Modern Wisdom - #920 - John Delony - Why Do We Date People That Need Fixing?
Episode Date: March 27, 2025Dr. John Delony is a mental health expert, author, YouTuber and speaker. What does it mean to be a good partner? We all want fulfilling relationships, but building one involves a careful balance of gi...ve and take. How do you show up as a supportive partner and not just for your significant other, but also for yourself? Expect to learn why we date people we feel we need to fix, why it’s so hard to leave relationships even if we don’t have our needs met, advice for how to move on from breakups easier, how to gain control of your mind, how to deal with stressful situations better, how to be a better partner to your significant other and much more… Sponsors: See discounts for all the products I use and recommend: https://chriswillx.com/deals Get a Free Sample Pack of all LMNT Flavours with your first purchase at https://drinklmnt.com/modernwisdom Get a 20% discount on Nomatic’s amazing luggage at https://nomatic.com/modernwisdom Get the best bloodwork analysis in America at https://functionhealth.com/modernwisdom Get $350 off the Pod 4 Ultra at https://eightsleep.com/modernwisdom (use code MODERNWISDOM) Extra Stuff: John's website: https://ter.li/ldhkxh 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)
Dr. John Deloney, welcome to the show.
My man, Chris.
How are you?
Thanks for the...
Dude, I'm fantastic.
I love being back in Texas where I was born and raised, man.
It's good.
Are you adjusting?
I am slowly becoming native.
Someone told me that I was allowed to use the word y'all
because I've been here for three years now.
That's a huge welcome, Matt.
I get the sense...
That's big, man.
I get the sense that it is me being conned into saying the equivalent of the N word for
texting people and the Texas Tribune is going to catch me hard R'ing my way through y'all
a couple of times.
So I'm not falling for the, the Psy-Up.
I can't, I can't quite get to that.
I'm up to sidewalk and trash can, but y'all not yet.
What's the alternative to trash can?
Rubbish.
Oh yeah.
You gotta be careful with rubbish bin here. Rubbish. Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
You gotta be careful with rubbish bin here.
Rubbish bin.
Yeah, you don't know what that means.
Crack that open.
Come on, get it in you.
All right.
You've been waiting for this.
I've been excited for this moment.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Well, you'll have an unlimited amount going to the office soon.
Well, I appreciate that.
Orange sunrise for you.
Excellent.
This is my first one.
This is my live review.
Cherry popper.
That's outstanding. That's outstanding.
That's outstanding.
Well done, man.
Thank you.
Well done.
Good, good.
Yeah, it's, you're now five IQ points smarter.
10.
Each sip is like...
I accept, man.
It'll light me up like a Christmas tree.
Half a standard deviation.
All right.
I have no idea how I didn't stumble across you and the work that you do, because it aligns so much with lots of the things that I'm very interested in.
And I really appreciate the way that you are firm but gentle and reassuring,
I think, when you speak to people.
A lot of the conversations around relationships and dating and mental health
tend to me to either be so soft as to not have an impact
or so brusque and harsh as to cause people to get defensive and for it to feel a little
bit more about the host or the commentator, the advice giver than it is about the person
who has the problem.
So, yeah, I think like really, really great.
I appreciate that. Your ability to balance that. It's, I wanted so badly to be the, the
human of, of mental health and of relationships.
And early on it was very clear.
That's not why people want to talk to you.
They've never seen a big, tall, loud,
tattooed up Texan talk to that mother who just blew her life up.
Like compassionately.
And I think in our, in our strange little weird, uh, ecosystem that we live in,
there's a lot of people that know about stuff and they've just never sat
with hurting people, right?
There's a lot of theories and a lot of ideas, but man, you can hear somebody
who's actually sat with somebody who just lost a child and that's it.
There's a different level of compassion, right?
What have you learned about how to hold space for somebody that's going through
a difficult time from the, um, my first ever relationship just broke up with me
all the way through to the, I just lost a child.
Dude, let me tell you this.
So my wife, um, she was a research professor.
She quit her job before she's like, man, that sounds strange, especially for her.
I think I want to stay at home and have kids.
And that was like, like, who are you?
What have you done with my wife?
It was amazing.
We talked through it.
It was awesome.
And gets pregnant, miscarriage number one, gets pregnant, miscarriage number two, then
miscarriage number three, but it wasriage number two then miscarriage number three no
But it was an ectopic pregnancy and it ruptured right and so she's a really strong tough West Texas woman
And she sits in that living room and says I'm not doing this it's not happening again
Which you know like I mean she almost died in our living room well
Here's the thing after miscarriage one and especially number two lucky for her
she was married to a guy working on his second PhD.
And I was also a crisis,
God, the word that gives me hemorrhoids expert.
And so I would show up in the community
to sit with people who had lost.
And dude, I rubbed her nose in my charts,
in my graphs, in my answers.
And then this happened.
So a close friend of mine who's suffered unimaginable loss,
I show up with my son who was four at the time.
We go to the ER, they're wheeling her back.
And when you show up at crisis scenes,
it's hard to describe.
There can be blood on the wall and bodies,
but you make eye contact with other responders
and you know the scene's safe.
You know it seems classic.
And then there's something we call crazy eyes.
You look across and it's like, oh, this scene's still live.
Like, there might be a shooter still here, right?
And you can see it.
And I walked in and I made eye contact with the head of the OB-GYN at a Texas Tech Medical
Center and I remember holding my son's hand saying, oh, this is it.
This is the last time I see her.
They wheel her off.
I text somebody to come pick my son up I go to this little room. It's about this big and
A buddy of mine a West Texas rancher who's a children's author walks in hat everything. He's taller than me
He nods I say nothing. He says nothing. He sits by me 30 minutes one hour
one and a half hours two hours and the physician busts in the door holding up
like a iPad thing and she says, we lost the baby but your wife's okay.
And I exhaled in this rancher who he hadn't spoken other than, hey, he reaches over and
grabs my shoe and I look over at him and he starts crying tears I don't even have yet.
But the important thing is he said no words.
It didn't matter.
In a culture that we won't shut up Chris.
When your friend has a breakup,
the last thing they need is all of your theories and answers.
Well, my gosh, let's Google.
That's catastrophic.
They just need to sit there and bring tacos,
bring a bottle of wine, or bring whatever you got in the fridge.
You know what I mean? And we don't have a culture of presence. We have a culture of answers, of talking.
So what I've learned over the years, what do you say to a mother whose kid is dead in that room right there?
Nothing.
But she'll remember that hug, right? She'll remember that exhale and
that will get her to the next gulp of air, to the next gulp of air, right?
There's just no words, man.
And so the more I've been sitting with hurting people, I'm finding myself
talking less and less and less and less.
The most, I mean, it's a beautiful story.
And, uh, the first time that I ever really started thinking about this was, uh,
Sean Strickland on
Theo Von's podcast a year ago where Sean has that really bad experience sort of reliving
his childhood.
And Charlie Hooper from Charisma on Command did this unbelievable breakdown.
He's redone it again.
He's run it back on his other channel and it's so beautiful.
He just explains he's Sean is sort of gripping this bottle. Uh, I think it's gripping the bottle with his left hand.
He's sort of drinking from it like this and you can see he's grasping with this left hand.
He's actually trying to grip onto something.
He's trying to get a hold of security and firmness and Charlie's breaking down his body
language.
You can see what Theo does that drops him in and then pulls him out and then he goes
back in again.
Um, because Theo kind of, he doesn't make it about him.
He does like a triple A.
I don't want to give any shade on Theo.
