very hard to give you an education,
so don't complain. Wow. That's a tough comment.
Your emotion is not valid.
Your emotion is not valid. I mean, parents do their best, but goodness me, stuff happens
in that crucible of childhood that is a bit suboptimal. But,
you know, love, come back to love, what love is, is accepting. You know, I don't want to see granny.
Okay, you don't want to see granny. All right. Or, or I really love you, or I really hate my sibling,
or I really like the dog, or I want to live forever. We know all the stuff that little children
come up with. Or I'm terrified of daddy, actually. I don't like daddy. Okay. Well, let's think about that. What does that mean? So being able to accept and then in
later life, again, having someone, it could be a therapist, it could be a friend who is
able to bear the really difficult bits of our psyches, which we all have. I mean, we're
all so much weirder than we're supposed to be so much sadder, so much more worried, etc.
And to be able to have someone, you know, it might only be one
person or two, if we're really lucky and three, if we're, you
know, God's gift, who can bear and who we've allowed into that
sort of private sanctum.
That was one of the realizations that Charlotte first taught me.
And then I learned through my therapy over the last year, one of the very unique.
Uh, parts of a therapeutic relationship is that you're allowed to be as small or
boring or petty as you want.
And those are areas that with a friend or a partner, it's really difficult to do
because you're managing optics in some way.
You're thinking, well, it's my job to kind of entertain this person, even if
they're there to sort of sit and listen with me, like not that, not the fact
that the way that the lady in the canteen ladled my beans today seemed a little
bit disparaging or dismissive or something in like, Oh my God, how
shameful for me to think that that's something that should play on my mind. I, so small, I, you know, the story I tell the second, third, fourth
order emotions come in.
And, um, that is one of the very few, it's that and your mum, a kind of.
Not even your mum, because most, as you say, most relations, it was all
relationships you have to manage and you have to curtail the fear of being
abandoned, you know, if you, if you were
too honest. This again, the canteen lady and the beans again, this is the third time in two months.
Think of how this plays out in couples, right? So people come together,
because they're fed up being lonely, right? You know, you, it's lonely. So you try and find
a special person and we, we dignify this concept by saying, I'm in a relationship, you know, I'm,
I'm a special friend, I'm getting married,
et cetera. We've got these words, but really what this means is I'm no longer so alone
in a terrifying world. So you have this special person. And in the early days of love, it's
thrilling that you can say stuff that you wouldn't say to anyone else. And it's so delightful. You
can say things like, I still long for my teddy bear. And they go, I long for them too. And then
hug to the teddy bear. And it's so amazing because, you know, you're the CEO, and you know, you're an important lawyer, doctor, banker, and actually, you're clutching
your teddy bear. And it's amazing. Or you can go, I really want to put mayonnaise on the pizza.
And that's great. And then, you know, you push it further. And then you go, I'm going to go to a
museum, but I don't like any of the art. I don't like it either. Or I've never read that book, but I always pretended I did.
And it's just thrilling.
And, you know, and then, and then sex gets invited into, you go, I like
this strange sounding thing and they go, I like it too, I like this other thing.
Et cetera.
And you're building a wonderful universe.
But, um, you know, this is the challenging thing about love because, you know,
let's imagine you're with this person and you shared all
this stuff, etc. And then you go to a cafe say, and you, you say,
wait is hot. And then you look at their face, and they're like,
look really quite heartbroken that you've just commented on
the, you know, visual appeal of waiting staff, and they, they
feel hurt, and they feel jealous, and they feel upset. And
suddenly you think, oh, my goodness, there's a choice here
between, you know, kindness and honesty.
And I think that's what we're circling around, which is, can you be, you know,
what, at what moment does honesty run up against the limits of kindness or the,
you know, the requirements of kindness?
I think what you're saying about therapy is you don't have to be kind to the
therapist because it's 50 minute session, you're giving them money and people go,
Oh, it's a bore that you're giving them money.
Well, you know, Freud thought long and hard about this, about the role of money
in therapy and his view was it's an agent of liberation.
It's a good thing you can pay the therapist.
And that's where you want people to bring cash and leave the cash on the
table, uh, at the end of every session.
Now, nowadays you might put your card on, but, but the point is, um, it's,
it's a way of saying, um, I can be fully myself because I've earned.
This person's attention, but they don't really love you, et cetera.
And you go, maybe they don't really love you, but that's a liberation.
Correct.
Because you know, obligation, no obligation, just lingering on that balance between
transparency, emotional openness, and you said kindness, but I think that there's other reasons
to add it to, is there a place for editing yourself in a relationship? Should we not be open, honestly communicating all the time? This is how I feel.
You want to see the inner texture of my mind, don't you?
I mean, you're putting your finger on a big paradox. I think the idea that you should be
yourself in a relationship is one of the most disastrous ideas, because the untrammeled self
ideas, because the untrammeled self is a frightening specter, best kept for you and your therapist, you in the mirror. If you have to confront your partner with your stream of consciousness
at all times, you can't do this. Parents don't do this with their children. Obviously our
partners are not children, but it's telling us something about love
in a loving relationship at points.
You edit yourself, you know, it's 11 at night.
I'm not going to bring that issue up.
They're very tired.
I'm not going to bring that up.
Um, I'm feeling stressed and raw.
I'm not going to start a subject that I won't know how to handle, et cetera.
Now, all of us fail at points.
All of us fail in this area.
But I think as an ideal, it's a good idea.
I mean, I could stick up for a word
which sounds very odd in the context of love, politeness.
You know, it's a good idea to try and be polite.
I'm like, oh, that's fake, that's fake.
Well, it's also kind, you know, to edit yourself,
to put a veneer of civilization on certain things.
Yeah.
Why not?
There's a very slippery slope with that though.
A lot of people, especially if they have started doing therapies and self-inquiry, some emotional
work, think, God, like I should push the amount that I'm emotionally open.
I should improve my transparency for so long.
I played a role.
I was terrified of making my, my needs known, my desires, putting myself
first, realizing that I even have needs and putting those out there.
And now there's these odd bits of territory that I shouldn't stray into.
What happens if I stray over there and the tendency for you to overcorrect
and go in the other direction,
Neil Strauss says, unspoken expectations are premeditated resentments.
And you know, we have this balance between the two.
Yeah, you're absolutely right.
There are some people who need to work on being more transparent, more communicative
and others who need to be less technical
where I think for it is reactive.
You know, they're not, you shouldn't come out with whatever it is that you're feeling
at all times in its full force.
It just depends.
I mean, you know, that classic anxious avoidant attachment pattern, we might say that on the
whole avoidant people need to work on their communication skills, you know, and they need
to be more transparent and avoidant and anxious people need on the whole to
contain certain feelings, you know, and it's just horses for courses on this one.
What would be your advice to people in the classic anxious avoidant relationship,
the two polarities coming together?
Understand, understand, understand where each one's coming from.
