Modern Wisdom - #910 - Dr Julie Smith - The Science Of Emotional Intelligence & Self-Understanding
Episode Date: March 3, 2025Dr. Julie Smith is a clinical psychologist, author, and content creator. Discovering who you are is a lifelong journey. Understanding your past, unpacking emotions, and gaining self-awareness are all... part of the process. So how do we move beyond our past and emotions that hold us back, to create a fulfilling and happy life? Expect to learn why emotions are so hard to understand, how to better understand your childhood, how to forgive your parents, why people keep saying yes when they want to say no, how to deal with passive-aggressive people better, how to get better at asking for help, why we compare ourselves to others so much, why its so hard to be with yourself, how to work out what really matters in your life and much more… Sponsors: See discounts for all the products I use and recommend: https://chriswillx.com/deals 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 Get a Free Sample Pack of all LMNT Flavours with your first purchase at https://drinklmnt.com/modernwisdom Get a 15% discount on your first order from Maui Nui Venison by going to https://mauinuivenison.com/modernwisdom (use code 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)
Why are emotions so hard to understand for humans?
Well, we're going to start with a big question, Zoe, Chris.
In the deep end.
Yeah. Well, I guess I've made a bit of a career out of working with people on their emotions.
And as a psychologist,
I was in the NHS for 10 years and then worked in a very small private practice.
And I would say, you know, all of that work, however diverse it was in terms of what people were dealing
with, mostly the common problem was there's this feeling or set of feelings that I have
and I don't want to have them. And there's these other feelings that I would like to
have more of the time, but I'm not sure how to access them. And nobody
has this sort of manual for how to manage emotions and how to understand them. And we
don't even really have a great vocabulary for that. You know, we're quite limited in
you think about the sort of the diversity of the different sort of minute feelings that
you can have throughout the day that apply to
different situations. They're all slightly different. You know, if you say, I feel joy
one minute, but joy in a certain scenario might feel quite different to joy in a different
scenario. You know, the qualitative differences are there and you can feel that, but we don't
necessarily have the words to express it. And we certainly don't have the sort of models to understand it. And, you know, it's only in recent years that
people have even started to talk about them. So we're in the early stages, but it's, you
know, exciting.
Are we doomed to fail in some regard there as humans that we have this very rich inner experience,
which is very difficult to communicate, to measure, to understand, to export to somebody else, hey, this is what I'm feeling.
And then you have just this limited language, which is constrained not only
by the words you know, but even by the language, you know, German has a ton of
words that we don't have in other languages that almost unlocks your ability
to understand emotions in that way. Are we fated to kind
of always be scrabbling to try and understand emotions but never fully doing it?
No, and I don't think it's necessarily sort of our failure or our limitation that emotions
can't be measured and quantified. I think it's a limitation of the method,
isn't it? Why do we want to? We don't have to do that in order to want to. There was
that real push actually in my career where we were asked to measure things on scales
and numbers. Actually, when you looked at how that would be applied in the room with
someone when you're working with someone,
it was sort of really, really limited
and how helpful it could be.
You know, if someone came back with some kind of mood diary
in which they'd kind of added a scale of,
and you get this a lot on apps, don't you?
You know, rate how you feel today out of 10
and really doesn't tell you much at all
because you don't feel it on a scale.
You don't feel a number.
You have a set of feelings that are kind of different and sometimes deep and sometimes complex and sometimes confusing.
And often it's when people are trying to kind of sell something around mental health that they try to make it really simple.
But it's okay that it's not, I think.
What's your advice for people who are overthinking everything?
Well, I think this is actually a really popular subject online. I think it's something lots
of people are dealing with. And that's because I think the way that life is set up now, right, we're all expected
to do all the technology that we have. In theory, life should be really easy. It was
all sold to us as if that will make life easier and you'll have more time on your hands.
And actually all that happened was we increased our expectation about how much we get done
and how much we can handle. And so what we're dealing with in terms of mental load
is so much more than what would have. And actually, the way that life is set up now
away from traditional roles where a man might go out to work and a woman would take care
of the family, those things were separated. But now both people are trying to do both. Actually, you're
both taking on two full-time jobs. And so the mental load is there. And so it makes
sense that people are living at a higher level of stress all the time. And when your stress
level, your arousal level is higher, you're more vulnerable to overthinking. So a lot
of people think I'm overthinking something because there's
something wrong with me or I'm just a warrior.
And I always say to people don't label yourself as just a warrior, because that
gives you that sense that you can't overturn it or you can't do anything
about it, which is wrong.
Um, you know, it, it's a habit as much as anything else, but it's also something
that is more likely to happen when you're already stressed.
So, you know, if someone came into the you're already stressed. So you know
if someone came into the room with me and said you know I'm just overthinking
everything what shall I do? Actually what we would look at is life as a whole, the
full context of it's not only what are you overthinking and how can you stop
thinking about it in that way, it's you know what is going on with the your
stress levels in general that's causing you know, what is going on with the, your stress levels in general,
that's causing you to be at that state where you're looking for the worst case scenarios.
So, because that's what you're set up to do, right? It's not a fault in your brain. Your
brain's doing a really good job. You're probably giving your brain lots of some sort of, lots of
signs rather that things aren't okay. You know, your, maybe your blood pressure is high, maybe
you're on the go all day.
And so your brain is getting those signals from in your body and from your surroundings that, uh, we're not all, you know, not all as well here, that there's a lot going on.
I've got a lot to deal with.
Be alert because something could be unpredictable here.
We need, you know, so that's your kind of state of readiness.
Um, so I think when you're dealing with overthinking,
it's important not to just deal with overthinking,
but to look at everything as a whole.
Yeah. I wonder whether there's more opportunities for people
to consider and ruminate about what's going on in their life at the moment.
Because most of the base needs for most people that are listening to this podcast are sorted.
They know where they're going to sleep tonight, they know where the food is going to come
from, et cetera, et cetera.
And oddly enough, an existential crisis or worrying about emotions, thinking about thinking
is actually kind of a luxurious position to be in, in order to be able to get to that
stage.
I'm aware that for everybody that deals with it, including myself, it doesn't feel luxurious
at the time, but it's probably an indication
that the base of Maslow's hierarchy of needs has probably been sorted.
And we're then moving on to what's next.
But yeah, the threat detection thing, the fact that there is an infinite number of potential
stresses out there and are biased towards looking at those ones as opposed to something a little bit more calming.
The calm stuff, that's not salient. I don't need to worry about that,
but I'll worry about the thing that I think I need to worry about.
So what about in the moment, somebody's in that sort of, they're trapped in that cycle,
that overthinking loop. I imagine this is something that your clients talk to you a lot about.
What are interventions or what are the ways when you find yourself doing that, that you take yourself out of it as best you can?
Yeah.
So if you're worrying, I think there's a lot of work that you would do around building
awareness of what's happening at the time.
So we formulate, so we pretty much draw out the cycle on pen and paper. We look at the scenario
that comes before. So what tends to happen in the lead up to the overthinking and what
the things that are contributing to that. And then what are the types of thoughts that
you're having? And so you build this awareness that they are usually horror story thoughts, you know, it's the worst case scenario
that you can possibly come up with and you play it out in your mind over and over again. And that
ramps up your anxiety. And then when you feel those symptoms of anxiety, whatever they are for you,
you then look, you know, become more vigilant and you become, you sort of look for more things that could go wrong. And so when you do that, when you look at the cycle, even though the minute
details will change depending on what's going on for you and what the situation
is, the cycle will pretty much always be the same.
And so you get this sort of insight into the cycle that you're going around in.
And when you do that,
I mean, in therapy you do it in hindsight, right?
So you go and you look at the week that's just gone by
and you say, this happened
and I was really worrying about that.
And that's how I dealt with the worry.
And often you're looking at what you did in response
to that feeling that then actually fed back into the cycle.
And when you see it on paper and you see that when you,
you did something to get rid of that feeling, but then actually it brought you back ground, you can see that
you're doing things that actually contribute to making it worse. And it has to be a kind
of careful process of self-discovery. But when you do it, you begin to get this awareness
in the moment as it's happening. So you start with it in hindsight, you're looking back,
and then the more familiar you become with it,
the more you start to, when you're in it, go,
oh, I know where I am.
I think that that thing again,
that we thought about last time and now it's happening.
Yeah, that's interesting. Using retrospective assessment as a predictive tool.
You go, hey, this thing happened before, maybe it'll happen again.
That pattern's beginning to come up.
So for me, when I'm under slept, if I'm under slept, my ability to sort of
regulate just falls out of the window.
So I go, okay, right.
I'm tired.
Therefore I need to sort of adjust the site on my scope to be like, am I
actually that bothered about this?
Or did I just get four hours sleep last night?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
What about fear as well?
Because I think that this is kind of a two-pronged challenge that people have.
A lot of fear, a lot of concern about making decisions about whether or not I'm doing the
right thing, very visceral emotion.
How can people better deal with fear?
Yes.
Do you know, I, I actually rewrote the chapter on fear in this book when, so
over the summer I went through, some health problems, I was diagnosed with
cancer and at that point I was about six weeks away from finishing the book.