He literally inspired me to become a better spaceholder, not a
communicator in difficult times.
Um, but there's some things that you do that just rip someone out just a little
bit and then they, they close off and they, well, you know, like, what does it matter?
I'm a big guy.
I'm a grown adult.
And then he sort of starts to get back into it, starts to get back into it.
And then, you know, the most beautiful thing that Theo says in that entire
exchange is, he's like, we don't need to talk, man, we can just sit here
for a while if you want.
That's it.
And that's somebody who only knows that because they've been hurt too.
Right.
Like, I'm not going to say anything.
I'll just sit here with you.
Powerful dude.
What a gift.
What else?
What else?
So shut up.
Yeah.
One of the first things that you should do when trying to help somebody
that's going through stuff.
What else?
Um, yeah, I think that sounds easy in theory, but I think the, what else happens
before I have to do my own work that I believe I'm worthy of the space I'm
going to hold with you, right?
So I got to show up.
Okay.
Most of the people, I'll say most of the people,'m gonna hold with you. Right, so I gotta show up okay. Most of the people, I say most of the people,
who get diagnosed with cancer, who lose a loved one,
who lose a pregnancy, et cetera, they'll tell you,
they found themselves responsible
for making sure everybody else was okay.
And don't text somebody, how's it going?
Like, you really wanna know how's it going, right?
And I'm gonna text that back to you.
Bring food, show up, and I mean, I think it's action. It's action, it's action, it's action.
I'm going to go mow your lawn.
And I trust you to tell me to stop.
I'm going to keep sending tacos.
And you may have 5,000 tacos.
They may go straight to the trash can.
But you're going to know when the fog lifts.
You were loved.
You were cared. Yeah, you were cared for.
Yeah.
I had an incident that opened up something similar.
It was my birthday a couple of weeks ago and I finished recording upstairs, finished this
episode and came down and Jonathan, who's outside, his dog was walking around.
I was like, what the fuck's Jonathan's dog doing here?
Uh, oh, he must be here to show us the new merch samples.
Cause we're, we're starting to get much done.
And as I walked in, it turned out that there was a surprise birthday.
Like celebration for me.
And there was only five people that all of them worked for me in one form or
another, or work with me, and, uh, it was the middle of the day on a Friday.
So who's free at 2 PM on a Friday to come and do stuff.
It's tiny and my best friend was getting married the next day and I was
his best man here in Texas.
So my head's in a different place.
I'm thinking about the speech.
I've just finished this episode.
I gotta go and work on the speech.
I gotta remember the thing that do the joke about the white people.
And I come down and there's five people and they put a banner up and it said,
happy birthday. And there was a cake and they put a banner up and it said, happy birthday.
And there was a cake and one of the guys was filming it.
Our videographer, Max was filming it.
And I was like, oh, this is really, really beautiful.
And then we sat down and we had some cakes.
It was all laid out really nicely.
Then they sang happy birthday to me.
And there was this bid, there was this census.
I went down as you said there about almost having this odd guilt debt that
you want to repay to people because, well, if they're doing this just because they love
me, then I need to be able to sort of feel that in a way, as opposed to there being some
sort of value exchange.
You know, all of these people in one form or another work with me, work for me.
And that's fine.
You know, we're working together.
We're building this project.
We're doing the whatever thing.
And yeah, watching five people sing happy birthday to me at 2 30 PM on a Friday.
I did a live show in London last year to three and a half thousand people.
The five people was way more uncomfortable.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Because I was seen by them.
But think of, think of the world we've set up.
Um, Dr.
Joyner, he's out of Florida state.
He writes really eloquently on suicide.
Right.
And one of the, the, the three legs of the stool is of when you're doing a
suicide assessment is perceived burdensomeness.
Does that idea right?
People would be better if I wasn't here.
But look at the world we've built.
Like, I'm not gonna ask you to take me to the airport,
I'll just Uber.
I'm not gonna ask you, can I borrow some eggs and sugar?
I'm just gonna like Instacart or whatever.
And I think the meta narrative is
my presence is a burden too.
And if you guys, it's the air we breathe
that everyone, I'm gonna bother people. Even even in now every relationship we have is transactional and your experiences, man, it's very common that you wake up and the one people in your life are on your payroll or on somebody's payroll.
Like y'all are on the same payroll and man, that your body would be failing you if it let you sleep all night.
Cause it knows you're lonely. Right?
And in some ways, I've heard you, this, um, do you have people in your life
that you can talk to that are just your friends that you don't work with?
That seems to be a common thread in some of the conversations you speak to.
You have some housewife, I've heard you speak to a bunch of these recently,
a housewife who's, there was one that had insomnia, she kept waking up throughout the night. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah these recently, a housewife who's, there was one that had insomnia. She kept waking up throughout the night.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, the same thing.
You said how many friends have you got?
And you dug real deep and it turned out she did have,
it seemed like she had quite a good social network.
But yes, it does seem, we spend so much time at work
and we're so obsessed with productivity
and moving forward in some way
that we don't have friends
for the sake of being friends with them.
We have friends who are compatriots and soldiers
in whatever battle it is that we're fighting against getting our Brazilian
jiu-jitsu purple belt, against becoming better at pickleball, against learning to
salsa dance, against learning to do improv, against the job interview, the
promotion, whatever it is. And it uh, it's an odd blend.
You, it makes people into a 401k.
Is it your opinion that there is something lesser about friendship
with people that you work with too?
Uh, no, I, the fear I have is when you don't have jujitsu and when you don't
have, I remember dude training at MMA gym, dude, that's's the most eclectic wacky group of people that had a shared
mission that all got together. You've selected for a group that want to be
punched in the face. Yeah but there's also like a male nurse and this guy
doesn't have a job at all and this guy's the dean of students. I mean it was a
random group of people. No the problem with only having friends at work is if
something ever doesn't work out
there, you find yourself on an island in a moment when you need people.
And so if you get let go, if you have a problem at work, then you also have a problem everywhere
else in your life.
Well, it's the same issue with men who get divorced, right?
The single most predictive lifestyle change for suicide is men who get divorced.
The reason being, it seems, women are much better at holding onto
their own social networks when they get into a marriage, whereas men supplant
their own social networks and they use the wives.
So, you know, the wife has loads of female friends and the female
friends have husbands and you as the husband become friends with the husbands.
That's it.
That's it, man. And you sit there like, yeah, it's hot.
Yeah. Yeah. How's work? Good.
The only thing you have in common is the fact that your wife knows their wife.
That's it.
Yeah.
And usually that is you all have kids in the same age.
And then when that kid moves up, yeah, the tether gets pulled on everything.
Yeah. Yeah. It's that ability to be able to sit with, oh, well people actually want to be here.
Yeah.
For this.
There's a degree of discomfort.
Not for this, for you.
Yes.
And that's hard to hold.
James, you spoke about him earlier on the other half of Mutonic.
I fucking love this story.
I tell it all the time, but I fucking adore it.
He did a load of mushrooms.
I won't mention the country in case they're going to kick him out.
Did a load of mushrooms on a rock.
And this question came to him and the question was, do people love you for who you are or
for what you do?
And, you know, people loving you for what you do feels transactional.
It feels flimsy.
It feels volatile.
And, you know, the subtext is if I stopped doing what I do, then the
love would be taken away from me as well.
What we want is people to love us for who we are because it feels grounded
and forever, it's attached to our sense of self where our work isn't.
And it's rigid, right?
to our sense of self where our work isn't.
Um, and it's rigid, right.