I mean, why is someone an avoidant?
They're not evil.
They're not mean.
They're not, you know, it, it can be pretty horrible to be on the receiving end of
certain kinds of pattern of behavior, but let's remember why, why does this exist?
Someone becomes avoidant when they've grown up in a calorie, emotional calorie
controlled diet environment where they have had to get
used to very little.
The way they survive is, mom's not so interested, dad's not interested, no caregiver around,
a lot of disappointment.
I'm just going to hunker down and get used to very little, literally like an animal that
gets used to a very thin diet.
That is what has happened to an avoidant person. And then when they
get to love and someone goes, I adore you, let's spend every evening together. You're
marvelous. They feel a bit, often they don't even understand that they're feeling it, totally
engulfed. They feel overwhelmed. They feel their very identity is in threat of dissolution
by something that's lovely, but it's too much too soon.
What they need is an experience of love titrated. They need the titration of love.
But often they don't know how to ask for it. They don't even know. Often they might smile
through it and go, I'm not really feeling this. And then they can't bear it. They can't bear it.
And then they run away or just become weird or something. So, explanation, you know, hello, I'm somebody who had to get used to a very, you know,
calorie controlled diet emotionally.
You know, I really feel warmly this relationship matters a lot to me, but the kindest thing
is not to be too kind to me in an overwhelming way.
The most generous thing is not to be too abundant, not because I don't want this, but because I grew up in a situation of deprivation. So that's our
avoidant friend. Anxious friend, similar kind of story of explanation. Why do people become
so called anxious? Normally because unlike the avoidant person, they have had an experience
of love. So in some ways, the anxious person has had a better childhood, better journey
through life in a way. They have experienced love, but they've also
experienced loss and the disruption of that attachment.
So someone died, someone went away, someone had to go to the army, someone
had to, something happened to disrupt the bond.
It was very intense, but it was disrupted.
And that person needs to understand that they are, you know, it's a wonderful
sentence from Donald Winnicott,, great psychoanalyst who said,
the catastrophe you fear will happen has already happened.
And the key thing is it's been forgotten.
You forgot the catastrophe.
And that's why you keep seeing it in the future,
whereas actually it belongs in the past.
So what you need to do is understand this structure
and repatriate the emotion and put
it back where it belongs.
And so the avoidant person at dinner, you know, on an early date needs to go, you know,
I really want to believe in your love.
But if you say you love me, I might not be able to believe it very easily.
And what I will do is test it.
And the person might go, oh, test,
oh, fine, fire away. And the anxious person should go, yeah, this test can be quite unhealthy,
quite horrible. You know, it's going to mean that when you say, I love you, I'm going to
start to act up because I want to see if you really do. So I'm going to be really difficult
around you because not because I don't want you, but because I want to test whether your affection is really real. And the
only way I know how to do that, because I'm carrying this stuff from childhood, is to act up, play up.
And so when we're in a nice restaurant and you tell me that, you know, things are great,
I'm going to say, actually, the food's not that nice. And I don't really like the clothes you're
wearing. And I'm going to cause a drama. Why? not that nice and I don't really like the clothes you're wearing and I'm going to cause a drama.
Why?
To test whether the love is real.
Very unfortunate.
So the more the anxious friend can get on top of their anxiety, the more they can translate
everything I've just said into something that sounds like it's been processed and can be
understood by another person, then the better it can be.
So anxious and avoidant people are walking wounded and they need
to be able to explain the nature of that particular wound so that appropriate
care can be, uh, set up awareness, awareness, which is why, you know, it's
great for people to go to therapy.
It's great for people to explore themselves.
Um, it's not merely fancy. It's great for people to explore themselves. It's not merely fancy,
it's not really whatever. It's a serious indicator of an easier life with them. I mean, if you're
with a partner who's able to go, okay, hang on a minute. I think I'm confusing you with my mother
at the moment. Or I think an anger that actually belongs to my father is weirdly in the room,
because that's what happens when you start to explore your past. You see the intermingling
of past and present all the time. And the more you're able to handle on that and warn your partner,
the easier it is. I mean, we don't need people to be perfect. We need people to understand
how they're imperfect and warn us of the coming imperfection or
retrospectively apologize for it in relatively civilized terms.
That's what we need.
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and modern wisdom at checkout. How malleable are our attachment styles?
The foundations of them able to genuinely be moved or is it a case that the best we
can hope for is to just compensate for them in adult life?
I'm hopeful here that we can definitely make progress and wherever we start, we can make
progress that a temperament where we're inclined to close ourselves off because we constantly
think that no one will be able to understand us.
Once we start to think, okay, this is what I do.
I feel very easily misunderstood and I go and essentially sulk.
Once you notice that, that's a big step.
And we're so good at marking milestones.
It's somebody's birthday.
Let's throw a party.
Somebody's just run a marathon.
Let's give them a medal, et cetera.
We need different kinds of medals.
You know, the medal for the avoidant person who understood that they sulk
rather than explain, don't let's put them on television.
Let's give a game show in their honor.
These are major milestones.
Let's give a party.
Let's give a party to the person who's understood that that's going on to mark.
There's much more significant than their birthday,
you know what I mean? Which might not be tracking anything significant.
That's a significant milestone.
So we, we should, you know, give more public within our circles, public
recognition of moments of emotional maturation.
And how much is that?
You know, I think lots of people envy the other side.
If only I could have a little bit of a little bit more of that anxiousness.
If only I could actually lean in a little bit more, if I could feel a
little bit more easily, if I could communicate or God, if I could just
be a little bit more distant, if I didn't need the reassurance in this way,
if I didn't have this requirement to feel safe in order to be able to feel comfortable.
I wasn't externalizing my own sense of self-worth onto somebody else quite in this sort of a
way.
Yeah, I think it's a question, you know, attachment styles are kind of the hot new girl in school,
psychological, emotional work at the moment, very trendy.
It's been around a while. It has. In a good way. And it's based on very solid science. You know, it's, we've been going at this for 50 years.
I looked at some really interesting stuff recently that, um, attachment
styles, like everything psychologically, uh, genetically predisposed, not
necessarily predetermined, but predisposed, uh, and given that you are
raised in the environment, which is probably the, uh, breeding ground for
that very predisposition, it gets reinforced.
Yeah.
So not only have you got the raw materials to make this thing happen, but
unless your parents have somehow managed to sort of pivot in the opposite direction,
you then get this additional boost, which is a wall, the environment, uh, nature
came along and nurture then enhanced it. Yeah. Uh, yeah, the environment, uh, nature came along and nurture then enhanced it.
Yeah.
Uh, yeah, it's, um, it's interesting.
It's going to be interesting, I think over the next few years to see what sort
of interventions we have to be able to help people to ameliorate.
Yes.