Yeah, no, yeah, I was six weeks away when I started going for tests. And then I was about two weeks away from handing the book in when I got my diagnosis.
So I was so determined to finish the book.
And at that point I was just reading it through, right?
And I just happened to read through the chapter on fear the day after.
And I thought, this isn't what I need to hear right now.
This isn't right.
What was wrong with it?
Hit delete.
So it was probably more gentle than I wanted, um, than I personally needed.
And, and I think generally, um, they, that can happen, you know, lots of
people do need that approach, but at the time I got selfish with it and I
thought I need something a bit
different to this, so I hit delete and I rewrote it for myself.
So it's much more about, you know, in that moment, okay, fear is here and
it's necessary and it's information.
It's telling me that not all is well and I need to be alert and I need to
think about how to work through this.
to be alert and I need to think about how to work through this. And so I'm going to use that fear, but I'm not going to be the victim in this. I'm not going to be the, you
know, there's often, when you talk, people talk about cancer, there's often this idea
that that thing is attacking you and you're victim to it. And I just did not want to be
in that place at all. And so I wanted to kind of turn the tables.
And so, um, in the chapter, I talked about this idea of, you know, choosing
to be the prey instead of the, uh, choosing to be the predator instead of the prey.
So, um, sort of always being on the front foot and forward motion and looking
at what's my plan and what am I going to do next? And taking action so that I didn't feel, you know, cause you can feel,
you still feel fear when you're on the front foot, but you're using it.
And that feels so fundamentally different to sitting in fear
and just allowing it to implode.
I had this realization toward the end of my 20s when I was trying to unpack
three decades of not understanding myself.
I remember I wrote down,
action is the antidote to anxiety.
The reason for that was I became way less
fearful about the future when I was moving myself toward it.
When I didn't feel passive,
when I didn't feel like I was being blown around by the wind.
And yeah, there's this interesting,
this interesting sort of coming back to center moment,
I think with a health scare or with fear in general,
if it's really visceral, you know,
if it's emotional fear, if it's serious.
And it really does kind of remind you
about this essence of yourself.
At least I found that, that when I'm in, when I've got a big period of ruminative
stress, I actually feel oddly more myself than I do at other times.
I think it sort of strips away a lot with the bravado and momentum and inertia
that you've got going on, compensating mechanisms and the ways that you can kind
of hide things when everything's going well.
And then you kind of come back to center and you kind of remember what that is.
But yeah, action being an antidote to anxiety, I think.
And it's ruthless because the action is the exact thing that anxiety stops you from wanting
to do.
The very last thing, I'm going to stay in bed, I don't want to get up, I don't want
to be leaning in, I don't want to be sort of taking charge of the situation.
And a lot of it is being able to recognize urges and override them. So recognize that
urge to go for safety and comfort and act opposite to it. And in the same way that you do
in kind of more lighthearted situations, so I don't know, exercise, you know, you get to a point where your body's sort of hurting
a bit and you would rather stop, but you practice sort of overriding that.
And that's a big sort of skill set that is actually taught in certain therapies, acting
opposite to urges.
And you can do it in really small ways.
So you know, you might, you know, put a polo in your mouth and resist the urge to
crunch it.
And, you know, so you can do it in really lighthearted kind of simple ways, but then
what you're doing is you're kind of practicing that mental muscle really, to be able to
recognize that in moments when you need it most and, and to be able to do it.
So it's not the first time you're doing it.
Doesn't feel, you know, you, you know, the process.
It's a vicious cycle.
You know, there's periods where momentum seems to be working with you and then
periods where it seems to be working against you.
And, uh, I think what we all, everybody wants is this sort of permanent upward
spiral towards ever increasing capacity and ever increasing hope in ourselves.
But, you know, there is a, there is a vicious sort of other side to that
momentum too.
Stepping in to have a circuit breaker on that is something I think a lot more people need.
Yeah. And I think people want to feel courageous and strong. And I think what we forget is
that fear is a core component of that. It's a core ingredient of courage. You can't really call yourself
courageous if you didn't do something that filled you with fear. When you face things
that scare the living daylights out of you and you do that with forward action and you know take a sort of commanding composure in the face of those
really scary things. You start to feel that and you start to discover that what you thought
were your limits was really kind of a smokescreen.
Trust really is everything when it comes to supplements. A lot of brands may say they're
top quality but few can actually prove it which is why I it comes to supplements. A lot of brands may say they're top quality, but few can actually prove it, which is why
I partnered with Momentus.
They make the highest quality supplements on the planet.
Three of the products that I use to support my brain, body and sleep every day are Omega
3s, creatine and magnesium L3 and 8.
Honestly I try and limit the number of supplements that I rely on, but when I take these consistently,
they have a massive impact on my cognitive performance, my strength and my sleep.
Momentous are literally unparalleled when it comes to rigorous third-party testing.
What you read on the label is what's in the product and absolutely nothing else.
Best of all, they have a 30-day money-back guarantee, so you can buy it and try it for 29 days,
and if you do not love it, they will give you your money back.
Plus, they ship internationally.
Right now, you can get 20% off everything site-wide plus that 30-day money back guarantee by going to the link in the description below or heading
to live momentous comm slash modern wisdom and using the code modern wisdom a checkouts that's
Livemonentous.com slash modern wisdom and modern wisdom a checkout. It's different, you know
one of the taglines of CrossFit for a while was get comfortable
being uncomfortable.
And it was sexy or whatever, but I always felt a little bit, I don't know, it always
felt a little hollow to me because the discomfort that people were getting comfortable with
when doing a workout was something they'd elected to do.
Like you chose to go to the gym.
You already do this because you like to do it. Yeah, maybe you've pushed yourself beyond a limit that would be reasonable to even almost everybody,
but still it's sort of within your control.
Cancer diagnosis is a degree of discomfort that you didn't choose.
So, you know, reflecting, I guess, on the last year for yourself,
what's your advice to somebody who is going through a tough time with their health, uncertainty, fear of the
future?
You know, this is the personal and the professional colliding for you, I suppose.
What did you, what would you say to somebody?
I think when, when uncertainty is, I mean, that's the big thing about something like that.
And you don't, when it happens as well, it's not like this sort of big dramatic moment
where you suddenly, you know what the diagnosis is, you know what the plan is, you know what
the risk is.
It doesn't really happen like that.
It's all in stages.
So there is this sort of big period of being really uncertain about everything
and not knowing what to do with that. And then not knowing who you can really share
that with because you don't want to scare the living daylights out of everybody else
that you love. And so when there is such uncertainty in that way, the way that I dealt with it
and would do again in the future is just narrow everything down,
narrow your focus down. What's the next move? What's the next step? And let's take
that, get that get that bit done, take action. What would be an example of that?
So actually it was a really kind of strange experience where the day I got
diagnosed, the day after the consultant I was under was about to go on holiday
for two weeks and then we had a holiday booked for two weeks after that. And once he went, some more tests
came back and the treatments or the recommendations were changed, but the team wouldn't tell me
what they were because that was his role to do that.
So I was sort of thinking, okay, they're not going to tell me, so it must be something bad.
Do I cancel my holiday? What do I do? And there's all these kind of, you know, uncertainties around what to do. And I could feel as I was sat there trying to edit the book, and it was just consuming
me. And rightly so, right? My brain's saying, hang on a minute, let's sort this out.
And I could feel that sort of sense of just being in turmoil, not being able to affect
anything or control anything and just waiting.
I thought, I'm not doing this.
There's no way.
So, you know, my husband came home from work and we just, we started doing lots of research on surgeons
and consultants and we're lucky enough that we were in a position to go and pay to go
and see someone.
But I started asking medics I know for recommendations, found someone that was nearby, made those
calls, got those appointments.
And in the process of just doing that, nothing's changed in theory,
that I am moving forward and taking action.
And it felt just fundamentally different to,
I wasn't sitting there shaking and weeping.
I was, okay, what's the next call we can make?
How much does that cost?
What can we do? Who can we see?
And we did and actually helped the process.
And I found someone to do the surgery for me and all that kind of thing and it was really positive.
But yeah, I think sitting there and that's where I got that feeling of the rabbit in headlights.
I'm not going to sit here like a rabbit in headlights. I'm going to move forward and I'm
going to do something. And you can't in every situation, not in every situation, you can do that.
But, you know, I'm lucky enough that, you know, in such words, I'm lucky enough
that I was in that position where I could, you know, affect the outcome.
Trying to contribute to your own future.
Again, it's the action being the antidote to anxiety thing, I think.
Every time.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You don't want to feel like life is buffeting you around and you're at the mercy of it.
You're already feeling a little helpless.
You're already in a little bit of hell.
You know well that it's going to get worse.
So yeah, trying to step in.
I think it's okay for that action not to be the solving of the thing as well.
People often say, don't avoid know, don't sort of avoid things
by getting busy with something else.
But sometimes that's necessary for, you know,
improving the moment and not making it worse.
Well, there's better and worse coping mechanisms.
And if one of the coping mechanisms is,
I made myself feel better for half an hour today.
I did a thing that gave me some respite.