And, you know, I told this story on the pod and someone asked, well, it's an interesting question, but a more interesting question is, do you love
you for who you are or for what you do?
Because a lot of the time we want the world to love us for who we are.
Meanwhile, we love us for what we do.
So you're asking the world to show up for you in a way that you're
not prepared to show up for you in a way that you're not prepared to show up for yourself.
You don't love you for who you are, for the fact that you actually care about other people, that you have empathy,
that, yeah, sure, it looks a little bit wimpy when you cry at Christmas films, but it's because you've got a soft side to you.
Or because you're really reliable, you know, like, like genuine good traits
that are as timeless as you can be.
No, no, no, no, no.
You've judged yourself on the last 10 hours of productivity and the fact that
you got distracted on YouTube for 30 minutes, despite the fact that you've crushed
it, even if you look at your productivity over the last six months, you've
crushed it as well, but no, no, no, you're going to, you know, exactly where
your shortcomings lie and the scabs that you can pick at and the scars and you know exactly what to say to
yourself to torture yourself about these things.
And you're not a nice friend to you, but you want the world to be a nice friend to
you. You want the world to love you for who you are.
Meanwhile, you love you for what you do.
Yeah.
I just thought that was such a lovely little.
No, I think that's a, um, cut me off if you heard me talk about this.
It was after book number two comes out.
So I grew up in a house.
We didn't have a lot, right?
And money was electric.
Uh, it was always a sense of tension.
Always, always, always, always.
And the book comes out.
Um, my wife and I, she was raised by teachers.
My dad was a policeman and then he became a minister. So we-
A lot of authority.
My therapist, when I walked in, I was like, my dad's a cop and a minister. She was like
getting the lake house. Very happy.
We've got lots of work.
Very happy. But both of us come with not a lot, right? And so then you find yourself
in this wild new world, right? Where of abundance, don't have psychology for it. I'm downstairs, my family
has come and they've been with maybe seven to ten days, too long, and they know it, I know it, it's
that strange, like, be good if you all left, and they're like, we'd be good if we left, and it's
just that awkward. They leave, I've got COVID as they're leaving, and then I'm working out in the
gym in my basement. My manager calls and he says,
hey, you know those two speaking event gigs
we were hoping to land, you got a second.
And the way he called, I was like,
ah man, we didn't get it.
He calls and starts yelling into the phone,
we got him.
And I start yelling,
cause these were the last two,
like transformational financially for me.
And I start cheering, I start yelling yeah my
wife comes downstairs into the basement she's like what are you yelling about
and I was like wake up I'm going to speak of this thing and the same and she's
very stoic West Texas woman like just will withdraw and wait till things are
calm she didn't do that she came forward this time and she got this close which
is not how she does conflict.
And she said, I'm watching my husband die and I'm watching him cheer the whole way and
I'm gaunt.
I'm exhausted.
I'm sweaty.
I'm sick.
I'm people out and I'm cheering.
And then she said this, she said the pie piece, the pie chart of how much I love you and the
pie piece for how much money you make is full.
And then she said, we have enough.
And she turned and walked away.
And I angrily was like, what the hell's enough?
And it was psychology for it.
And I didn't understand. What does that mean when someone just says, no, no, no, no, no, I picked you.
The joke in our house is she bought real low on me.
Right?
Like she bought when the stock was really low on me.
She's like, I picked you and this is cool.
This is awesome.
But I picked you.
And at part of the exchange, she was like, you can go do your speaking events.
I told you when I married you, I would never tell you now, go do it.
This is for your ego.
This is not for us.
And I got hot, but then I went straight to the therapist's
office, but we ended up in this moment. She said, I want you to take your fist and put
it in your chest and say the words to me. I love this man. And that was the first time
I was like, oh, I'm over my head. I'm stuck. I couldn't say the word. I couldn't do that
act. And in front of another grown woman, I could not say, I love this guy.
And then I was like, I got a problem, right?
I'm asking the world to give me something that I won't honor myself to give myself.
It's tough.
It's tough.
How did you walk through that?
Very, very slowly, very slowly.
Yeah.
It's, it sounds, it sounds obscene to think I've got to practice, but I have to practice saying you're a good dad.
Yeah. This sounds cheesy. I carry this with me. to think I've got to practice, but I have to practice saying you're a good dad.
Yeah.
This sounds cheesy. I carry this with me.
This is a, like when the thoughts pop in, like, ah, your kids would be better off
if you were at home right now.
No, they wouldn't.
They're doing great.
They're right.
It's that negative self-talk and just resetting that.
You're doing some CBT homework.
That's exactly right.
Yeah.
My act, ACT, yeah.
CBT homework. That's exactly right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
My act, ACT, yeah.
I've started CBT this year and I did a twice weekly psychotherapy for a year.
Okay.
How was that?
Tough, actually, in retrospect.
Wasn't so tough at the time.
I loved it.
My therapist was amazing.
It taught me an awful lot about myself.
It taught me more about myself than one and a half thousand sessions of meditation and many, many years of journaling
because somebody else is pointing at the things that you've got
that are going on inside of your mind.
But it opens an awful lot of loops that it doesn't close.
Cause there's no action steps.
Yeah, that's exactly right.
Yeah.
Correct.
And maybe for some people who aren't as dopamine nor
epinephrine as me, that's fine because they can just sit in the story.
But if I, if I've got open loops, I'm going to try and fix them.
And I think that this is, there's lots of different modalities where people can improve
their mental health, where people can improve the quality of their life.
Uh, your outcomes may vary.
Sure.
They say trading or whatever it is.
And I think psychotherapy is really, really useful for learning about yourself,
but you need something which is more action focused.
So for me, CBT has been fascinating.
It's been very rewarding, but fuck dude, it's hard.
Because for the people that don't know,
cognitive behavioral therapy is basically one hour a week
where you speak to a guy and then the remaining,
whatever it is, 163 hours a week where you do homework.
Challenge the thoughts.
Yeah.
You do homework.
He gives you homework and it's not, I have, if you looked at the reminders in my
phone, you'd think I was a crazy person.
I've got like punch the bully.
It repeats every three hours throughout the day.
Um, journaling practice.
Anyway, it's been really interesting.
Um, but talking about. I didn't find that as useful.
I CBT is obviously it's the, it's the gold standard.
I found the act, the app acceptance of commitment instead of challenging
the thoughts so much, just letting them walk by or letting them be that guy
at the table that always, you know, he's known that guy, everybody has that
friend and I, you spoke and I appreciate it.
I'm going to move on. That on that's interesting and it keeps me from
going to war with myself hmm otherwise I stay in I stay in constant conflict
with myself and like it's exhausting for me before we continue do you often feel
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I wrote this the other day.
It kind of, I think it resonates a little bit with what you're talking about there.
Some advice on how to support men.
Men want to aim high without feeling insufficient if they fall short.
Men want their suffering to be recognized and appreciated without being pandered to or patronized and made to feel weak.
Men want to believe that they can become more
without feeling like they're not enough already.
Men want to be able to open up without being judged.
Men want support without feeling broken.
Men want to be loved for who they are, not for what they do.
Too long didn't read.
Blending inspiration with compassion is not an easy task.
How do I set lofty goals,
which drive me to fulfill my potential without feeling less than if I don't get there tomorrow, said every guy ever.
The desire for self-love and high performance comes into conflict inside of the mind of everyone, men especially.
Sure, some men are all drive and goals with non-introspection.
And sure, some men are all reflection and inner work with few external desires.
But most men desire a mix of encouraged self-belief and understanding support.