And I think, um, not, not to try and sound trendy and, you know, think, but I
think AI is going to have a real impact on us,
in a sense that so often what happens is we lose sight in the moment of things we know,
but are no longer in our minds. Right. And so people will have, you know, let's say a couple
have a rather torrid time, difficult time, and then each one goes to therapy in the, in the week,
and then they all come back and they're kind of, they're starting to, you
know, they're back on track.
They can, they can see things more clearly again, or they've spent some
time alone, they've journaled, et cetera.
Um, I can imagine a world where we allow technology to nudge us in the same way
that, you know, we've learned that technology can nudge us awake, nudge us
asleep, nudge us to eat this, nudge us, you know, um, you know, imagine a little
nudge for an avoidant, a little nudge for
an anxious person, et cetera. A little reminder, hang on, hang on, hang on. You're slipping,
you're sliding. Psychotherapists talk about the window of tolerance where it's a window in which
you're in charge emotionally or you're kind of in control and you slip out of the window of tolerance into something, you know, you lose command of yourself.
And you can imagine a little AI helper just nudging you to stay within the window.
Yeah, your attachment strap has piped up and said, notice you're a little bit stressed
at the moment.
This might be because of X, Y and Z.
Yes.
And you know, it sounds supernatural and strange and you know, a lot of people would say things like, oh, it's not,
I don't want to give my data, blah, blah, blah.
Okay, I grant all of that and it could be spooky, et cetera.
It's no different from,
think of people who've got their first word, religions.
Religions understood that if you want to keep people on track,
you've got to get them repeating stuff.
It's not enough to tell someone something once.
You need rituals, systems of memorializing the
important things.
That's why if you're in Islam, if you're Muslim, you'll be praying multiple times a day.
You'll be saying the same words because those words have, as it were, been forgotten, not
intellectually, but emotionally.
Their full resonance has been forgotten.
In Judaism, you're reading
the Torah every Saturday in synagogue, you're reading the Torah and you just go back over
it. You don't just read it once, you keep reading, you keep going back to the same important
texts. We're very bad at that in the modern world. We think, oh, well, I read this book
on attachment. It was quite interesting and now that's it.
I know it now.
I know it now. No, you don't. You need to go back. You need to read it all the time. That's why, you know,
the idea of nudging is not as strange as it might sound. Not as futuristic. It's a very old idea
that you might give new life to. One of the most shameful or humbling realizations of going down a
personal development journey for a while is that the tool
that you're looking for to the problem you're encountering now is not
only something that you know, it's one of the first things that you ever
discovered when you began this journey.
It's maybe something you wrote about.
It's maybe something that you practiced for a very long time.
And I often get asked, I was doing these live events recently.
And one of the most common questions is, um, what advice would you
give yourself 10 years ago? The interesting thing about that question, I was doing these live events recently, and one of the most common questions is, um, what advice would you give yourself 10 years ago?
The interesting thing about that question, I think, is that the answer that
you give, what you would tell yourself 10 years ago is almost always invariably
the answer that you right now need to hear as well, because the big problems
remain the big problems because they're so fundamental to who you are.
If they weren't fundamental to who you are, they would
probably not be the big problems. If you were able to detox that it's, it's the ancillary stuff.
It's the extraneous outsides that you end up tinkering with, but the core, you know,
the, the middle of the cake is this chocolate is it's strawberry.
Uh, that's really where it is.
And, um, yes, to think.
Not only is this challenge that I'm encountering, you know, to break the fourth
wall, I've used a number of videos from the school of life over the last decade, when
I've encountered the same situations.
Like I already, I've, not only have I watched this, there's been periods where I've learned
entire passages from this as a little mantra that I can reflect on. I go, I'm going back to the same, but that you're right, this temptation novel
new, there is a, there is a better answer.
Well, we're five years hence.
There must be something that's come out in the last however long.
And, um, I guess this is what art and heritage history, uh, does, that it
helps to sort of strip that away.
What's stood the test of time. What's been sufficiently Lindy that it's still sort of strip that away. What's stood the test of time.
What's been sufficiently Lindy that it's still with us now.
Yeah.
You know, it's TSL is in the four quartets is, you know, we return
to the place where we started.
It's the idea of that.
That's kind of part of every journey is you come back to the place where you
start an entire story of the alchemist by Paulo Coelho, right?
Exactly.
And so I noticed also when you were speaking just now, your smile on your lips.
And that's not coincidental.
I think the more, you know, one journeys through life, um, the more there's really
only one major solution, which is a smile on one's lips at the sheer, let's put it
bluntly, idiocy, absurdity of oneself.
You know, at the School of Life, we did a class on confidence and we wrote
a little book about confidence.
Great book.
And, thank you. And I remember sitting with my co-author, great friend of mine called
John Armstrong. And I said to John, because we started the topic, she's like, okay, what
makes us confident? And we'd read a few books, each of us on like bestselling books and they're saying things
like repeat yourself, how great you are, beat yourself, your potential, get in touch with,
you know, and I said, I've read all these books, I'm starting to feel humiliated.
I know that it's kind of wise, but I don't know.
And then I remember John saying to me, okay, what makes you for
comfort?
And I said, if somebody goes, it's okay, you can just be a total idiot.
It's all right.
You, you're a bit of an idiot and it's okay.
Not you're an idiot, but we're all idiots.
That makes me feel I'm ready to play.
I'm ready to have fun.
I'm ready to take risks.
Removes the seriousness.
Remove, well, remove the, an inhuman expectation of what a human life can be.
Pressure.
And, and accept that when all of us blockheads who can't really make very much
progress and, um, and you know, there's a wonderful painting, which we put in
the book by a Bruegel.
So there's ship at sea. Yeah. It's the ship at sea.
Yeah, well, the ship of fools. And anyway, forget this exact title, but it's showing people doing
mad things, silly things. One person's eating his foot, the other one's walked into a wall,
the third one's jumping off a cliff. And it just shows human folly in all its exaggeration. And
you think, yeah, that's us, that's we humans. And that opens up such an avenue of compassion.
You just think, okay, compassion for yourself, compassion for the other.
We're all flailing about in the darkness.
And if we can have a relaxed relationship to our foolishness and our
blindness, that's a huge confidence booster.
Yeah.
I want to, I want to try and linger on that as well.
I think, again, the sorts of people that listen to the show, the sorts of people that
that read your work, um, they'll probably take life seriously.
They think it's a thing that you're supposed to apply earnest pressure to perhaps a kind
of sort of dynamic persistence, but maybe more persistent than dynamic. And, um, what's your advice for people to try and embrace some more
playfulness when it comes to life?
Serious, serious things.
I want to be taken seriously.
I want to do things.
I want to make an impact in the world.
I don't want to grip too tightly.
I know that when I grip too tightly, it kind of ruins the entire point.