You know, it's a very low resolution way to look at what you should or shouldn't
do, like a random judgment that you're making on it, which is, well, do you think
that being sympathetically activated for 18 hours today is a good way to spend?
What if you could get that down to 17 and a half?
Okay.
Is that worthwhile?
Are you saying that that's a coping mechanism or is that maybe you actually
giving your body a little tiny bit of respite?
So looking forward, what about looking back?
How can people better understand their childhoods?
Um, in terms of understanding your childhood, I think it really helps to do.
A lot of people are doing that online with kind of bits of information that come
up on videos and stuff like that. But I think if you want to do it in depth in a really
constructive way that's truly going to help you and not send you into kind of resentment
and bitterness about everything your parents got wrong, then it does help to do that with
somebody else where you can look
at it in a constructive way that's actually going to help.
Because there's utility in going back and processing that and creating that sort of
narrative really, a timeline of, okay, this happened and that influenced me in this way
and this happened and that influenced me in this way and this happened and then, you know, and that's really useful. But sometimes if it's
not constructive, it just becomes a rant of everything that was done wrong for me and
all the negative impact that's had on my life. And that's quite dangerous in some ways, because you can then get into that cycle of
that sort of turmoil really of resentment and feeling like a victim of it. Whereas when
you do that constructively, for example, when you do that in therapy, it will be a fairly
balanced view and it will kind of look at the things that you wouldn't change and the
things that you might do and how they've impacted you now and how if something that happened in your childhood got you stuck into a certain
cycle of, I don't know, something that you do in your relationships today that you'd
rather not, then you're using that, right?
You're going to use that to then break the cycle because you're going to use that to
say, okay, I know what I'm doing now.
It's because of something that happened earlier on.
And I'm going to choose to do something different.
I'm going to break that cycle.
So it can be really, really productive, but it has to be carefully done, I think.
What about if, I mean, everybody's parents will have made mistakes, some larger than others.
Will have made mistakes, some larger than others.
How can people learn to get back to neutral with something that they can't go back and change?
There is no time machine to go and fix whatever it is.
They feel like they've inherited this version of themselves that their parents
created the pathologies, the thought patterns, the
biases, the ways of seeing the world and themselves and the inner voice and all of that stuff.
If our parents got it wrong and in the ways that our parents got it wrong, how can we
become more at peace with that?
I think in some ways a part of that work is understanding where your parents have come
from and that they more than likely had their own complex childhoods in which they had their
own damage that was done and cycles that they were stuck in. Probably they were growing
up in an era where there wasn't that education around this kind of stuff and there wasn't
that insight. So they would have been living out their own coping strategies with whatever they were dealing with. So I think that's part of it is understanding that
doesn't make it okay if your parents were, you know, horribly abusive, but it's, it's
one way of understanding these cycles that people get stuck in and how damage can be
caused often without intention. But also, there's a degree of, you know, in that parent-child relationship, often we carry
the parent-child relationship into adulthood and we still behave like the child in that
relationship.
That's just what I was about to say.
In a sense that we give all the responsibility to our parents for making it a good relationship.
And actually what you have now is an adult to adult relationship in which you
get to decide you can't change your parents.
And actually often people assume that if I could just convince my parents that
and help them to see the damage that they did and get that apology, that
everything would be better and you know, but, but a lot of parents won't necessarily have any
more insight than they had when you were a child.
And so I think we can't sort of rest our idea of healing on that, on getting
those apologies or getting their insight.
Um, because often they don't have it.
And, and often it's about developing a relationship with our parents that
they are capable of as well, so that we're not expecting more of them than they're actually able to give.
It's interesting that we see the lineage between our parents did this and therefore I am like that,
how unfair, how could this be the case? You just go, just go back one generation, just move back by 25 years and you go, well, your grandparents were like that, which made your parent.
How can you give yourself this excuse or this reason and not continue to roll?
And then the great grandparents, the grandparent, you know, you go all the way back.
Yeah.
So yeah, it's, um, it is odd.
And I think that you're right as well.
Every generation thinks that it's unique.
And I get the sense that emotionally, maybe this has been the biggest change
across one generation from sort of like boomer period to whatever ex-millennial
gen Z, just that the opportunity for people to
ruminate the challenges that people have from an emotional
stressor perspective, the information that you have to
become aware of how much better things could be as well, which
creates an ideal. And then you sort of compare yourself to, oh,
well, if only I could get rid of my anxious attachment, if only
I could get rid of my fear of the future, if only I could get
rid of my overthinking or whatever it is, which has now opened everybody up to think back more, but our parents don't necessarily
have that. They're just sort of dealing with the physics of their system, the way that it was given
to them without necessarily realizing quite so much or quite so viscerally that, well,
things could have been a different way. It's like, well, things just are the way they are.
And you go, well, okay, so what do you want? Do you want to be largely unaware that things could have been different and to
understand the way that attachment styles and child rearing and behavioral
genetics and et cetera, et cetera, work to influence the disposition you have as
an adult, or do you want to have it this way?
Like is ignorance bliss?
Because for me personally, I would much sooner be able to contribute a little bit
to have the pain of the realization that there's something which is in my hands and that there are ways that this can be changed, but be
educated on this and actually be able to make some sort of an impact as opposed to just
being at the mercy of it.
Yeah, absolutely. And I think what we have to be really careful of and you kind of see
a lot of online is this sort of resentment and bitterness, this sort of one-sided, this negative thing was done.
Parents are the bad guys, I'm the victim of the bad guys and now it's awful. And to a degree,
in the most severe scenarios where things are just awful, that's almost separate from what we're
talking about here where you can have a fairly normal childhood and there were things that
negatively affected you, but there would also have been a lot that positively affected you.
I think one way of creating antid creating sort of antidote to just feeling bitterness
and resentment towards your parents is to sort of nurture some gratitude around, okay,
these were the things about your childhood that weren't ideal. What would be the things
that you would repeat, you know, when you become a parent yourself? What were the things that you value about your childhood that you think helped you become the person
that you are or that helped you feel secure? Your parents might have been emotionally neglectful
and not spent lots of time with you, but actually maybe they held down a really difficult job and endured that so
that you could have food on the table every night. Maybe your mum was at home every day
when you got home from school with a warm dinner and had that kind of dutiful sense
of love loving you. There will be new ways of turning something and looking at it in a slightly different way that helps you to
shift, shift the feeling and, and not just sit in that resentment of, um, you know, I've, I've survived, um, despite my parents rather than the cousin.
Are you familiar with the Thomas Sowell quote?
There are no solutions, only trade-offs.
I am now.
Okay.
So this year, it feels like that's been the quote of the year for me.
And a lot of the time, what it means is trying to optimize absolutely everything
and railing against things that are shortcomings is a surefire route to
misery because you're not going to be able to get everything to be perfect.
And in many situations, something is positive and something is negative.
And the negative thing has probably come along for the ride as the dark side of the positive thing.
Yeah.
And I think that it's the same with the parents. It's so right.
You know, dad wasn't there for me sufficiently emotionally.
I imagine that's a big sort of millennial complaint about boomer parents. You know, dad was sort of this classic still blue collar guy.
And you go, yeah, well, he was at work like 10 hours a day, five days
a week for 18 years to raise you.
And before that, and for brothers and sisters and all the rest of the stuff.
And you go, okay, so there are no solutions.
There's only trade-offs.
You had this level of security.
Or maybe there's somebody else who dad was there
for me a lot of the time, but we really struggled with money.
And you go, okay, again, you, you, it came to me because I started, I made a big
pivot with my diet and that improved a ton of energy problems that I was having.
But I was finding myself waking up at three, 30 or four in the morning, every
single day for a week.
And the first day I thought, oh, this is just, it'll be like it's a transition thing.
Then the second day I thought, oh no, this has become a habit.
And then by the third day I was railing against it.
So I woke up and I was like, God, like, why is this the case?
How come I'm waking up at this time?
This is so annoying.
I'm going to be tired tomorrow, et cetera, et cetera.
And that Thomas Sowell floated into my head and he, the quote, there are no
solutions, only trade-offs.
I thought, right, okay, would you be happy to get up at 3.30 in the morning
if it meant that your mood and your cognition throughout the day was better
than it had been over the last couple of months?
It's like, yes.
Like, what are you complaining about then?
What you're complaining about is why can't I have the entire world
exactly the way that I want?
Yeah.
It's like, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. Would that be beautiful?
Yes. Is it in anyone's world realistic?
Absolutely not. The same thing I think when we look at our parents is a nice perspective.
Yeah, absolutely. There's always something to be grateful for and
something to feel a bit annoyed about or miserable about. I think part is a really
important life skill to just have that clarity that you can choose. We're all human. We
all find ourselves in those moments. When I'm talking about that health scare stuff
that I went through in the summer and I talk about sort of being the predator, not the
prey and all of that, that doesn't mean every moment I was feeling that, that was a response
to those dark moments where you feel, oh my, you know, what's going to happen to me and
you know, those dark moments. So it's only human to find yourself in those, but just
by having that awareness and knowing that it's a choice, gives you that
opportunity to step back from it, put it at arm's length, see it for what it is, and then you get to
choose. But having those moments of difficulty, all the moments when you're not doing that,
like you say the dark moments in the morning when you're thinking, oh, why am I doing this? It's
okay to have those moments, doesn't mean you're failing, oh, why am I doing this? It's okay to have those moments,
doesn't mean you're failing,
but then you had that process of, hang on a minute,
I remember that quote, now I get to choose,
and you just learn from all of those experiences.