Inevitably, these two things come into conflict.
Basically, every man just wants to hear,
I know you can be more, but you are enough already,
and even if you just stay where you are, I'll be right here next to you.
You're going to be great, but you don't need to be great,
and I'm with you no matter what. Or, as said best by Sturgill Simpson's mum, boy, I don't care if you hit it big
because you're already number one.
Yeah, that's powerful.
And that reminds me of what your wife said.
Yeah.
You know, like this is all great, but it also throws into harsh contrast.
Why am I doing it?
If people love me for who I am, why am I doing what I do?
Yeah.
Well, if you're doing it because you think it's going to feel some way on the back end,
that's the tale of all this time, right?
That's the great, that's the Jim Carrey speech, right?
I wish everyone could become rich and famous and see it's not going to fix up.
Yeah, it's nonsense.
And I think the alternative that we've got the last 15, 20 years is,
well, I'm just going to opt out and play video games. And that's a recipe It's nonsense. And I think the alternative that we've got the last 15, 20 years is, well, I'm just going
to opt out and play video games.
And that's a recipe for disaster too.
I think we, you know, Michael Easter's book, The Comfort Crisis, which I think is a masterpiece.
I think we have a culture that's allergic to discomfort.
And so I think that tension is, that's where joy is.
That's where meaning is.
Is I'm enough and I can hold
that loosely enough so that I can hit that guy real hard.
They, they had a breakdown in ESPN the other day of Alex, uh, Piera and his,
they're talking about how hard he hits that it's otherworldly.
And the, they had an interview with a referee is like he, the sound it makes
when he hits another human is different.
Right.
And I just thought, man, can you imagine me I'll do that?
But they say it comes from how calm he is.
Right.
His ability to stay at until he uncorks.
And, um, my coach used to always say like, dude, you're like a bear.
You're like so tense all the time and it takes away.
And so I think of men knew, oh, she loves me no matter what,
that actually drives that anchor deep into the concrete so you can repel off the edge and go do
something bananas. And it sounds counterintuitive. Yeah. That you don't need to push me. I'll push
myself more if I know that I don't need to. Let me know I'm anchored. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Well,
I mean, you know, that's a phenomenal piece of advice. And I put that essay out and perhaps unsurprisingly, a lot of girls,
the women who caught a hold of it or follow me on Instagram said,
well, like women want this too.
And I'm like, yeah, I'm sure they do.
Can I tell you, that drives me crazy.
That makes me insane, dude.
The every conversation has to be so universal at all times. You've got to
equivocate. God almighty, if I write a note on Instagram to dads, that's just... What about
moms? I guess moms too, but I was I failed as a dad in this moment. I just
write myself a note. You'll notice that it doesn't really happen in the other
direction. God almighty dude, it's wild, it's wild. I had a conversation with
Richard Reeves sat here. Gosh, you know what, Richard?
Oh my gosh.
Yes.
So boys and men.
Yeah.
So he's great American Institute of boys and men.
And, um, it was the second time we'd been on and we got, we went for like
three and a half hours and it's phenomenal.
Um, and I mentioned, I was getting a bit frustrated at the fact that every
time I talk about the problems facing boys and men, I need to do this weird.
Social land acknowledgement about the fact facing boys and men, I need to do this weird social land acknowledgement.
Oh yeah, dude.
About the fact, well, we must recognize that there is issues that women have faced and we have to
remember that it's only been a recent time that men have been falling behind and we must not forget
the fact that we've got sexual assaults and blah, blah, blah. And after we've got through all of
that, let's begin to talk about men.
It's the Seinfeld, not that there's anything wrong with that, right?
Yeah, exactly.
Everything has to have a qualifier.
And I'm like, can I say this once
at the beginning of my career,
and never have to say it again?
Because it's, you know, part of it's clipping culture
that if somebody's able to pull you out of context
by not having said the thing.
And even if you do, if you say it at the beginning,
this happened to me the other day,
I said the thing, I said it, and it just got cut off.
I'm like, right, well, fuck that.
I might as well not even say it.
But what about this?
What if, as a society, we just chose,
I'm going to think the best of Chris.
Well, the problem is, we don't like to think the best
of people because hypocrisy on the internet is like
catnip, right? Being able to catch somebody out.
This was the reason, you remember when Joe got popped
for his N word video, which is like five minutes of you hard, actually hard R'ing your way.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
A combination of A'ing and hard R'ing.
Anyway, this video goes live and Joe's like, yeah, fuck, that looks bad.
That's, that's, that's not, that's not good.
And the internet was told by legacy media, this is what this guy is truly like.
And this is what it means about him.
He's really the secret bigoted racist, homophobic, xenophobic transfer,
blah, blah, blah, that we've always known he was.
They were saying, this is the tip of the iceberg.
And we know that below it is all of this.
But the problem was most of the people that were trying to convince are like,
I've listened to 500 hours of him speaking. You're saying that this is the tip of the iceberg.
I've seen the whole iceberg. I know there's nothing down there or I have a reliable sense
that there isn't anything down there. And that situation kind of taught me what gets sucked in,
what causes people to get sucked in to this. And the precise thing is a vacuum of information and the speculation,
the opportunity for people to point a finger and say, ah, see, I got him.
I fucking, I got him.
Yeah.
And no, the principle of charity is not extended to people on the internet.
But it's not extended to people in our homes.
Like the Gottman say, when you distill all the way down, what makes a great marriage,
beyond all like religion, finance, are you all friends?
Like I've got a buddy who lives what five hours west of here.
His name's John too. He was fat John. I was hyper John.
And back in the day, dude always leave cans out everywhere.
Always, always, always, always.
This single worst text responder in human history.
It doesn't matter.
A guy cannot respond to a text.
It's phenomenal.
Not one time have I ever left his house and thought, leaving Ken's out.
What is he trying to say about our friendship?
Not one time.
He doesn't respond.
Not one time have I thought, does he not love me?
What does this mean for us?
Not once.
He's my friend.
That guy stood in front of me and thrown punches on my behalf. Literally. He's opened up his house to me Not once. He's my friend. That guy stood in front of me and thrown punches on my behalf, literally.
He's opened up his house to me for decades.
He's my friend, right?
And, but I don't give my wife that, what do these towels mean, right?
Or like, like what is happening in this house?
Like, oh, there's a dish in the dishwasher.
What is she trying to tell me?
Right.
And we make this huge character assassination.
We just, it's madness.
I don't even, so I don't think it, I think what's happening on the internet is a, is a magnification of what happens in our own homes. Right? And we make this huge character assassination. We just, it's madness.
So I don't think it, I think what's happening on the internet is a magnification of what
happens in our own homes.
We're so unsure of ourselves.
We walk around with these glasses on trying to find where everybody else has holes so
we can be like, yep, yep, yep, yep.
And that's the way we try to prop ourselves up to say, I've got value too, right?
I can get value by burning everybody to the ground inside my own house.
Our self worth stands on the shoulders of other people's shortcomings.
That's it.
That's it.
Instead of exhaling saying, when I walk in the door and there's a pile of towels,
good God, what must have her day been like?
Let's pick up the towels.
Or when I walk into John's house, I just pick up the cans.
Or when he finally texts me back, right?
Like, Hey, what's up?
Like, yeah, I'm happy to hear from him, man.
He's one of my best friends.
So it's a madness.
It's a madness.
Speaking about challenges, why do you think people regularly get into relationships with
partners that they feel like they need to fix?
Yeah, I think that old adage in marriage therapy is true.
You marry your unfinished business.