Well, I think, I think the way is not to, not to say, Oh, what you is a bit, you know, lighten up and tell a few jokes, because I think that's not
going to, that's going to rile people up. I think the thing to do is to push some pessimism their
way, because it's actually, if you think about what a joke is, a joke is always basically a bit
of pessimism wrapped up in, you know, artfully wrapped, but it's basically pessimism. One of
my favourite sayings by the Stoic philosopher
Seneca, he goes, what need is there to weep over parts of life? He says, the whole of
it calls for tears. And everyone who hears that sort of gets a smile on their face. And
you think the guy wasn't trying to tell a joke. He wasn't trying to make it funny.
He was just trying to be bleak and say it how it is. And then it makes us smile out of relief.
And the relief is, phew, it's not just me.
Arthur Schopenhauer, another great pessimistic German philosopher said,
today it is bad, tomorrow it will be worse until the worst of all happens.
Death.
You know, totally bleak.
And you read that and you think, I feel a bit better about today already.
I'm starting to cheer up.
Um, I think we really get it wrong, but we think, we think the only way to cheer
someone up is tell them someone cheer, something cheerful.
I think the Brits have understood this, you know, right?
We, you know, quite this country's got lots of problems, but one thing it
understands is melancholy and the relief available in dark humor. And, you know,
bless our American friends, but they don't get it. If you pitch up in LA and someone goes,
how are you? And you go, you know, it's bad today, tomorrow it'll be worse.
It'll be the worst of all happens. I don't know if you've sectioned. It's not, you know,
your life in Los Angeles is not going to take off.
Yeah.
I've heard you refer to melancholy as tragedy well handled.
Absolutely.
Uh, I, I adore that.
I think it's so great.
You know, Sam Harris has something, he says something very similar, you know,
you have to smile at the absurdity of life.
He, these situations, just as things were smooth, something comes along and
completely sideswipes what you had planned.
Yeah.
Um, and an interesting insight, I suppose that the volume that you complain is
probably proportional to the amount that you aren't, you're unable to see life for what it is, which
is not at your whim.
Life is going to have problems thrown at you.
Yeah, but Chris, let's not do down complaining.
I mean, it's one of the great pleasures.
It's one of Britain's great pastimes.
Well, you know, it's one of everybody, you know, and, and, you know, being
able to complain to a loved one and you'll have to listen to their complaints too.
But, um, to complain without expectation of a solution.
I mean, the big complaint that every mortal, uh, you know, directs to the sky
ultimately is why do I have to die?
And, you know, and then you work your way down from that to why do I have to go to
work, why do you know all these things?
But, um, yes, life would be a poor thing if we, if we weren't allowed to spend a
good deal part of it complaining. I've heard you say that, uh, adult relationships are a poor thing if we weren't allowed to spend a good deal part of it complaining.
I've heard you say that adult relationships are a litmus test of our emotional development,
that they're a moment where your past catches up with your present.
How so?
Why is that the case?
So the way we love as adults always bears the imprint of the way which we were loved and we loved as children. And that hugely
restricts how we're able to behave and explains the very peculiar, often nonsensical, often
counterproductive ways in which we love. We're not free to love just anyone. And this, you
know, I'm sure you'll have had this in your life, met people, et cetera,
who will say things like, seem to have ended up with quite a difficult person for me.
You know, they're really, they're quite challenging for me.
Why can't I go and love somebody else?
Why am I so in love with this person who's quite challenging?
And often it's because what's challenging sits on the very area that was challenging
in your past.
And that's what makes them attractive.
Now before we want to jump off a cliff at the pessimism involved, let's be a little
optimistic here.
In a good relationship, we are drawn towards people who, yes, carry some of the puzzles,
some of the knots, some of the challenges of a parental figure or figure of a caregiver.
But they hold out the promise of a different ending. So whereas in the relationship with
parent or caregiver, it ended up with shouting and you stormed out of the house and you're
no longer in touch with them. Imagine the joy, imagine the sense of triumph over adversity and human non-communication
if you are together as a couple able to move towards understanding and mutual growth.
I think that explains why people hang in there with people who you might think, you know,
attachment theory, an anxious person who, who teams up
with an avoidant one, you might want to go, why, why are you
with this avoidant person? And you look at this other, I'm
going to present you with a perfectly securely attached
person, and you go, oh, they're a bit boring. Don't really want
them. Why? What's going on? Is this pure perversion? Let's be
generous towards that impulse that trying to find a different
ending to probably a very painful
early situation. And to be able to do that, to be able to grow together is literally, I think,
one of the most exciting and lovely things. It's rare, which is why successful love is rare.
But to grow together away from your early attachment wounds powers a lot of the ambition of luck.
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Seems like deciding whether to stay in or leave a relationship can sometimes be a protracted decision,
which might be surprising given that we have this short time on earth and we don't want to waste it.
I think a lot of people have problems breaking up with someone, even though they might not make them particularly very happy.
Why do people get stuck in unhappy relationships in that way?
Hmm.
Um, th th there are, you know, I think the, the mood of the modern world,
the mood of modern Instagram I've observed is all about, well, ditch them,
chuck them, run away.
It's, it's a pure pathology.
You are, you are sticking around someone suboptimal for purely pathological reasons.
Um, that's got to be true in some cases. It is definitely true in some cases. sticking around someone suboptimal for purely pathological reasons.
That's got to be true in some cases.
It is definitely true in some cases, but because it's so well known
nowadays that that's true, let's stick up for the other side.
Sometimes it's hard.
Sometimes we, we stick around very challenging situations because.
We want to try and grow together, we want to try and make progress. And sometimes we can, sometimes we can't. So, you know, it's a balance. I
don't want to advocate, you know, an endlessly unfulfilling relationship, but good relationships
will be marked by a heavy dose of what Psychotherapist call
rupture and repair, a break and a repair.
And the ability to, you know, the thing crashes at night, but the next morning
it's fixed, you know, our friends in the East, you know, the Japanese tradition
of Kintsuki fixing that bowl with golden lacquer, fixing the break.
It's a very, very important and satisfying part of all relationships.
Yeah.
Yeah.
What about the people who are in a relationship, but don't have the courage to leave?
They probably have this, they feel stuck, sort of stuck in this unsatisfactory,
not abusive, not terrible, but just they have that fear, pulling the pen, making that move.
Again, you know, you talked about primary secondary emotions.
Let's not shame these people, right?
Let's not add to their woes that they are deficient and ill in some way.
They're finding something very hard and that's okay.
Let's bear with how difficult it is.
You know, again, I'm frustrated by the modern tempo,
which is like, get out, shoot the awful person,
you know, and join the liberated uplands.
Maybe, maybe, and maybe that is what they're gonna do,
but, you know, let's be very thoughtful about why
they've ended up there. They might find a hundred things in life quite easy. This is what they're
finding difficult. And let's acknowledge that. Let's be very kind to that. And let's hold their hands through it. You know, why? What's difficult for them?