This episode is brought to you by Function.
I partnered with Function because I wanted a smarter,
more comprehensive way to understand
what's happening inside of my body.
Twice a year, they run lab tests
that monitor over a hundred biomarkers and
their team of expert physicians will analyze the data and give you actionable
advice to improve your health and lifespan.
If you've been feeling a bit sluggish, your testosterone levels might be a problem.
They play a massive role in your energy and performance and being able to see
them charted over the course of a year with actionable insights to actually
improve them gives you a clear path to making your life better. Dr. Andrew Hubeman is the scientific advisor and Dr.
Mark Hyman is their chief medical officer so you can trust that the data and insights
you receive are as scientifically sound as they are actionable. Getting these lab tests
done would usually cost thousands, but with Function it is only $500. Right now you can
get Function's expert blood work analysis and bypass their 300,000 person waitlist
by going to the link in the description below or heading to functionhealth.com
slash modern wisdom. That's functionhealth.com slash modern wisdom.
I imagine that a lot of parents, I'm not one yet, but I imagine a lot of parents have the reverse
problem, which is that they're terrified of getting it wrong for their kids as they're raising them,
or shortly after they've raised them. What is your advice there?
It is part and parcel of the whole experience. And you feel it for a woman, as a woman you feel
that from the moment you know you're pregnant and suddenly everything you do is about somebody else.
And so you feel guilt no matter what you do really. And with feelings of guilt,
it's important to listen to it as well. I mean, there's kind of, you know, there's stuff online
about sort of parent guilt and how, you know, you shouldn't feel it or you should ignore it
and do what's good for you. And that's fine. There are moments that might be in the context of taking a break because it's difficult to do that and take time for
yourself. And that's when you acknowledge that guilt and you take it with you because
you know this is the right thing to do. And there are other times when it's important
to listen to that guilt more deeply and go, well, am I feeling that because I'm not living in line with my values as a parent?
And so I don't know, if I, you know, feel guilty about coming here, so coming to London
for a couple of days, doing some interviews, there's a sense of, I don't want to leave
you guys.
And if one of my children got upset, which they didn't, but if they did, but I would
feel that sort of, oh, why am
I leaving? And that's the point where I have to get that clarity of the situation where
I'm doing this because it benefits the family. Like the payoffs thing, right? Your dad's
at work all day, that kind of thing. They're difficult decisions. And by having your values
really clear in your mind about why you're doing something.
Um, it's easier than to kind of not make the guilt go away. You just, you're willing to take it with you.
So you get it in your backpack and you, you know, you take it with you because
you know, you're doing the right thing.
And because sometimes that feeling is, um, is not based on something that's
warranted, you know, sometimes it's, you know, if you're, I don't know,
a people pleaser or something because of how things were set up in your childhood,
you'll probably feel guilty all the time
when you feel that you might have, you know, upset someone.
And that's not necessarily warranted, that's a pattern.
So sometimes, you know, if we engage in sort of
emotional reasoning, right, which is that bias of, I feel it, therefore it's true,
that can get us into all sorts of trouble. So if because I feel guilt, that means I'm a terrible
parent, then I'm going to have a terrible time. That's interesting. Yeah. So if you feel guilt
That's interesting. Yeah. So if you, if you feel guilt and you don't recognize it as a, as a normal part
of being a parent, um, then you're likely to just think that you're failing all the
time.
So it's not just the sensation, it's the story that you tell yourself and you happen
to be defaulting to a very particular story, which is because dot dot dot, because I'm
a bad parent. I mean, like the only thing I can contribute is sort of a bit of an evolutionary lens.
But I imagine that mothers,
especially, but also fathers,
have a pretty easy to activate guilt response to kids.
Why? Well, because the parents that
didn't feel guilty when they left their kids,
their kids died.
And we've selected for the most neurotic,
overbearing, caring parents that we can think of, and that's, that,
those are your ancestors.
Yeah.
Okay, so this is going to arise.
You leave, like, you know, I'm sure that even just
dad going to work, mom going to work on a morning,
normal day at work, kid is sad.
You go, okay, I understand that in order to put food
on table to keep tiny child alive, I have to go to work.
Yeah. Do I feel guilty about that?
Well, kind of, no.
But then if it's something that seems more elective,
then it feels like, yeah, that is,
because it's, I don't know, less justified in some way
or more opulent, more chosen.
So you go, okay, well, I just need to work out,
is this in line with something, like you said, principles,
the life setup
Am I doing something that makes the world a better place that my kids can grow up in is this something that they're going to
Be proud of is this something that affords us a different type of lifestyle
Is this something that they would want me to do if they were in 20 years time would they want to look back and say
Do you know it is I'm really glad that you actually went and did that
Yeah, but in the moment you've got a crying child and you feel like a piece of shit
because you're leaving. Yeah. And it's important to listen to anyway, isn't it? Because like I say,
even if you've got the values and you know it's there, it might be an indication that,
you know, I do feel guilty. So maybe I need to just redress the balance a little bit. So, you know,
I think people talk about balance as if you find this perfect spot and then you just don't move.
And that's the perfect way to live.
And it really isn't that, you know, if you see someone on a balancing beam or a tight
rope, they're always doing this.
They're always moving slightly from side to side and readjusting, readjusting.
Notice when you're going off too far, readjust.
And particularly for, you know, as a working parent, I find that's constantly, if you can
listen to those feelings when they happen, it can be, it's information.
It's you know, do I need to just spend some more time with them?
Maybe I've spent a bit too much time on the book this week.
Yeah, do I need to, you know, block out the weekend and just play?
I suppose as well, an uncomfortable realization for, look at me, bro-science-ing, parenting,
bro-parenting from the sidelines over here.
But I imagine as well that there should also be a question that parents ask where they
say, well, are my kids maybe too sensitive?
Are they too unfamiliar with me being away from them?
Are they unable to regulate even a small amount of time
away, which is unrealistic and is making them fragile in a way? Maybe I need to step in on the
other side. Maybe we need to do a little bit of training. I need to sort of bring them into land
a little bit. I need to calm them down. I need to say, hey, this is what's going to happen. I'm
going to be away for 15 minutes. I've got to go to the shop. I've got to go and do whatever.
So yeah, they're all signals. And I guess it's a good learning experience. And if you deny them, then the opportunity to learn is just out the window.
Yeah, yeah, absolutely.
And it's all about opportunities to learn, isn't it?
And like you say, if, like you said, if a child has been used to having you there,
you know, that sort of post lockdown kind of experience for lots of parents,
actually, where, you know, everyone had been at home for many months.
It was really difficult for young children to then transition out, go to nursery or go to school.
I wonder what we'll see in a decade's time from an attachment perspective,
from a lifestyle perspective,
from a psychological makeup perspective.
We may find out that kids are largely so robust that
a two-year period during their formative years didn't make that much of a difference,
or maybe it'll be really great, or maybe it'll be really terrible,
and time will tell.
You mentioned before about people pleasing. This is something that over the last year
or so I've realized that maybe a pathology I'm more familiar with than I realized. What
have you come to learn about people pleasing, people pleases, where it comes from. Yeah. So, you know, often, often it makes sense, you know, often these things feel, um,
confusing until you hear someone's story and then it makes complete sense.
And you kind of, I've had so many of these moments with people in the room
where, you know, they come in and think you're just not going to understand this.
This is just bizarre and complex and I don't get it.
And, and then you spend a decent amount of time going through someone's story. you're just not going to understand this. This is just bizarre and complex and I don't get it.
And then you spend a decent amount of time going through someone's story.
And then you get to this lovely point where you kind of say to each other, of course,
of course it is this way. How could it not be given everything that's happened?
And, you know, there isn't sort of one story or one scenario that always leads to people pleasing. There are lots of different ones. But I think it's important to distinguish
that people pleasing isn't being a nice person. It's so much more than that. It's being absolutely
vigilant to how other people feel and placing that as your absolute
priority over and above your own wellbeing, your own health, anything.
So, you know, it's just terrifying the thought of displeasing someone else or experiencing
their disapproval or them not liking you or rejecting you. And so, you know, I've seen people who live in turmoil trying to please everybody
around them and keep them pleased, which is not sustainable. And so it creates chaos where,
you know, you're constantly chasing your tail and it gives other people a lot of power over you. So you can end up in
relationships that are sort of exploitive or just not healthy for you.
So I think it's one of those things that's sort of banded around
and it's something that a lot of us kind of do in bits and bobs, kind of like, yeah, sometimes I'm like that, or in certain situations I'm like that.
And some people spend their lives really, really struggling with it.
The desire for us to take something we do a little bit and turn it into a label that describes our
entire personality is quite strong, even the pathologization of sort of normal emotions
in that way, which is odd, right? Because both me and you are fans of sort of emotionally informed therapy and
people understanding their emotions.
I also think it's very interesting.