I think the way I would describe it is your nervous system puts little GPS pins in there
when you're a kid and you're constantly asking, why doesn't that man love me?
He's supposed to.
Or, why is this shiny little box more important than me?
Or, why did my mom pick up that bottle of wine and not pick up me. And you constantly are trying to solve that loop.
And when you get older and you want to, your body repeats what it knows and you
go in and try to solve that situation again.
And you do it again.
I was just talking to somebody in the outside of the grocery store, just a
minute ago about the same exact thing.
Your body just goes in and tries to solve it again and solve it again.
And you got to get outside that loop.
Um, otherwise you just repeat it and you repeat it and you repeat it because over time you
realize the seven year old is not the problem.
Seven year old is never the problem.
Well, I suppose you can become enchanted by a person that you're attached to.
Yeah.
Which fills a literal void inside of you.
And when this is a primary caretaker, this is good.
But when this is an inappropriate partner, it's not.
So you're used to, I think a lot of the time, if you grow up around difficult adults, children can't change or get rid of their caregivers.
So they just learn to cope.
They learn to solve it.
Yeah.
They learn to hold on to the long enough and in the hopes that maybe the person
will take mercy on them and change.
If you're five, you don't have a passport.
You don't know how to leave the house.
So you become, if you were not cared for in the way that you should as a child,
you learned to become unusually good at surviving on a meager diet of love.
Or you learn to sing and dance and get it, right?
I've got to perform.
I remember one of the coolest things about going back to
grad school as an old man is I had to do a practicum again.
I was working with this brilliant man named,
a psychologist named Dr. Michael Gomez.
I remember we were sitting with these kids that had some pretty remarkable trauma.
And one of the kids was making straight A's.
And during a debrief, I said, he's like, all right, who's going to struggle here?
Where do we go?
And I said, this one's going to be okay.
And I said, why?
And he goes, well, he's performing well.
He's doing grades.
He's making great grades.
And he said something that has rattled me since.
He said, straight A's can be a trauma response too great grades. And he said something that has rattled me since he said,
straight A's can be a trauma response to John.
And you can burn a building down.
You will be, you kids will find a way to be seen or they'll
find a way to hide.
They'll find a way to stay safe and they'll nuzzle up against you.
So I think kids are always trying to solve and yeah, there's
some that have to survive on just sips of oxygen, right?
Through a straw, but others will be really good on that T-ball field man.
Cause that makes my dad exhale.
Well, I mean, that's why when we look at, you know, the highest performers in
business and, and, uh, content creation output and the world of sports and all
the rest of it, for the most part, what you should look at these people with
is pity, not envy.
You think what has happened to this person to cause them to need to do that to themselves?
That's not for me to say that all high performers don't have...
Some don't have a good balance of you desire for more and running away from past trauma and all the rest of the stuff.
Many do. But most don't.
Most are doing it because they need validation from the world because they didn't get it when they were kids.
I remember watching that ESPN documentary with Michael Jordan.
And there's that scene where he's smoking the cigar in the hotel room.
And he looks at the camera and he said, you don't want this life.
And he can't go to the bathroom downstairs.
Like, there's just full of people, right?
And I remember it cuts to a scene of the banners and the rafters.
And again, I'm sitting there on my couch in my small little house.
And I just remember looking at all that saying, for what?
Like for six pieces of cloth for glory, like for what?
Right.
It's a weird realization though, especially when it comes to high
performers, because we assume that if we had what they had, we would feel fulfilled.
And the reason that they're not fulfilled is because they're ungrateful,
not because the fulfillment is hollow.
That's exactly right.
The issue is with them, not with the thing that they've been given, the fuel.
That's right.
Um, yeah, I think.
And dude, I'm doing the same thing.
Like the moment my first book went number one, we were, I was in a meeting two
weeks later, be like, all right, what's the next one?
Right.
I got right on it, man.
It's it is dude.
It just taps in, man.
Fucking, we both do need to act.
But yeah, I think, you know,
there's a lot of different insights
on the dating somebody that's a problem thing.
I think there's an allure of somebody
who doesn't love us back.
There's an allure of someone.
But the allure is a question, why?
Can I solve this?
Can I solve this?
Can I solve this? Of course.
Because a lot of us like fixing problems.
But we also export our value to somebody else.
Oh yeah.
Right? And if this person doesn't like me, can I morph and change and transform so that I can become likeable?
If we can convince someone who doesn't seem to like us all the time to care, maybe that means that we're worthy.
That's right. We solved the problem. Of course.
If we can fix them as well, maybe it means that we're fixable too.
Like in their mistreatment of us, we see reflected the same level of
mistreatment that we give ourselves.
Right.
Right.
Right.
Well, like I actually always did think that I wasn't worthy of love.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Now it's being given to me.
And if I can redeem this person externally, maybe it means that
I can fix what it is that I've proven to myself in time as well.
I think, you know, the weirdest element of this that I was thinking about was variable
schedule reward.
So the way that slot machines work and just that when you see someone that's in a crazy relationship, turbulent,
it's hot and it's cold and it's all the rest of it.
You think what the fuck is like, what are the, both of these people
getting from this relationship?
And I get the sense that there's, you don't know what you're going to wake up to today.
It's like, if you don't know what you're going to wake up to today, that might be
really painful, but there's just a very, very ancient
bit of your brain that fucking loves it.
Yeah.
Exactly.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It means a hell of a drug.
Well, and we've, uh, I actually came to her
book through you, uh, Louise Perry's book.
She did.
No, no, she was on again this week.
Um, there's a, uh, quote in that book that
has just bounced around and set my head in a taunt to me, but it's about, have we solved for so many existential issues that
plagued humanity forever that we're simply, we're bored to death.
Oh, this is the exact Maslow's hierarchy of needs thing.
Yeah.
See, I have a, man, I have an unsubstantiated hypothesis about even that
Maslow's hierarchy we can talk about.
All right.
But I think, I think we're, I think we're bored to death. I have an unsubstantiated hypothesis about you and that Maslow's hierarchy we can talk about.
But I think we're bored to death.
I think our brains are cooking because we've got food at the touch of a button.
We've got water in every room in our house.
We've got these problems solved.
And then it's got, we need that slot machine, man.
And we'll get it from that guy that makes the back minute.
You know the idea of concept creep where as a,
as the incident of something like let's say racism becomes less
and less over time, the definition of racism expands.
Okay. So the level of racism stays the same,
but what constitutes racism has changed in order to keep the
level the same because the actual incidents have reduced in
the same way as I think climate related deaths have
decreased by 50 times. It's like 98% drop in the last hundred years. Let's say
something like that. 168,000 people get lifted out of poverty every single day.
So we've had to redefine what climate crisis means. That's not to say that
there isn't a fucking problem with the climate. Of course, yes.
But yeah, when it comes to in your life,
if you're the sort of person who is used to fixing problems
and you don't have many problems anymore,
you'll begin inventing them.
You will begin finding them in places
where they don't need to be,
not because you are a good problem finder,
but because you're addicted to solving
problems.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And my identity is found and I solve problems and I will manufacture them and I will create
them and I will seek them out.
And my wife will often she'll gently pat the table or pat my leg when I get off into, and
then in Syria, we're right here.
We're in Nashville.
And it's such a, such a, like, okay, yeah, I can solve this one today.
I can be nicer to my daughter right now.
Yeah. I think on the difficult partners thing, if you don't have a full tank of self-love,
how dare you deny the love of somebody else, even if it's tricky or filled with poisonous ingredients.