Is it that they think that they'll be judged by other people? Right? What's the fear? What's
the fear? I'll be judged by the people. Okay, how does that fear stack up with what might
really happen? Or I'll never meet anyone new. Okay, let's think about that. Let's not immediately
say, oh, you will. Maybe they won't, you know, let's take it calmly, et cetera.
I just, I'm really resistant to some of this narrative, which is, you know, get
out, get rid of the awful underperforming people and get into that golden
relationship that's been promised to you in heaven.
It's not, you know, that may be the direction of travel, but let's
just acknowledge the bumps.
Yeah, I think it's unrealistic.
You know, there's a lot of people who just don't want to make a fuss that
there's this sort of fear, this question, is it fair to want what I want?
You mentioned before, how do people that from the outside, you go, why,
why her with him, why him with her?
Why, why would that union happen?
And, um, we don't get to choose what we love in many ways, you know?
Absolutely not.
We are, we are, you know, we think we've done away with the arranged marriage.
No, we haven't.
It's just become an emotionally arranged marriage internally arranged rather
than arranged by our parents.
Yeah.
I think, uh, again, for the cerebrally,brally predisposed, you kind of rail against that.
Why can't I, why, if only I could, can you not get in line with you?
Please, all of the things, they're there in front of me.
They have the...
And we get literally irritated.
And just to be able to understand, it's like saying, you know, why can't Mount Everest
be smaller? Why can't the sky be less blue? Whatever. We're trying to change a constituent
element of reality. And, and I think we need to have as much respect for the inner architecture
as we do for the outer architecture. You wouldn't look at a building and go, I just want to
get rid of that wing immediately. You'd understand that it was incredibly difficult. It's the
same thing. Just because it's intangible doesn't mean it's not incredibly
stubborn and hard, you know, it's hard to change.
Do we need to, uh, build, create the capacity to give up on people
in that way?
Does that help?
Um, yes, I think some of us do, you know, the, you know, again, it's
life's all about finding what's the thing that, what's the lesson that
you need to hear. So there are some people, um, not know, again, it's life's all about finding what's the thing that what's the lesson that you need to hear.
So there are some people, um, not everyone, but some people really need to hear, um,
a little lesson about how sometimes they should give up on people, but sometimes
making excuses for people or trying to understand where people are coming from,
et cetera, it can go too far that that those very nice traits can go too far.
And that the next best thing that you need to do is to be able to say goodbye without too much regret. That might be the lesson
that you need to do. And let's remember the people who on the whole find it very hard
to give up on people are people who couldn't give up as children can't on parents who are
very unsatisfactory. You can't expect a five-year-old child to give up on a parent. So a parent can be beating the child every night and the child will think, oh, maybe it's my fault,
because the child cannot bear to give up on the parent and do the thing that would be natural to
do, which is to say, I'm in the hands of an abusive parent. You can't do that when you're five. You've
got no access to lawyers. You've got no money. You can't go anywhere. You are trapped. And therefore,
you become a world expert in not giving up on people.
But some of our adulthood requires is precisely the opposite sometimes.
Getting perilously close to people pleasing here.
Uh, and that sort of tendency to put other people's emotions ahead of our own, make
their emotional state our responsibility.
If you're not okay, I'm not okay.
our own, make their emotional state our responsibility. If you're not okay, I'm not okay. How can we better alchemize that and understand that tendency?
I mean, look, let's remember. So the psychology of the so-called people pleasing person is
someone who no one tried to please for themselves. In other words, they were in an asymmetrical
relationship probably with a caregiver or parent who didn't care about their feelings, they didn't prioritize
their needs, et cetera. And they had to adjust to them. So, you know, if you've got a parent
with a volcanic temper where anything might set them off, well, what you say or think
is going to disappear completely because all you're going to be doing as a child is managing
the mood of a parent. They will be an infant essentially, and you will or think is going to disappear completely because all you're going to be doing as a child is managing the mood of a parent.
They will be an infant essentially, and you will have to be in the parenting role and
you'll have to put aside your needs.
And children are great geniuses at reading the room and doing what needs to be done to
survive.
It's a survival strategy.
I will become a people leader not in order to annoy people in later life, but in order to survive, in order to get to the next stage of existence, in order to reach adolescence, let's face it.
And the problem in this, as in so many other neurotic structures, is a very good idea outlives its use.
And so it's still operating in circumstances where it's no longer needed.
So what we need to tell, what the people needs to tell themselves is, it was amazing at the
age of five, I cleverly worked out that I needed to people please in order to cope with my intemperate
father, but that situation is now gone. And if I keep doing this with my partner, with my colleagues,
etc., it's going to annoy everybody and it's going to create serious problems. So what needs to be
done is that person shouldn't feel shamed. They should be made to feel
proud. There should be a little ceremony where they're able to say to their five-year-old self,
thank you. Thank you little whatever it is. Thank you for carrying me to a later stage and working
out something so clever. And this applies for all defensive neurotic structures. I mean, let's
imagine somebody who can't feel very much, who's invulnerable, doesn't open themselves up to other people. And in relationships,
that person may be shamed. Oh, so and so, they're afraid of intimacy. You want to go,
okay, shaming this person is not going to help. You have to ask another question, which
is in what circumstances did their current behavior make sense? First question. And it
always will make sense. You go back in
time and you say, right, in those circumstances, of course it made sense. You know, your father
was dying, your mother was absent. Of course it made sense not to feel anything. You would
have been destroyed by your feelings. Therefore, very clever, five or six year old, you to
work out that it's best not to feel. Problem is you have 35 or 45 and there's lots of
reason to feel because there's someone loving nearby or you've got children or whatever. And therefore
we need to say thank you to the younger self and then we can move on. But shame is not
going to do it. To wag a finger and go, oh, another one who's afraid of intimacy. No one
ever changed like that. Yeah. The, uh, Realization that doing that internally, being a tyrant to yourself also isn't necessarily
the best way to encourage you into behavior change, whipping yourself into submission.
Yeah.
It's, it's, it's missing the logic of, of why you're doing what you're doing.
As I say, so much of what we do as adults makes no sense even to us.
You know, why am I worried every morning?
Again, ask yourself the question.
It's a key question for your viewers, listeners.
When did the current behavior, which now doesn't seem to make sense, when did it once make sense?
In what circumstances did this pattern develop, this pattern that is now Inverticom, mad or destructive or boring or counterproductive.
When did it make sense? And if you can start to see a logic, and there always will be one,
I would suggest, almost always will be one. There will be a moment when to feel anxious every morning
was bound up with your safety and your survival to the next stage of life.
So if you can recover contact with what that stage was, you will then be in a position to honor the
defensive strategy, but also say goodbye to it. CB What are some of the best and worst ways to
tell somebody that it's over in a relationship? LL One of the worst ways is not to explain at
all why something has come to feel necessary.
In other words, just running away and leaving someone no sense.
Because that then leaves the person to imagine everything.