I think it's one of the most interesting things that you can do.
And yet I imagine that you have a similar problem to me as the overuse of
therapy speak online to describe like this person wasn't mean to me.
They were narcissistic or they caused me trauma. You know, I'm not sad. overuse of therapy speak online to describe like, this person wasn't mean to me, they
were narcissistic or they caused me trauma. You know, I'm not sad, I'm depressed and
the sort of the straying over into you crossed a boundary, that's one of my bounds, etc.
So people a lot of the time will say yes to things when they mean to say no, or they want
to say no, they want to become firmer at being able to disappoint those around them. How can they become better at that?
I think is one of the most important skills anyone will ever learn actually, because you
put yourself at risk. If you can't say no when you need to, or you can't hold boundaries,
and there's that people pleasing tendency. So if everything is about everybody else and what they
want from you and that's where it's not the same as being a nice person. So you know if everybody
else's needs and wishes and desires come first and you don't have the ability to put a stop to
that when it doesn't fit then you'll end up doing things that you regret and don't fit with your values or that don't feel like you're being a nice
person but it's because somebody else has more power over your behavior than you do.
So I think assertiveness skills are a big part of what's taught in therapy actually,
teaching people to manage difficult people and people who perhaps have more power
in a relationship or, you know, it kind of sounds easy to be able to say no. And it's
not because it's always packed out with lots of emotion and the complex dynamics between
two people. And so it can be really difficult, but it's absolutely learnable. And so that's where it's important to remember that even if you've had a habit for life of putting
everybody else first and being the, I don't mind, I'm fine, you know, whatever you think type person,
that you can begin to change, but it's often about learning specific skills and-
Why do you stop? What are the skills?
it's often about learning specific skills and- Why do you start? What are the skills?
So a lot of it is practice in lighthearted ways. We talked about the sort of acting opposite to
urges, using polos and kind of situations that aren't necessarily the most emotive,
the most difficult for you. You kind of grade situations. You could even make a list to be fair. So
you can make a list of the different situations where it's difficult to be assertive or state
your own needs. And you take the easiest one and you start with that and you practice and
you have a go and then you come back and you see how it went, what went well, what would,
you know. And so I was working with someone on dealing with those kind of assertiveness skills or needing to
stay your own ease in a workplace and going home on time or taking a holiday, those sorts of things.
And so we started with something really that felt the easiest and then we just assessed it. So stress
test things and then learn from it. Actually, the anticipation anxiety about it was much worse than actually the awkward moment of
saying what I needed to say. And their reaction was not as bad as I thought it would be. You know,
I had all that fear and discomfort, but that died down as soon as the moment was over. And then
actually, I got what I needed and the situation was better than it would have been and I'm not living in resentment. So when you start small, you get these small
victories that give you that momentum and give you that sort of drive to move forward
and go for the next challenge. But you can't expect to suddenly go, right, from now on
I'm going to be boundary and assertive and strong and
going to be overnight harder.
Yeah, right. It's just not going to happen.
You have to do these things gradually
and start with the easiest thing.
Something that almost feels a bit silly,
that's so easy it's almost a bit kind of
really am I starting here? But then you get
that little easy victory and then you move on to the next one
which is a little bit more difficult and so on.
That anticipatory anxiety thing is so funny because you're right, it's almost always your
ability to turn the future situation into a nightmare is significantly better than it almost
ever is. And the stupid thing is that all of the nightmares that you genuinely encounter in the
real world are ones that you probably didn't see coming. So you're like, okay, so I have this
unbelievable ability to predict things
that aren't problems and not predict things that are going to be massive issues.
Okay.
Brilliant.
Thanks.
That amazing way that our brains are set up.
Um, but yeah, I think that that's right.
And again, as a, uh, slowly rehabilitating people pleaser, uh, that's a way that,
that I found to be better as well.
Um, to learn to be able to make demands of other
people to not subjugate my needs or believe that I don't have needs or think that it's
noble to not have needs, to put somebody else ahead of me.
Oh, this is like a sort of a sacrificial type.
It's a sort of odd like emotional puritanism where you think if I feel bad, but someone
else feels good, net, net, that means that it's good.
You go, what if you could both feel good, but you just need to sort of make a demand?
Yeah. Yeah, so true. And often when you feel like you're being a nice person because you're
making them feel good, actually sometimes what you're doing is just appeasing them.
And you're just scared of their emotional reaction or their disapproval.
And it's, you know, feel it's motivated by fear of, of what their reaction might
be rather than, um, you know, your own values around what should happen in that
situation.
It's also not very trustworthy.
If somebody can't trust your no, it's very difficult to trust your yes.
And you know, you hinted at, uh, if you don't have any choice, it's not particularly virtuous trust your yes. And you know, you hinted at
if you don't have any choice, it's not particularly virtuous. You don't even feel good about doing
the virtuous thing because you didn't have any other option. You didn't choose to be
nice to this person. You simply couldn't be bad. And I had wrote about this this week,
actually, that a friend of mine a few months ago, me and him had had a sort of well-meaning
debate, but I was worried that I'd upset him.
So I rang him a little bit afterwards and I was like, Hey man, I just wanted to
sort of check in and make sure that you're all right.
I said, yeah, of course.
Like, of course it was, it was totally fine.
And then I, he heard me start to chastise myself for going, see, this is, this is
my people pleasing nature coming out.
This is me.
I had to check in.
He's like, Whoa, Whoa, Whoa, hang on a second.
The reason that I love you as a friend for one of the big reasons is because you decided to put me first,
even in this situation, even the one that was neutral,
the fact that you did reach out and care.
He's like, be careful pathologizing something which is
actually a really virtuous part of who you are.
I'm like, right, okay.
So doing the thing was good.
It's a part of my nature that my friends are glad that I
have.
But by not really, by being compelled to do it as opposed to choosing to do it, that does
kind of derogate some of the virtue that's behind it.
So I was like, right, okay, so am I supposed to purposefully try and get rid of that?
So briefly make myself a worst friend to then relearn it again consciously so that I can
finally get back to the place that I was in the beginning.
Like that seems unnecessarily effortful.
You know, to go around this whole loop to end up at the place that I started again,
but this time it's, you know what I mean?
And I think this, this line between virtue from compulsions and virtue from choices,
and then this odd sense that we need to deprogram, et cetera.
Okay, so if it's hard to do, does that make it more virtuous?
Like it's in my nature. Like that's just me speaking forward. What a lovely way to be.
Would you rather be somebody that's mean and you have to work hard to do that thing? Would that
make you a better person if you were good, but you was naturally mean? I'm sure I'd be able to find a
way to castigate myself and whip myself into submission, say, well, I mean, you know that you
did the thing, but you didn't feel like doing the thing. So that's, you know, the human desire to minimize our sort of good
points is robust, to say the least.
Yeah. And like you say, it's all about the choice and, you know, that you clearly have
an awareness of it now. And so if you found yourself in a situation where it was really
detrimental to you and you knew that you probably should say something different, but you'd said X because of that people-pleasing tendency,
then you'd be in a better position to be able to choose something different because you
have that awareness. And that's the key, isn't it? It's okay to have that as a trait and
that sort of tendency because if you're aware of it, then when it becomes
troublesome you stand a chance at doing something different. It doesn't mean you have to kind
of eradicate everything and clean slate and start again. And that's the thing, a lot
of stuff now is about, like you say, pathologizing everything and as if it's something that's wrong with us.
And actually those tendencies can also be really lovable parts of us and things that
other people appreciate about us or that we appreciate about ourselves, but that don't
always work in every context.
In other news, this episode is brought to you by Element. For the last three years I've started every morning with Element. Element is a tasty electrolyte drink mix with everything
that you need and nothing that you don't. Each Grab and Go stick contains a
science-backed electrolyte ratio of sodium, potassium and magnesium with no
coloring, no artificial ingredients or any other junk. Proper hydration isn't
just about getting sufficient water in you, it's about having the right number of electrolytes to use the fluids that are inside of your body. You might not be
tired, you might not need more caffeine, you might just be dehydrated and proper hydration
requires electrolytes. Best of all, they have a no questions asked refund policy with an unlimited
duration so you can buy it and try it for as long as you want and if you do not like it for any
reason they'll give you your money back and you don't even need to return the box. That's how confident they are that you love it. This thing tastes
phenomenal. It's like a sweet salty orangey nectar first thing in the morning and I love it
and that's why I've used it for probably a thousand days now. Right now you can get a free sample pack
of all eight flavors with your first box by going to the link in the description below or heading to drinklmnt.com slash modern wisdom that's drinklmnt.com slash modern wisdom.
What's your advice for dealing with passive aggressive people?
Oh, so with passive aggressive behavior, I think it's one of those things that
of behavior. I think it's one of those things that you feel it very subtly. You start to question yourself. I think that's one of the key signs is that something will happen. Maybe
it's a compliment that feels more like an insult or something that's where on the surface
everything seems friendly superficially, but you come
away feeling like you're not sure if they really liked you or you come away feeling
sort of wounded in some way and or maybe you're being kind of subtly excluded. And that sort
of behavior is inviting you in to become especially especially if someone is being a passive aggressive by
taking on the role of a victim in a situation. They're inviting you to come in as a perpetrator.