You know what I mean?
Like I have, I don't think of myself that highly and this person isn't treating me that
highly either, but they're treating me.
Yeah.
And it sounds like a cliche thing that I'm always, nobody's going to exercise.
Nobody's going to go through the pain of any sort of
life change or any sort of relationship change if at the end of the day you don't think you're
worth the change, right?
And so it's easy to keep going out and seeking these nonsensical lack of reality like truths
that exist in our world now because I don't even think I'm worth doing the hard work,
right?
Dave Ramsey's built an empire on live on less than you make.
And it's like, that's insane, right?
It's madness.
That's just math, dude, right?
But we create all these other alternate realities to make ourselves go,
because I don't even think I'm worth the hard math.
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Modern wisdom. Yeah, I mean look we accept the love that we think we deserve. There you go and
And that's the problem
Yeah
Because this is why you see people who are consistently in the same sorts of relationships.
It's intellectual cutting.
Yeah.
It's intellectual self-harm.
Oh, right.
Yeah.
I'm not worth it.
Yeah.
I've got to whip myself into submission.
Yeah.
I want to ask you, can I, can we pontificate?
Fire away.
I've been wrestling with Maslow's hierarchy.
Once you get above physiology and love, I don't know that this idea of esteem and self actualization can coexist on top of these things.
I think they are interwoven.
Okay.
And I think that we may have given ourselves an illusion
that you become actualized as you're choosing to love
every day, despite hard things and how to forgive.
And you find esteem by consistently being part of safety
and consistently being part of a community
and coming back in when you get separated.
And this idea that they're separate and somehow
we're all gonna become this little lighthouse on the hill.
I just don't think that, I think we're at the end of self actualization.
This notion that we can somehow be set, be all be little lighthouses on a hill.
I don't think that's how we're wired and designed.
I certainly think it's more difficult in the modern world because let's face it, the safety
needs, the basic needs, the survival needs,
they're looked after. You don't have to do anything for them.
So all of those needs now, for instance, good example,
you're not going to starve.
Most people listening to this podcast,
I would like to think I'm going to starve.
But that doesn't mean that someone is going to cook a meal
and put it on your dinner table, right?
So there's a difference between having food in the house so that the people
around you don't starve and serving them through something which they still need.
Exactly.
Yes.
Is that what you're talking?
It's sort of a relationship between the two.
Well, I think implied, especially in the modern world is, and again, I don't
know what Maslow was thinking, but there's absent participation in these
bottom rungs.
There's an expectation that they're going to exist for us so that I can get to the more
important stuff of sitting in a room and thinking about how great I am.
Yeah, yeah, Whole Foods has got that sorted.
The police have got safety sorted.
Yeah, yeah.
And so the world owes me these things.
The world owes me love.
The world owes me these things so that I can get to the more important stuff which is on
top.
And I think that's false.
I think the more important stuff I will find out, I'll become actualized through a constant
lifetime of love.
Well, there's definitely an element that anyone going through an existential crisis, anyone
asking themselves, am I really enacting my logos forward?
Is this my highest contribution to the world?
Is in a position of ultimate luxury.
That's it.
Because the only chance that you have to ask yourself that question.
But it diminishes the mom who day in and day out and day in and day out and day in
and day out.
That's self-actualization.
Dude, I want to make moms great again.
Or the dad who, dude, doesn't do the job that we do.
He goes up and down fifth and sixth street collecting trash day after day after day,
year after year after year.
You don't do that and then hopefully you can get some self-actualization on the side.
You're going to look back and say this city operated because I was a part of it.
That's self-actualization, right?
It's not this place you go to, this destination that you're
removed from these other things.
They're, they're tightly integrated.
Yeah.
That's interesting.
Well, you know, I mean, how many people do you know that have reached
some degree of success?
I have two people that I think of, uh, Tucker Maxx and Ryan Holiday, both of
whom live in opposite directions out here from Austin, uh, two people who
big businesses, very successful authors, well-known, renowned, money, opportunities, blah, blah, blah,
essentially retired to do the thing that they used to do full-time, part-time
and to hammer fence posts in full-time.
They did ranching and wrangling and fucking hoeing the ground and fixing
fence posts and the sheep's got stuck and blah, blah, blah.
Why?
Because chopping wood and carrying water actually gives you a sense of
satisfaction that it's hard to find elsewhere.
But I've been thinking an awful lot about where people take joy and satisfaction
from in their work and for people who maybe have a little bit of agency or
self-determination to the sort of work that they do.
So we need to be a business owner,
but they can maybe contribute to how the teams are put together,
maybe part of a small business or a startup,
or maybe they are independent contractor or something like that.
I've been thinking a lot about bands and the way that bands,
they have to work very hard,
but it's a very enjoyable career,
and performing and concerts rank as some of the highest happiness
pursuits that you can do. Like huge, huge, huge studies that look at anything that's collective
effervescence, especially if you're performing, but also if you're experiencing. You have to
presume that if you're performing, you also get the benefit of experiencing at the same time.
And I was thinking like, okay, so what is it that they're doing that's keeping them going when
they're, you know, 50 dates deep into this big long tour and
they're in fucking Japan and they're sleep deprived, blah, blah, blah.
And I think a big part of it is having other people to share the successes with.
To be able to, I don't just mean like coming home to your wife and her going,
nah, thank good for you honey, or whatever it might be, but a good thing happens.
And you have someone that you can go, ah, that's
fucking sick.
You know what I mean?
Like, and it wasn't your wife in that moment, but it was your manager.
That's right.
Right.
You on the phone to your manager, your manager's there screaming down the phone
because you're both on a journey together.
That's right.
If you'd done your own bookings, who would you have screamed to?
Yeah.
I would have pumped my fist and been like, cool.
And forgotten about it.
Right.
Got this memory. You wouldn't have remembered it if it was on your own. That's right. You wouldn't have remembered to? Yeah, I would have pumped my fist and been like, cool. And forgotten about it. Right. Got this memory. You wouldn't have remembered it
if it was on your own. That's right. You wouldn't have remembered it. Yeah. And
then having my wife walk up at one of those events, she surprised me, walked up
with a microphone and said, I'm so proud of you. I'll remember that to the day I die.
Right? I'll remember that to the day I die. Yeah, because it meant something. It was a
shared experience. And kind of like stand-up comedy, I've become obsessed
over the last few years, man. I just obsessed. I live around the corner from a club in Nashville
and I kind of go too much. I love it.
But that and music, it's got a pretty tight feedback loop to it.
Exactly. I mean, you have immediate response from the audience.
It's one of the last bastions of human connection.
Yeah. You play a good note, they make a noise.
You tell a good joke, they make a noise.
It's very quick.
So yeah, I think just one thing that's come to me.
Although the internet and remote working have afforded everybody the
opportunity to step back and to, you know, I can work from anywhere, man.
You know, I can be on the top of a mountain.
I can determine my own working schedule.
I don't need anybody else.
I just need a laptop and an internet connection.
I'm good.
That's great.
But it's siloed you off from being able to do the thing that you actually wanted to do, which was enjoy the fucking process. That's it. That's great, but it siloed you off from being able to do the thing that you
actually wanted to do, which was enjoy the fucking process of doing the work.
That's it.
That's it.
Look, some people are just looking to earn in pounds and spend in pesos and
they have whatever like fulfillment that occurs outside of their job.
Fine.
But if you want to get some fulfillment from your job, I don't think that you
can solo Sigma male loan ranger,one Ranger one entrepreneur it in fucking Bali.