And most of our imaginations are dark places in this regard.
In other words, we think that someone hates us boundlessly or is trying to humiliate us
or deliberately wants to be cruel to us, et cetera. And in many, many cases, I venture to say most cases when
someone leaves someone, it isn't those things.
It's the truth is better than we think.
It's still tough.
You know, it's very, very tough.
You know, those attachment ruptures in everyone's life,
they're some of the most painful things we will ever have to go through to build a life with someone and then see that life disappear.
I mean, we need space to mourn.
You know, in Judaism, when someone dies, you lose a spouse.
You're allowed a year of mourning.
You wear black and you have a lot of year of mourning when not too black and you have allowed a year of mourning.
Where not too much is expected of you, both professionally and personally.
You can go a bit mad and that's all right.
Everyone looks after you.
They know you're in mourning.
We kind of need that when we're heartbroken, when we're seriously, because we're dealing with something that is, from an emotional point of view, as serious.
This is as serious.
I mean, it literally is a loss. Someone has died, you know? And
so we need that space. So to come back to your question, how to break up, to be able
to explain diplomatically, kindly, generously, some of the real reasons why. And as the person
who's leaving, not to feel that those reasons, not to be
ashamed of those reasons. You know, people feel relationships don't have to go on forever.
Sometimes relationships have a sell-by date. They are there. They were formed for a particular
purpose, unconscious, to carry us to the next stage. And maybe that stage has come to an
end for someone. And we can explain that. can try and, you know, verbalize that. But
also clarity. And sometimes people try to be kind in ways that end up being very, very
cruel. I want to leave you but let's go on holiday together. Can I? Is that a wise thing?
Or I want to leave you but let's be in touch every day. You know, I'll just still call you what I used to call you.
You know, when we were very intimate, tough, that's tough.
So we, we may, you know, couples may out of kindness and a mutual respect go,
you know, there's still a lot of love, still a lot of affection, but probably
we shouldn't be in touch that much for a little while.
You think it's a bad idea for exes to try and be friends?
Um, look, it depends, but I think, I think, you know, there needs to be healing.
Doesn't there needs to be, um, a break that's marked and honored so
that two people can, um, recover.
How do you come to think about the balance between fixing our patterns,
investigating them and dwelling on them.
It seems like a lot of criticism is thrown at sort of reflecting on our past as akin
to indulging in it in a way, not allowing us to move forward.
Yeah.
This is a common debate that I'm seeing online at the moment.
Yes.
And people, I think are very afraid about responsibility here, aren't they?
They're very afraid that someone will go, oh, sorry, I did that thing.
But the thing is, it's my childhood.
And that's why, you know, and the people will evade basic responsibility.
So I think one can take full responsibility, full ownership while still explaining it.
People are also very worried about blaming parents often.
That's another one that comes up a lot.
You know, people will go, if I start to investigate patterns, etc., the only solution is then
to get angry with my parents.
Well, again, there's a real, you know, people are lied, was like anger, blame, etc.
You can, you can say this happened because of childhood dynamics, no one really wanted
it, maybe no one's evil, but it definitely happened.
And you know, we can't evade that.
Um, you know, is the result anger, fury? So it doesn't have to be sometimes it could be, um, uh, yeah.
So.
Look, it's so many of these lessons.
It's it's horses for courses.
We, we, we
Broad strokes are very difficult with stuff like this.
I understand that, but yeah, I think I'm dealing with an unhappy
childhood retrospectively, not resenting things that happened to us then.
And we're now at the mercy of wanting to be able to investigate why we are the
way we are whilst not allowing that to define us.
whilst not allowing that to define us.
Um, I don't know, there's, there's an interesting movement at the moment,
almost towards denial.
We've got, you know, the horseshoe was horseshoe back around it. It's been rotated a couple of times.
And, uh, I wonder whether this is just a, a requisite push back to some of the
over pathologization of normal human emotions, you know, the use of therapy
language online that somebody hasn't been
mean to me, they've caused me trauma.
That that person isn't selfish.
They're a narcissist.
And, um, yeah, I I'm starting to see now a little bit more of a lean away from
reflecting on why you are the way you are.
Uh, and again, it's very much, this is just one cohort of people saying that
cohort of people over there, their strategy doesn't work for me and vice versa.
Um, look, I mean, we're a car that needs different gears.
You know, sometimes we need to go forwards.
I'm just going to backwards means to turn right, which is on left.
We need full maneuverability.
Right.
And I think when people discover an exciting idea, the great
tendency is to go, well, this toolkit will explain absolutely
everything and this will be the only thing I need.
And this is why we need the whole history of ideas.
This is why Wellstocked Mind has got in it some books on the Stoics, as it were, some
ideas from the Stoics, some ideas about resilience and about shutting down emotion and about
turning towards pain and all that. We need that. Sometimes we need an aristocratic side. We might have read Nietzsche
and his aristocratic sense of, you know, you need to overcome and, you know, what doesn't kill you
makes you stronger, et cetera. Sometimes we need Nietzsche, but if you're only dieting on Nietzsche,
you may also need, you know, John Bowlby in attachment theory, but if you're only snacking
on John Bowlby. So we need a well-stocked mind. And I think that,
as I say, I appreciate that people fall so in love with certain ideas that they think that's all they're going to need. It's monotheism, only one God. And the great thing about paganism,
ancient Roman or Greek religion, but you find it in's finally in India too, and other parts of the
world. There were many gods. There was the God of the river, but there was also the God of the sky,
and there was the God of the cloud, and there was the God of rain, and there was the God of sunshine,
and there was many, many gods, and we need many gods. And just as in our social lives, let's
remember, you know, total monotheism doesn't, you know, it's like, I need one lover, and they will
answer all my needs. Ah, that's quite tough on the lover.
Um, you may also need a friend who's brilliant at that thing.
And there's friends who's also good at this.
So we need a, um, a paganism of ideas.
My friend, uh, Gwinda has this idea called the golden hammer.
When someone usually an intellectual who has gained a cultish following for
popularizing a concept becomes so drunk with power, he thinks he can apply that concept to everything.
Exactly. Exactly. We think it's the hammer that, you know,
the one size fits all. Yeah. And this is everything looks like a nail that slots into your very
specific, very fancy gilded piece of work. Yeah.
Look, but you know, we can forgive it. It's, it's very exciting when you come across an idea that you think and does explain a lot of the world. And this is what happens when people
discover Marxism. They go, oh my goodness, this model explains everything. And then no, it's
really good at explaining certain things. And then they discover Freud, Freudianism, it explains
everything. No, go study. We need multiple tools. I wonder whether this helps to constrain some of the complexity of the world as well.
What if I have one book, if it's meditations or if it's, if it's an ancient Chinese text,
if we're looking at some Lao Siu or something And you think, well, that one thing answers everything.
I don't need to look elsewhere.