Passive aggressive behavior is one of those things that it's really difficult to pinpoint
exactly what it was.
The culpable deniability is the entire reason for the passive aggression.
Yeah.
So someone could, you know, I don't know, let's say, you know, something great's happened
in your life, you've been really successful, one of your friends has a problem with that
and so starts sort of ignoring you or trying to exclude you and stuff.
But as soon as you pick up on that and say, are we all right? Then all is denied,
right? Everything's fine. I've just been busy. I haven't been able to, you know. And so you're
kind of stuck in this place of, I can't really address it because they will deny it. And yeah,
I feel terrible and I don't feel connected to this person anymore. I feel like they maybe don't like me or something's going on.
And the trouble is the more you then get sucked into kind of joining the circus
in that way and playing the game, the more you lose, I think.
So a lot of it is about watching and learning.
You know, if someone reveals themselves to you that they're not okay with
you in a certain way or that friendship is now conditional on you, I don't know, making
yourself smaller or not doing certain things or associating with certain people, then all
you can do is learn from that and make your own decisions then about
whether that's a friendship for you or whether that's something that the friendship can overcome.
You know, it might be a blip, but it might also be something bigger.
Yeah, I am intimately familiar with passive aggression.
It never really points at the thing that someone's trying to say.
It's this sort of shadow sentence that gestures in the direction of it, whilst
also being able to be completely denied that it is that thing that we're talking
about so that it's quite a cowardly form of communication.
I'm aware that it's coping mechanism, there's lots of reasons that people do it,
but it's a very cowardly form of communication. I'm aware that it's coping mechanism, there's lots of reasons that people do it, but it's a very cowardly form of communication
because it doesn't ever actually say the thing that you mean.
It just sort of points in the direction
and then gets mad at you if you don't realize it.
So Neil Strauss says,
unspoken expectations are premeditated resentments.
And I think that's sort of passive aggression in a nutshell.
But yeah, you know, there's two, at least for me, there's sort of two broad approaches.
The first one being like call it out as gently as possible.
You're like, look, hey man, it feels like such and such a thing has happened.
I'm not really too sure what it is, but I don't like this sort of lingering sense of something unspoken.
Help me understand to you.
Like what's, what's going on?
This is an open forum.
I'm not going to judge you.
Just let me know.
Uh, and for me with that, you know, that's a really, as long as you deploy it in the
right way, that's a really open door policy.
That's an olive branch for somebody to go, ah, okay.
It's a bit safe.
Yeah.
Do you know what it is?
Like, I know that you don't even think about it, but you said this thing the other
week and fuck, it's just got to me and I haven't
really been able to stop thinking about it. And you go, awesome. Like, water under the
bridge and you can then round it out quite nicely by saying something like, hey man,
look, I just want to let you know, if this ever, ever happens, if anything even remotely
close to this happens again, just call it out. Like, just say it to me straight away.
Is that what happened for you in your situation?
I mean, I'd like to say, illustrious career of dealing with passive aggressive
people, but that's at least my current working theory of one of the better ways
to deal with it.
And the second side of it is look, like if you've put that forward and this
person sort of behaving this way, I think going, okay, like I trust what you're saying, but it still feels like
there's something lingering there. And, you know, reliably now those situations, those
people just got phased out of my life. So I'm like, hey, man, I overthink enough. I don't
need to be overthinking about your thinking as well. Like I've got enough of my own thinking
to overthink about.
Yeah. And, and there's a big decision to make, isn't there, when someone is
behaving in that way towards you. And, you know, friendships are valuable. So, you know, it's
important not to make that decision impulsively, but to, like you say, do that over time. So,
you know, someone might make a mistake because they're having a hard time and that might change and get better after
a while or it might not. And so with that sort of watch and learn approach, take it
in, adjust the amount that you trust someone. So adjust how much you share with them, adjust
how much you trust them to know certain information or whatever so that you can kind of, not so that you're
always guarded, but so that you're just protecting yourself if this person is revealing themselves
not to have your best interests at heart.
And then gradually come to a decision about whether this friendship is really for you
or not, whether it really adds to your life or if it actually takes away from your life.
But yeah, I think sometimes that decision has to come just carefully and considered so that you're
not sort of impulsively pushing someone out and then later realize that there might have been an
explanation for it. It seems like I I think, talking about relationships, intimate relationships,
there's sort of two broad buckets of challenges early on in relationships.
One being you loving somebody who doesn't feel the same and the other being
somebody loving you, but you sort of struggling to let them get in close.
The sort of anxious versus avoidant, I suppose, the push versus the pull.
Yeah. What's your advice for these two buckets of people? getting close, the sort of anxious versus avoidant, I suppose, the push versus the pull.
What's your advice for these two buckets of people?
Yeah.
So, I mean, it's quite common actually, this sort of avoidant person getting into a relationship
with an anxious attached person.
So if you're sort of anxiously attached, you might always be worried about
what that other person feels and you will want more affection from them and more reassurance
that they still love you. And that's based on those early attachments. Whereas the avoidant
person, they still need love and they still need that reassurance but they're not going to ask you for it.
When things get too intimate then that will fill them with some sort of uncomfortable feelings, maybe fear and they will kind of shut that down. It doesn't mean they don't need love from the
other person. They still benefit from connection. They just find it really
difficult to reach out for it and to sit in that sort of exposed state, that vulnerable
state of being close to someone or being intimate with someone. So I think what you're doing
when you're working with couples who are in that relationship,
the risk is that the relationship ends because the avoidant person becomes so overwhelmed
by the anxious person who keeps trying, keeps trying, keeps trying, that they kind of push
back or become sort of rejecting and then that's too much for that anxious person.
And in the end, they say, I can't do any more of this and they move on.
And so what you're aiming for in that scenario is to, and it's important to, I know you said
at the beginning there about someone who doesn't love you back, this is a kind of scenario
where these people do love each other, they just have different styles of attachment. And so what you're aiming for is awareness
of each person's cycle,
own sort of cycle or pattern of dealing with people
in the relationship so that they have some level
of appreciation and a degree of patience
for the other person and what they're experiencing.
But for both of those to aim
for a more secure attachment style.
So to the edge towards somewhere
in the middle, which involves compromise from both people.
So it involves the person who's more avoidant building up their tolerance for intimacy and
closeness and for the anxious person to build up their resilience for uncertainty and
the tendency to kind of seek reassurance and calming that.
So it involves both people kind of working to fit together.
And it's absolutely possible.
You know, there are lots of couples with those sorts of styles
that work really well.
Yeah.
What about the person that doesn't love you back? I guess we're one step before the relationship
here, you know, pining, pandering, cloying for somebody who just you want them and they
don't want you.
Yeah, I think, you know, there are just probably thousands and thousands of books written on
that kind of scenario that sort of unrequited love and things. And I think, you know, when we're talking about
the people pleasing side, some people will have that tendency to stay in relationships in which
the other person has no affection for them because of the fear of being alone and being rejected. I think
you make better decisions about those kinds of relationships if you work on having your
own back. It's much less scary, the idea of leaving someone or being rejected by someone,
if you know that you will look after yourself and do the best by yourself.
And you know, you're much more resilient to any of that and you're much less likely to
put up with someone who doesn't love you back and treats you poorly if you have your own
back and you're looking after yourself. So having that kind of good relationship with
the self where you come first helps you to be able to do it.
Isn't it strange?
We've got this sort of odd balance when we get into relationships with people.
Before we met them, we were a self-sufficient human, perfectly fine.
Most people, maybe in many ways preferable to being in a relationship. And then you decide to, you decide to let this other person into your life.
And you think, right, okay, well, I know that in order to fully love this person,
in order to integrate them into my lifestyle, I need to not just sort of
continue to do the independent thing that I was doing with the window dressing of
like some companionship every so often, but they actually infuse
themselves into it.
I begin to take heed of what they say.
I care about their opinions.
Uh, there is a bit of them in me.
And if that leaves, there is this void there and you're sort of trying
to create this balancing act.
And then as things get more and more, you think, well, maybe even their
opinion of me is more important than my opinion of me.
And I am so concerned about what, whether they're okay, that I
can't be okay without that.
And if they were to leave, I don't even know what would be left.
But in order to have, in order for you to hold onto the initial type of sort of
ruthless independence that you had before, it feels like you wouldn't ever really
fully be able to let that person integrate into your life.
So yeah, I, this sort of a delicate balance between you are okay.
You can back yourself.
You are not a fragile little mouse.
And also if you want to experience everything that there is to
enjoy in a relationship, you need to allow yourself, you need to open up that side of
yourself in order to be potentially hurt. It's not a simple balance.
Yeah, and it's a risk, but it's a risk that's worth it because we do a lot better in relationships than we do outside
of them.
There is so much to gain from that risk that makes it worth it.
You do make yourself vulnerable going into a relationship, don't you?
When you're at a stage where you're not sure whether the relationship is going to end. Like you say,
when people have been so into a relationship and sacrificed so much of themselves that
it's become all about the other person, ending that relationship then can be this process
of rebuilding. You don't know what your preferences are because you've spent so many years prioritizing somebody
else's.