Because who, when you nail this next client on a sales call for like the biggest
deal you've ever, oh my God, like Hewlett Packard are going to use our software.
Dude, you just made 20 grand.
Right.
You just made 20 grand.
Oh, it's just me that made 20 grand.
Who am I going to celebrate with?
And I'm fired up kind of, but I'm not that fired up because the whole, the whole
reason that you want to win something is so that you can go with other people.
That's the Wolf of Wall Street.
It, uh, DiCaprio's character.
It looks like he's, he's addicted to the deal.
I don't think he was.
I think he was addicted to the room cheering.
You know what I mean?
To that, to that celebration and the deal gets you that. think he was. I think he was addicted to the room cheering. Yeah. You know what I mean? To that, to that celebration. And the deal gets you that. Right?
Yes. Yes. So that becomes the proxy. And all the money is, is just the number that you
get to like shout in the air with everybody else.
That's it. That's it. And the awe and the, oh my gosh, how'd you do that? That's amazing.
So a perfect example of this. I'm going to go and do, uh, it looks like it's the first
time I'm talking about it. I'm going to go and do a tour around America and Canada later this year.
Come to Nashville, please.
It's booked.
Is it?
Outstanding.
Uh, so as a part of that, I'm going to get to, I don't need a warmup, right?
It's two hours of me talking on stage.
I'm going to take a warmup because I want someone to finish the show with and fucking
high five.
And it might be Zach, my ex housemate who plays guitar. It might be James Smith from Australia.
It might be somebody I might get, you know, guests come and do warmup, but I want
someone there with me so that I don't go back to the hotel on my own and think
about how good or how bad it was.
You know what I mean?
Like I've got friends who are DJs, dude.
I've got friends DJing looks from the outside, like the most dialed life in the world.
Let me tell you, it is on the come-up before you've got your tour manager with
you, before you've got an opener with you, before you've got like a structure around
you, it's kind of a bit like hell.
You're playing until three in the morning.
If you've got back to back gigs, I have a friend who did.
Played a gig on a Monday in Argentina, Buenos Aires, something.
And the next time he got to sleep in a bed was Saturday.
So it was Monday to Saturday and he played four gigs over five time
zones of whatever it was.
And, uh, he ended up basically having like a small psychotic break.
Talked about it on the podcast years ago now.
And, uh, he had to say he came to in a supermarket sat on the floor and he had
laid around him one of every different type of hair product.
He'd been scooping it up and putting it on his head.
Cause he realized his hair was shit.
Yeah.
He grabbed a floret of broccoli, 48 dishwasher tablets and walked out.
Like he had a full, you know, part, part psychotic break.
You think, huh, that doesn't sound fun, but from the outside, it's like, Oh my
God, he's living his dream.
He gets to play his music around the world.
Like careful what you wish comes at a cost, man.
Yeah.
Especially on your own.
Yeah.
There's always, there's always a trade.
There's always a trade.
Um, talking about, I guess the next step, people get into relationships with those
that they feel like they need to fix.
Why do people stay in relationships? Even that they feel like they need to fix. Why do people stay in relationships
even if they're not being fulfilled?
Talk to me about fulfillment.
And I think sometimes that's the model you have.
I think sometimes I'm not worth my needs being fulfilled.
Sometimes I don't even know what that would feel like
if my needs were fulfilled. And so kind of what you talked about earlier, I'm just gonna keep expanding what my needs being fulfilled. Sometimes I don't even know what that would feel like if my needs were fulfilled. And so kind of you talked about earlier, I'm just going to
keep expanding what my needs need to be because my need is actually seeing you how high you
can jump and it just keeps expanding, expanding. But I think for most of us, we don't have
a model of what it looks like. Our moms and dads, if you look at the demographics across,
like there was only one parent in the house or they were co-managers
of the house and even like each other, right?
And I've got no picture of what someone who actually loves me and is connected with me
and quote unquote needs.
And by the way, I've been struggling lately and love to get your thoughts on this.
I've been struggling with the idea of needs.
Because I think needs have turned modern relationships into a very parasitic relationship.
And I think beneath that, a more vulnerable, scary question to ask is what I want.
And I think it's easy if I lob a need grenade at you, I need you to do these things, this,
this, this, this, and this, versus, man, I really want you to X, Y, and Z.
Because one of those, I kind of take out the, I need this.
And if you don't do this, then, then you're not performing.
Or I really want you, do you want me to, do you see me?
Oh, that's lovely.
And so I think most of us are so terrified at asking the want question
of ourselves and of our partner that we cast it all as needs.
Right.
Because the want can be denied, but the need can't.
Oh, the want should, it could be denied, but the need should not.
If you deny my needs, you're an ass.
If you deny my want.
Cause you might not want.
Hmm.
That's different.
One of the most common questions I get from married men is I just want her,
I just want more sex, right?
I want more sex, I want better sex, et cetera.
But they come at it with, I need more sex.
But if you need something, then it goes on the chore list,
along with the diapers, end of this, and I got to clean the kitchen.
Which is unbelievably sexy.
I'll get you off and then I'm going to go to bed, right?
A way more terrifying question for a modern male is,
to a wife with two kids and it's exhausting and you're both working full time,
I want you, do you want me?
And if you don't, we need to have that conversation.
What would, what would desire look like? That's a scarier conversation, man.
And there are basic needs, so I don't want to throw out the baby with the
bath water, but I think most of this comes down to wants and that's terrifying.
That's an awesome reframe.
That's really good.
That's an awesome reframe. That's really good.
Yeah, I think in the process of defining our wants
and risking the potential for somebody to be unprepared
to fulfill them for us, we feel less than.
Yeah.
Or we don't have a psychology for being wrong.
I think you've talked about this on another show that I listened to.
Before I went to college, I went to this very well-meaning Texas church camp, and they took
us 18-year-old guys in a room, and they were like, the world's going to destroy you, so
write down right now what your non-negotiables for your life partner will be.
Write them down right now, because they're going to get watered down and the edges rubbed off.
It's going to be bad.
Oh, okay. So you were sort of at this purist.
Yeah. Before the world soils you.
Right. Okay.
Write down your-
Actually what you're really going to want.
Your 10 non-negotiables.
Okay.
I'm 26 years with the same person, the same woman, and I think she had two of the 10,
and one of them was be a pretty girl, right? Like
be a beautiful woman. And so it's what when I say I want something so often my manager's that's his
job is to be like you don't want that. Like I really want this. You don't want that. Right?
And we don't have a psychology for being wrong. We just are so led around the nose by our feelings.
I feel, I feel, I feel, I feel. and man, I can get what I want when I cast
it in the form of a need, that you have to meet it.
That's fascinating.
I suppose as well, you know, it goes back to what do you think you deserve?
And if we don't have a, we don't have a, man, if you had to fight and
scratch and claw and sing and dance in a third grade math class
to get your mom to look you in the eye, you don't think you're worthy of a want.
You know what I mean?
If you had to sing and dance on a soccer field for your dad to pat you on the back, no eye
contact, of course, but just pat you on the back, you don't think you're worthy of wanting
anything.
Everything has to be a need.
Also, what was the model of needs and wants and desires
being requested and fulfilled in the household?
Because, you know, a lot of the generation
that are growing up now and are asking themselves
these questions, their parents, they didn't have
that sort of communication education.
No.
You know, there wasn't podcasts and fucking Arthur Brooks
and all of this stuff, you this stuff to help everybody through.
So you go, okay, well, what was the model of how to
communicate the things?
Well, what about like passive aggression?
That's it.