And the problem is that we're finite creatures surrounded by infinite complexity.
So the, the battlefield is stacked somewhat.
The deck is, is offset against our favor.
And if we can constrain down the complexity that we're fighting with, we say, well,
we've got this one person and he's got all of the answers.
One guy has all of the answers. we're fighting with. We say, well, we've got this one person and he's got all of the answers. One guy has all of the answers.
I don't necessarily.
And, you know, we've seen it in religion.
We see it in politics.
One person has got every, you know, it's got everything and, and it can't be true.
But you're right.
I mean, we're drowning in inputs and that leads us to a certain kind of, um, yeah.
Remorseless quest for the one input.
Um, and I remember there was a,, there was a book, there's a line
saying something like, all of us are going to die with a book
half read on our bedside.
That may not literally be true, but there's capturing something
important there that our exploration will be unfinished.
It's quite daunting.
It's very sad, very sad thought, you know, that we won't, of course, the book that
we really won't have finished reading is the book of ourselves.
We won't have understood more than a share of ourselves.
That's, that's very frightening.
We'll have, you know, on an average gravestone, it should say, you know, here
lies, you know, who half understood who they were.
They only are understood. That's very weird. Like you have, you know, you're you're on your deathbed and you don't really know who you have been.
Was it Goethe on his deathbed pronounced, nobody really knows me. I don't really know
anybody else. Nobody knows anyone really. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So that kind of despair, um, surrounded by
friends and family. What a way to cut and call. See you later on. Yeah. Speaking on that. Do you
think it's inevitable for deep thinkers to be more lonely? Is the, the deep or sensitive thinker
kind of fated to have a bit of distance? It's a ticklish topic, isn't it? Because to say, um, you know, I'm not doing so well in life.
I'm a bit isolated from things because I'm so marvelous.
You know, you could go, come on.
Yeah.
You know, um, however, let's face it.
Um, you know, look, it's like, imagine, imagine you had a very sophisticated
diet and you walk through, you know, we're in
London now, you walk through this average street of London, there would be fewer restaurants and
eating places and supermarkets that you could go into to get the food that you need because
your dietary needs would be quite complicated. There's a version of this around sociability.
If you only need to talk about certain things,
if you are, I don't know, let's imagine you're Brian Cox. I don't know Brian Cox personally,
and you really just really love interplanetary phenomena. You're not going to meet that many
people who will really be able to meet you on those topics. I mean, or even be that interesting.
They might go, Brian, I loved your show, but, you know.
Enough of the black holes.
Enough of the black holes.
You know, and so he might find himself a little bit lonely.
I mean, who knows about his life?
I'm sure he's, you know, but, but.
He used to be a rock star.
You know that?
Yes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Very cool.
Or imagine if you are, I don't know, imagine if you were Freud and, um,
Freud was, you know, he had some collaborators, but he also fell out with a lot of them and didn't get on with,
you know, lots of people.
So one might argue that complexity of mind militates against easily finding.
Fewer people like you.
I'm going to have to work harder. I would say that's fair enough.
Yeah.
That's fair enough.
Yeah.
I, we mentioned, we sort of touched on it earlier on.
I think it's maybe worth just revisiting a little bit, trying to the deeper
thinker, the most serious person, the earnest person, how can they find more fun, inject a little bit less of that, uh, loneliness in that they're
in an area where maybe people don't resonate quite so much.
They don't have quite so, so many of the conversations that they need.
Can I answer a slightly different question?
Mm hmm.
I'm just cause look, I think it's really important to think that the deep thinker, the, the earnest
person,
et cetera, I don't want to suggest that there are these people called geniuses wandering
around the world and they're so different from everybody else.
I love this quote from Emerson where he says, in the minds of geniuses, we find our own
neglected thoughts.
So key, in the minds of geniuses, we find our own neglected thoughts. So key, in the minds of geniuses,
we find our own neglected thoughts.
I think what he was saying there was,
geniuses don't have thoughts that are categorically different
from the ones everybody has.
What's different is they hold onto them,
they look at them, they feel them.
You could say in the minds of artists lie feelings
that lie our own neglected feelings.
In other words, artists, geniuses, etc., they're just paying more attention to the stuff that's
in everybody's mind.
It's not that their stuff in their mind is completely radically different, which is why
often when you hear a great song or a great piece of poetry or whatever or read a great
book, sometimes you think, I kind of knew that that was already in me, that I'm merely
being put back in touch with something that's in me already, because what the
so-called clever person has done is just pay it more attention.
So let's not deify these people.
And let's also open up, you know, quickest way to become a genius, pay more
attention to your own neglected thoughts.
I'm interested, you know, having followed your work for a very, very long time.
And it's been one of the most reliably influential things, I think, on my
intellectual journey.
So I want to thank you for parasocially guiding me through an awful lot of
situations.
I'd like to say that I remind myself of your work when things
are good, but it does tend to be the sort of thing that I go to when I need a
little bit more guidance.
Uh, but I'm interested in what drives you the sort of primary motivating forces
that are behind your studies and sort of thinking over the years.
So it's brutally and horribly simple.
over the years. So it's brutally and horribly simple just to help me get through the day. It is extremely personal and motivated entirely by a desire for self-help. If it helps anybody
else. I mean, people sometimes say things like, gosh, did you, you must've studied a lot.
Um, how did you know that about me?
I'm like, frankly, I have no clue.
It's just, I was just doing my stuff and it's beautiful and lovely that it
should echo in there somebody else.
But that's not how I started.
It started always with me.
Um, and you know, I became a writer.
I wrote my first book when I was 22 and it it was not, you know, it grew out of writing
a diary.
It grew out of trying to solve my own confusions.
It was a way of trying to stay afloat emotionally, psychically.
And it had nothing to do with a career in that sense.
Later on became some of the accoutrements of a career.
But, uh, as I say, it began and it still is to this day, uh, an
emotional necessity, I would say it's a way of coping.
I am, I'm an intellectual, not a sort of fancy fancy thing, but I'm
an intellectual in the sense that I intellectualize pain.
I, you know, if something horrible happens, my immediate impulse, not to jog or drink
or do all sorts of things people do, but it's, it's to try and think about what,
what is this thing?
What can we, what, what lesson is there here?
Um, and that lesson is being fished out for me.
If it helps anyone else, fantastic.
But I do it, I do it anyway.
That's how I operate.
I've found an odd resonance with what I've done with the show as well.
Um, you know, in many ways there is a, a temptation to do what may be popular or
trendy or accumulate the most exposure or status, I'll make you look good.
And that's always there. And, uh, neither of us are immune to those incentives.
Um, but I think one of the reasons that I resonated with your work and
hopefully some microcosm of people resonate with mine is it very research
very much is me search in this situation.
And the fact you're right.
How could you have seen the human experience has been really sort of shown to me.
That's like you've turned the mirror around to myself.
Like that's, it's almost like you're speaking to me.