But it's absolutely possible to do that and to rediscover yourself and your own preferences
and the things that you like to do or your own goals and your own values.
But it takes a bit of work.
We'll get back to talking to Julie in one minute.
But first I need to tell you about Maui Nui.
Not all meat is created equal and that is why I partnered with Maui Nui.
Not only does their meat taste amazing, it's actively combating the environmental destruction
caused by Maui's axis deer overpopulation.
It has the highest protein per calorie ratio on the market, up to 53% more than grass-fed
beef and it is the only stress-free 100% wild
harvested red meat available. Their venison sticks are with me whenever I
travel. These are phenomenal. They taste unreal. Nine grams of protein. I love them.
They're a complete life hack. You need to get more protein in your diet and this
is going to help. You can get the healthiest red meat on the planet
delivered directly to your door by going to the link in the description below or
heading to mauinuivenison.com slash modern wisdom using the code
modern wisdom at checkout.
That's M-A-U-I-N-U-I-venison.com slash modern wisdom and modern wisdom.
A checkout.
I suppose a lot of the time the sort of disagreements, I guess, before the
relationship breaks down, uh, the kind of arguments that people have.
I had Ben Shapiro on the show recently, who's a good debater.
And he mentioned that he has to remind himself that being loved by his wife is
more important than winning an argument.
Because a lot of the time, regardless of whether he's in the right or in the wrong,
he he's very well trained.
It's like saying I got into a fist fight and I'm an MMA fighter.
Um, he has a very particular set of skills.
Humans hate being so wrong so much.
I think that we can become myopic about this sort of stuff that we just don't
want to lose the argument to our partner.
Yeah.
Even if we might be in the wrong, even if the outcome results in us being more
miserable or the things being more sad, what's
your advice for better disagreements and for sort of letting go of this need to win arguments?
It's interesting, isn't it?
Because when you're in the moment and you're angry with someone, it feels as if the best
feeling is going to be when you prove that you're right and you come out on top and you're the
only person that thinks you look good when you win. And actually, if you're in a loving
relationship with someone and you know, you prove yourself right and you feel like you've
won the argument, what the other person then feels is probably a bit crushed and a bit disappointed in you for being so ruthless with them. And so
it's so important and I think you learn this over time, the longer that you're in relationships,
you learn how to argue in a way that leads to reconnection. And the aim is no longer to work out who's winning and whether the relationship
is going to continue. The aim is to resolve it in a way that doesn't hurt either of you too much.
And arguments that focus on reconnection and repair as opposed to winner and loser
reconnection and repair as opposed to winner and loser lead to much, much stronger relationships in which you can argue and still trust each other.
I always had this thing in my mind, this is early bro science for me, this is like
early 20s bro science stuff, where I noticed that the tone that was set at the very beginning of
a relationship that I would get into very much sort of determined expectations down
the line that, you know, during the first, you know, six months or whatever, three months
where everything's amazing, the expectations coming down the line, if you spend four nights
a week together,
because you're besotted and you can't think about anything except for them,
et cetera, et cetera.
But really where you want to bring this relationship into land is you probably see
each other two nights a week or whatever.
The change, the pivot that then gets made, or this particular demeanor that you have
in the beginning, maybe you're more aloof, you're playing it more cool, or maybe
you're more lovey-dovey or might be. Um, that, that, uh, tone setting in the beginning is, uh, highly
determinant of what is expected down the line and quite rightly so.
Like this is the relationship that I got into.
What's this one?
Like what's, what, what's happened with this sort of adjustment here?
Um, but I get the sense that with disagreement, with attachment style,
with regulation, co-regulation, with the way that you make up after
you've argued, etc.
Setting the tone for that as early as possible as well is
maybe even more important because that is going to
determine, or at least my current working theory is that
most relationships live and die not on how happy you guys are together, but how
well you disagree because like insufficient happiness may be a reason
for a relationship to break up.
But what's more likely is too much disagreement, too much unhappiness.
Right.
Like let's get past that first.
Cause that predicates you being able to access the happiness thing in any case.
And yeah, the sort of direct communication that,
Hey, when X happened, I felt why I'm sure it wasn't your fault.
I'm sure that you didn't mean to make me feel that way, but I, I, I don't want to
lie to you, I just want this to be other end.
This is a collaborative process, almost treating the relationship like a third
person and being like, look, we have this thing which is the way that we're enmeshed together and I want to do things that allow
that to flourish as much as possible.
Yeah, yeah. And also it's okay for it not to be perfect at the beginning. So, you know,
I've been with my husband for like 20 years and we don't argue in the same way that we did
when we first got together.
You learn to argue.
You learn to, yeah, your relationship evolves and as long as you're always doing your best
to try and improve on yourself and what you bring to the relationship and making adjustments
when things don't work well, then what you have is this amazing, flourishing, strengthening
thing over time. Whereas I think if you base your choice about whether you continue a relationship
on how you're arguing right now as if that's the only relationship on, you know, how you're
arguing right now, as if that's the only way it can ever happen, then you might
end a relationship that could have improved or got better. So it's all about
sort of learning from each experience, isn't it? And then trying to, you know, do
better if you feel like you've not really bought your best.
Getting onto the individual,
what's your advice to people that have got a critical inner voice?
Do you know what, in my years of sort of doing therapy with people,
I've come across so many people who are highly self-critical, painfully so, and yet hold onto it for dear life because they think that that's their source of drive and motivation and productivity and achievement. And so they'll defend it
like it's doing something for them until they learn that actually it's probably doing damage
or it's holding them back. Because
often they'll come with some other problem and won't necessarily recognize that it's
being perpetuated by that tendency to not only be self-critical, but just psychologically
hammering yourself into the ground when things go wrong or when you're not perfect and that sort of thing. But I always like talking to
people about the idea of, okay, we all want to do well in life, right? We want to,
you know, be at our best. And if you take that idea and you take, I don't know,
elite athletes, there is no elite athlete out there that chooses not to have a coach or support around them
to do their best, right?
They recognize that that's helpful, but they also don't choose their high school bully
to come and coach them and come along to competitions with them.
They'll choose someone that they trust, someone that is honest with them, but delivers that honesty with
respect and someone who genuinely wants them to be at their best and achieve.
And so if you take that idea of a sports coach and everything that they have to embody to
be decent at that job to get the most out of someone, why wouldn't you want to also
do that for yourself in your own head?
You know, the differences between, you know, that kind of high school bully sound or, you know, the,
you know, abusive parent or whoever that voice is in your mind, that is never going to get the kind
of outcome that you would get from, you know, a really good coach or someone who genuinely wants the best for you.
It's a great realization.
It's a really lovely realization.
You know, I would certainly put myself into the category of person who believed
that his castigating inner voice was, uh, encouraging his performance for a long
time, kind of got myself to at least now realizing it's probably not helping. It's certainly not making me better.
But then there's an even more sort of difficult question, which is, okay,
it's not even useful dot, dot, dot.
And it's still there.
Right.
Okay.
So it's no longer performing the function that I thought it was, but you've got this,
you know, lifetime of habit of that just being the default that you go to.
I remember I used to do this thing when, again, CrossFit World Tour, But you've got this, you know, lifetime of habit of that just being the default that you go to.
I remember I used to do this thing when, uh, again, CrossFit world, uh, it's
interesting that I use CrossFit a lot of the time when I'm talking about kind of
like the induction to personal growth, because they, those, both those
things happened at the same time.
Okay.
Um, so I kind of anchor a lot of the things that I was doing then to the
training modality that I did.
Uh, and if I was doing a to the training modality that I did.
And if I was doing a workout on an assault bike, my heart rate was really, really high. It's 170 or whatever.
I've got the taste of metal in the back of my throat.
I'm aware 170 is not that high for some people, but it was high for me.
Working on the assault bike and these sort of, during that extreme stress, like acute stress, this sort of weird texture would appear,
this sort of landscape or whatever in my mind. And it was always critical voices. It was always,
and I have had it a couple of other times when I'm under periods of extreme stress,
the less gracious parts of my inner monologue come up. And yeah, I wonder, it's certainly got infinitely better,
but there's still work to be done.
Did it help you at the time?
To perform? Yeah, I think so.
I mean, look, in my experience,
most high performers are not driven by
a perfectly balanced desire to enact their logos and actualize themselves.
They are looking for validation from the world.
They are looking for acceptance in a way that they never got it as a child.
They're looking to prove the chip on their shoulder or the bully's wrong or whatever it might be.
A lot of people are driven by running away from something they fear, not running towards something that they want. And it allows people to create very, very impressive lives,
but in the only way that everybody else can judge it, which is outwardly. And I know that
this is one of your pet obsessions too, which is the price that successful people pay to be the
person that you admire.
It's probably been the most interesting question that I've considered over the
last few years, and you speak to a lot of people that are very successful.
And you look at the price that they pay and you go, I didn't know if this is worth
it.
Like you have this cathedral of accolades and success and reputation
and other people admiring you and so on.
But look at what you've had to do to get there.
And again, there are no solutions, only trade-offs.
Um, I'm, I'm currently sort of really, really trying to work about what would
this be like if it was more fun?