It's well, because there's broad buckets of people that sort of fall into similar
kind of cohorts and it would appear that perhaps me and you are in a non-tood similar cohort.
And this I think is a reason for confidence in our own work and in
listening to our instincts, um, rather than trying to work out what the market,
the audience, the reader wants, just saying, okay, well, what would be useful to me right now?
What would have been useful to me previously, especially given the fact
that the thing you need to hear right now is probably the thing that you
would tell yourself 10 years ago.
So it's still, it's the same lessons over and over.
It's what looking at that circle.
Um, and I think it is a, it is the best justification for selfishly following your instincts.
When it comes to an intellectual investigation of yourself, of the world
around you, uh, because if you think a thing, if you feel a thing, if you're
challenged with a particular issue, it's probably reliable that some non
insignificant majority, perhaps of other people are feeling
the same. How fucking narcissistic do you need to be to think that you're the only one?
Me. This is a-
Because that's too mean. That's too mean because we don't think of it nastily. We think of it
shamefully. We think I've been singled out for particularly-
Personal curse.
Yeah. We don't think I'm so great and I'm alone. We think, oh God, I've been cursed.
I'm broken.
Yeah. Yeah. I'm uniquely broken. Yeah. And and I'm alone. No, no, no. We think, oh God, I've been cursed. I'm broken.
Yeah, I'm uniquely broken.
Yeah.
And you're absolutely right.
It's so important to bear that in mind.
By the time you're feeling it, other people will be feeling it too.
And it's so hard to hold onto that thought because we, well, frankly, because we see
no visible evidence of it.
We don't see people talking about it in our vicinity, in the hundred people we know and
move around. No one's talking about it in our vicinity, in the 100 people we know and move around. No one's
talking about it openly. They're feeling it, but they don't talk about it. And so we have to hold
our nerve. And there's a lesson here about capitalism here and business, which is fascinating.
I mean, it's not naturally the area I fall into. You've talked a lot about this, but
area fall into more, you know, you've talked a lot about this, but so many great businesses start precisely like this, that somebody thinks there's this thing I really want and need
or that thrills me and it sounds quite weird to everybody else.
And the person just sticks with it and just has a hunch about it.
Just as many, many business failures are all about someone going, someone doing something. And then if you, if you say to them, do you want this, would you buy this thing?
And then they go, actually, no, I wouldn't, you know, so why are you making it for
somebody else if, if it's not, no resonance with you, you know, careful,
the, you know, the biggest business disasters are people making stuff that
they haven't asked themselves.
Would I really want this?
Yes.
The word, uh, grift is thrown around on the internet a lot.
And I was, I've asked people to define it.
You know, this person is grifting or shilling for a particular
product or company or ideology, whatever it might be.
And, um, I asked the best definition I've ever heard one that I actually accept.
I don't like the word because I think it gets pattern matched
incorrectly almost all the time.
But the best definition is somebody promoting something that they
themselves would not use or believe.
I think, that's good.
And there's an intellectual version of that when someone reads a book, et cetera,
and they've lost touch and they're spouting Kant or Hegel or Wittgenstein
or whatever it may be, or attachment theory,
and it's not fitting them. And therefore there's something wrong. But I think many hours ago now,
we began in this place, which is how difficult it is to hone that authentic muscle where you
feel something, you hold onto it, you think no one else is talking about it, but let me stay with
that because I think it's a thing for me.
So it may be a thing for somebody else, even though no one's mentioning it.
It takes a lot of courage.
How much better have you become at understanding yourself over the years?
How much have you been able to nudge those fundamental physics of, of your system?
Um, I've made some progress.
Yeah, definitely made some progress.
And I'd say that I understand myself more than I've been able to change myself.
And one could go, oh, so nothing's really changed.
Understanding is a thing as well.
That is its own legitimate thing.
Do I always make wise choices now?
Am I always, you know, no, but I do understand things better.
Yes.
I think I've also better understanding my unconscious.
By that, I mean, you know,
it's also what people call their gut instinct. I do think that there are things we know without
fully knowing why we know them or how we know them. And to allow a little bit more for that
slightly mysterious form of knowing. You know, we're talking about sentence completion exercises
where you're completing sentences, just letting something bubble up from your unconscious.
Um, I try and do that more and more.
Um, but I asked myself simple questions like, you know, what's, what's
re what am I really feeling here?
Don't don't overthink this.
What's really going on?
You know, you've met this person.
What do you really feel around them?
Just say it, say it to yourself.
Don't, you know, what do you feel?
And then, and then holding onto that, that something quite important has gone on
there, that your answer captures something that a more thought laden answer might
not, um, and, and trusting that a bit more, um, in love, in work, in friendship,
in, in areas of daily life.
I would say that one of the biggest contributions, at least that I've seen
from your work for me personally is that stark assessment of the human condition.
Uh, a very sanguine, uh, some would say British, slightly self-deprecating,
honest admission of how flawed, how insane, how irrational, uh, how silly, shameful we can be a lot of the time.
And, uh, yourself, uh, Oliver Berkman, if you're familiar with Oliver as well.
Um, again, you know, sort of really embracing that British melancholic sort
of tragedy, well-handled type thing. Uh, you know, I of really embracing that British melancholic sort of tragedy well-handled type thing. You
know, I, this has been a very long time coming. I've wanted
you on the podcast since before I began it. I went back and
looked at my first ever set of notes that I had that has your
name in. I'm sure there's stuff that's a little bit earlier
than that. And that was 2017. So it's late to the party,
perhaps in the broad scheme of things, but very early to the party in my intellectual trajectory and making people feel less alone in the
challenges that they face, the day-to-day machinations, this personal curse that,
I didn't know anybody else felt like that.
At least it's not just me.
At least I've not had this thing sort of thrown down on me from above.
And, uh, yeah, I definitely, when I find myself embracing that with the show,
with the content that I create, with the thoughts that I have, with the way that
I try to direct things, with the way that I try to push people forward, um,
especially at my age, I'm 36 and this is, there's a number of different directions that
I can kind of go down.
And the one that's pulling me the most at the moment is a much more stark assessment
of the silliness and irrationality and shamefulness of the human condition.
And I just wanted to say thank you very much for helping to be a, uh, a role model for me to be able to do that more.
Thank you so much, Chris.
Lovely words.
So generous.
Thank you.
Where should people go if they want to keep up to date with more of the stuff
that you're doing?
Um, so, uh, school of life organization that I started, um, if you, if you
follow our stuff every, every day, I'm writing stuff for the, for our website,
for our app, et cetera.
So there's content coming out all the time and we've got a lot of books.
I've written 15 books under my own name.
I've written about 70 books under the school of life, uh, together with my
colleague, John, uh, so we've got a lot of stuff out there.
Um, yeah.
I appreciate you so much.
Thank you, mate.
Thank you.
Thank you, Chris.