What would this be like if I sacrificed maybe even, you know, 2% or 5% of the
gripping and the cloying and the sort of like control in the real world to maybe
unlock 50% more enjoyment internally.
Uh, and I don't even know if that's a trade that needs to be made.
It might be a sort of a false equivalence or whatever, but I've made a ton of progress.
So for the people who've got an endemic critical inner voice, I think certainly there is at
least a little bit that can be done to deprogram that.
How much, whether you can get to the stage where it's the perfect high school coach that
you never had, I'm not sure. But yeah,
I'm moving in the right direction.
Yeah. And I think a lot of people get the impression that if you're not
verbally hammering yourself, that the alternative is some kind of airy fairy,
you're lovely as you are, and that kind of thing that you just can't believe in and just feels
that kind of thing that you just you can't believe in and just feels ick and there's a lot in between isn't there? So you know when I talked about the kind of fear chapter and and that sort of inner
voice that I needed when I was going through all my health stuff in the summer, I needed a hard
hard voice. We are not victims here, we are being strong here. We are doing this.
And it was very sort of powerful.
It needed to be a powerful approach.
It needed that.
I think what wasn't there was the contempt,
was the, you know, digging at yourself.
So I think what stops a lot of people from
trying to kind of challenge how they speak
to themselves is that they think the airy-fairy stuff is the only, self-indulgence is the
only alternative.
And it's not, you know, actually self-compassion has to be honest all the time.
And if you're not living in line with your own values, or you're not making yourself proud.
You have to be honest with yourself about that, but in a way that's also
respectful, and that doesn't make you recoil in shame and then unable to learn
from it.
So there's this kind of whole spectrum and variability and choice about
what that tone is like.
I think as well, it's very much a horses for courses thing that maybe at the beginning of your journey, if look, if you are 450 pounds, you're kind of getting towards the stage where you just need to use whatever you can.
And if shame is the most salient, uh, sort of tool that can get you from there down to a more healthy body weight or, you know, pick whatever it is, if you're on the verge of a drug addiction or whatever,
like you just get whatever fuel you can grab ahold of most easily.
But after a while, you have to think, right, okay, I've got myself into
some degree of momentum here.
Is the tool that got me here, the one that's going to get me there?
And is this really, like have I worked this hard
to achieve all of these things,
to still call myself a piece of shit if I fall short?
It's like, really?
That's what you're doing.
That's the, that's the fuel that you're relying on.
Like a guy with a hammer, you go, okay,
there's only one use that I have for this.
I only have one mode of inner monologue.
I'm never going to be gentle with myself.
I'm never going to be caring. I'm never going to be monologue. I'm never going to be gentle with myself. I'm never going to be caring.
I'm never going to be reassuring.
I'm never going to be supportive.
It's like, no, no, no, no, I'm just going to whip myself into submission.
And it's always, that's, that's it.
And those sorts of responses are often going to increase the urges to escape
and avoid, which aren't going to lead to success anyway.
So, you know, even if, even if you feel like shame or fear
or something like that has worked to get you set on a better path, it's not sustainable
because it's more likely to lead to the need to use those escape methods and later on.
So yes, recognizing that even if it's been useful, it's really helpful to find other
resources as well. Is this similar to the approach that you have for dealing with self-doubt?
Yeah, I think with self-doubt, a lot of the stuff online is a sort of like, you know,
just don't do it, just believe in yourself. And again, honesty has to be part of that. So with self doubt, sometimes it's useful to listen to it
because some of it's valid and warranted.
So if you're really doubting your ability to perform,
I don't know, in an exam, because you haven't studied,
then you wanna listen to that self doubt,
but in a constructive way.
So it's like, why am I feeling this?
Okay, I haven't studied, let's book in a load of study time and let's make it happen.
So there are certain, you know, you don't want this sort of like, you know, happy-clappy,
I'm never going to be honest with myself, I'm just going to be happy with myself all
the time. It's okay to feel these things. All of those emotions that we can feel,
including the negative ones, they are information.
And we get to choose what we do with that.
You have to choose to listen to it first off.
And when you're listening to it,
you kind of have to ask yourself, is this warranted?
And is it a fair reflection of reality?
And is it in proportion to reality as well?
So, you know, some people will have self-doubt because that's a really useful natural thing
to do and it reflects a need in the situation.
And other people will just chronically doubt themselves all the time.
And sometimes that's more of a pattern that's developed that doesn't always reflect reality.
You know, it's a learning experience that has happened
possibly earlier on in life.
All of this is made significantly harder
when you're overwhelmed and emotionally activated though,
I guess, which is, you know,
to kind of bring it full circle, I suppose.
All of the things that we're talking about in the cold, harsh light of a podcast studio, sound achievable,
rational, within reach, but you're just swimming in emotions.
This thing happens.
I'm overwhelmed.
There's too much going on.
happens, this thing happens, I'm overwhelmed, there's too much going on. What is a way that people can kind of come back to centre when we've got these things that we maybe even
understand the tactic, I should be more supportive with myself. There's that inner voice thing
again, but you're just, all you can feel is just this activation.
Yeah. And that's why I wrote the book actually, this idea that when you're in it, when you're in
the storm, what you don't need to hear is someone saying, well, maybe you should have learned to
meditate six months ago and you'd be all right now. Right? What you need then is you need someone to
kind of, you know, grab you by the shoulders, look you in the eye and say, okay, I know a way through
this, follow me. Here's what you need to focus your attention on and here's the next step you need to take
and we're gonna take that together.
And it's really difficult when you have a flood of emotion
because of whatever situation you're in,
it's difficult to work out which way is up,
let alone what step you need to take.
There are these moments of your brain
is sending you lots of information in the form of emotion
in its attempt to apply
meaning to what's happening and to work out what's happening and what you need to do next.
So in that moment, you know, the best thing for our nervous systems is each other and
is someone else. And so I always say to, I think, um, I say it in the introduction, actually,
you know, the inner world is a bit like a sauna. There is benefits to being there, but only if you don't stay too long. And so if you're struggling,
reach out to somebody else, another human being that you trust for connection. And that will be
the most helpful thing to you if you have someone in your life like that. But not everybody has that.
But also even the people that have it, sometimes that person isn't with them all the time or in the moments that they most need it.
And so that's what this was really about, is about kind of talking to someone in the
moment and say, okay, right, we're in this situation. It is what it is. Here's how we
deal with this moment, find some calm, find some clarity, and then work out which way
we get through this. Because the only way is through it.
As soon as you numb all that emotion,
well, that's all information for you.
So if you numb it, you're not gonna be able to use it.
But it's just, it's not easy to kind of work out
in the moment because life is complex
and it throws stuff at us, right?
I realized that the sort of numbing of emotions,
the fleeing from them,
there are better and worse ways to do it.
It's tried, you know, people to say,
well, it's better to be addicted to the gym
than it is to be addicted to fentanyl.
And you go like, yeah, obviously.
But one of the more sort of, not insidious,
but certainly subtle ways that people do that
was meditation or breath work,
or, you know, what people would typically consider
to be very healthy, very embodied
solutions to this. So an emotion arises inside of you. And if you're good at meditation,
you notice it, you release and allow it. Right. Okay. Brilliant. You still don't know anything
about that emotion. You haven't sat with where that's come from. And that's just going to
continue coming up. Now, are there times when you need to just let it go?
Yes, absolutely.
But if this thing's going to keep on happening, it is permanently putting some
sort of band-aid over the top of this and again and again and again and again.
You go, after a while you need to kind of admit, I just need to sit and
investigate where this comes from.
Yeah.
And some people are able to do that individually and kind of sit with it
and listen to it and be with it.
And other people need support to do that because it feels danger.
You know, it's only feels comforting if your body feels a safe place to be.
So for some people that's not the case and it's terrifying and leads to all
sorts of unhealthy
strategies. So that's when it can be really helpful to do that with someone else who can
kind of guide you through listening to that and then when things get too much kind of
pulling back a bit and coming in again and you know these things can be done really carefully
and piece by piece and by teaching some of the skills to begin with to cope with how
Distressing that can really be you know some people have a lot
a lot in the past that they've been really successful at
Numbing and covering up and so the minute you ask someone to take a look at that well
There is a reason they've been numbing that for a long time and so well, because it's really painful and it's really scary.
So no therapist worth their salt would ask you to sort of do that without first teaching
you the skills to be able to cope with how distressing that could be.
Dr. Julie Smith, ladies and gentlemen.
Julie, I appreciate you.
I think the book's great.
Where should people go?
Do you want to keep up to date with everything you're doing?
I'm on Instagram and YouTube and all the platforms just as Dr. Julie, but yeah, the books available
everywhere, I think.
Thank you.
I appreciate you.
Thank you.
I get asked all the time for book suggestions.
People want to get into reading fiction or nonfiction or real life stories.
And that's why I made a list of 100 of the most interesting and impactful books that I've ever read.
These are the most life-changing reads that I've ever found.
And there's descriptions about why I like them and links to go and buy them.
And it's completely free.
And you can get it right now by going to chriswillx.com.
slash books.
That's chriswillx.com.
slash books.