What about shadow sentences?
What about not requesting what you need and then
getting bitter about the fact that you never got it?
Yeah, we were cast in movies.
We didn't even know we were in and we got in trouble for not knowing the lines, right?
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You didn't attend a party you weren't invited.
Yes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And then how dare you not show up?
Yep.
Right.
Yeah.
Yep.
And you don't know.
Um, so yeah, I think the sense of what, what are
you worth, what are you worth?
What, what, what should you get out of this?
And do you even know what it is that you're asking for?
Like, have you got an idea of it?
And I guess, okay, moving one step forward from this, if somebody feels convinced that
they should leave a relationship, but they're struggling to accumulate the bravery to be
able to sort of pull the pin, maybe they've got close a few times and they've bailed out.
What would you say to sort of motivate that person who deep down knows
that it's the right thing to do, but as of yet, just the courage kind of hasn't come to them?
That's a great question. I think there's a practical aspect to this,
and then I think there's a practical aspect to this and then I think there's a relational aspect to this.
If there's a very real, the data is pretty clear that more women file for divorce,
but women's net worth often plummets, right? And so there's a very real economic consequence.
So if you're married to somebody, if you're living with somebody and you know,
I got to get out of this thing, there's a very real math problem you have to solve.
And that's unfortunate and that's scary and the social services are pretty tough, but
there's a very real question.
I suppose that the equivalent would be the same for men, but in reverse paying alimony
and blah, blah.
That's exactly right.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And so I think there's a math problem there.
Not to say stay together for the math, right?
That's, I haven't seen that bumper sticker, but there's a very real reality to this. The other side of it is I know for most of us when emotions are a sign, especially
strong emotions are a sign that your body's trying to protect you.
And when your body's trying to protect you, you're not thinking.
And so for me, it's been very important to have a couple of men in my life that
I outsource some of these things to.
Let's sit down with you, make sure I'm seeing this thing clearly.
Cause here's what I'm feeling.
And it's been more than once in my life when I sit down with a few of my old 30
year plus ride or die buddies and I'm like, she's doing this and this and this.
And they're like, have you looked in a mirror, man?
And they're able to see something, right?
No, no warrior goes into battle without eyes in the sky.
And so I think, um, I often are in our, in our lone ranger cowboy world we live in, man.
It's you got to know all this, but I'll do those by yourself.
And so I'm constantly telling people, dude, go get a cup of coffee with somebody and just exhale.
And they tell them what's going on.
And they may say, Hey, there's a common thing on my show.
Someone will call and be like, my sex life screwed up.
We have only had sex twice last year.
It's a disaster. It's falling apart.
And then 10 minutes into the conversation, it's like, well, we have a five- have only had sex twice last year. It's a disaster. It's falling apart.
And then 10 minutes into the conversation,
it's like, well, we have a five-year-old,
a three-year-old, a one-year-old, and she's pregnant.
I'm like, bro, hang up the phone and call me back.
Like, you'll have survival sex.
Y'all are figuring this thing out.
Like, you're not broke and it's okay, right?
But that's just, you just need somebody to sit with you.
But when it comes to courage and bravery,
I think at some point we have to head into the discomfort.
I mean, that's all the,
that's all Judd Brewer stuff on anxiety, right?
You gotta head into it.
The thing that you're scared about and anxious about.
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Yeah, I think some of the questions I've asked friends about when they've been on the fence,
unsure, scared about being alone, about losing this attachment.
You know, one of the things is how much of your life is thinking about this breakup taking
up?
Like what other productive or peaceful or mindful thoughts
is this taking the space of?
How often are you not present at dinner,
or not present at work,
or trying to meditate or train in the gym
or do any of the things that usually bring you joy
and you're not thinking about where you are?
When someone says, hey, should I break up with them
and thinking about this, this, I always say, absolutely, should I break up with them? I'm thinking about this, this, I always say, absolutely.
You should break up with them.
And I just watch.
And if they're, if their shoulders drop, if their face drops,
that may be the right move.
Yeah.
And they've got a sense of relief from, from that being on the other side.
They're just asking you for permission.
That's right.
They're just asking you for permission.
There's this great, uh, you know, Rick Hansen, he wrote hard wiring happiness.
Dude, unreal.
Imagine CBT meets, uh, Dharma wisdom meets mindfulness meets neuroscience.
It's a hard wiring happiness by Rick Hansen.
He's got a phenomenal, phenomenal, uh, podcast with his son, Forest Hansen.
I think it's called being well.
phenomenal, phenomenal podcast with his son, Forest Hanson. I think it's called Being Well.
And he dropped this quote that said,
wisdom is choosing a greater happiness
over a lesser happiness.
And I think, you know, a lot of the time we assume
that change is only ever going to make things worse,
even though when we look back,
almost all changes have made things better.
But we don't fear change, we fear loss.
True, yeah.
But that's uncertainty.
We don't necessarily feel lost, we fear uncertainty.
That's right.
Because losing an abusive partner,
isn't, you're not fearing that,
you're fearing the uncertainty
of what it would be like to be without them.
You know, we have two needs as humans.
We have an exploration need and we have a security need.
Yeah. And their intention, right? Correct. Novelty and their intention, right? Novelty and yeah, yeah, yeah. Novelty, safety. You need
to go out and get some berries. You need to go to a new bush because this one's empty. But also
there's a risk of going there because there might be a line behind it and it might kill you.
I think one of the things that's really useful is to try and have faith that you are the sort of person who can handle change well.
Like just to think about that as an ideal, like it makes a world inside of your mind where you don't need to fear things adjusting,
because change has happened in the past and you seem to deal with it quite well then.
Change is going to happen in the future.
You're probably going to deal with that.
So why not this one?
Like why not back yourself to be able to be the sort of person who can deal with change
well?
Like you've got this, you're flexible and you're okay in different situations.
And yeah, I, you know, unfortunately a lot of the people who have the opportunity to choose partners to not just have to settle
for the first thing that happens to have different life opportunities to move away from their
time, they are probably quite hard workers.
And the problem with being a hard worker is that you have to have a pain tolerance.
And if your pain tolerance is quite high, that means that your pain tolerance for emotional
deprivation is quite high, which means that you'll stick about in a relationship that isn't serving
you for a very, very long time.
Just keep going and going and going and going.
Cause that's what we do.
Yeah.
You're used to putting your nose against the grindstone and things being tough and coming
out the other side and going, I wasn't that happy, but fuck, I got through it.
Because in the past, in other areas of life, in the gym or in diet or in building
your meditation habit or in business or in skill acquisition, you have learned to
associate delayed gratification.
You're basically marshmallow testing your way through, through life over and over
again, and you go, well, look, there's certain things that you just kind of need
to embrace the suck and on the other side of which there will be maybe not happiness, but meaning and fulfillment
and wellbeing and perhaps downstream from that you get some like fun and enjoyment and
happiness and blah, blah, blah.
But probably not in your relationship, right?
I don't think anybody's going to congratulate you on your deathbed for saying he suffered
in silence.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, except that I don't know that, I mean, it takes two to tango, right?
But I think that makes suffering the, the inevitable outcome.
And I remember when my wife and I were sitting across the table, uh, like the
message I sent to her, cause we weren't speaking, was no crying, no fighting, no screaming.
And this was self-directed.
I'm the emotional one.
We got to say, are we still doing this?
This is it.
Because the marriage we've had up until now is over.
Are we going to keep doing this?
But I remember that conversation when we both came to the realization we have both mutually
chosen a miserable marriage.
And the beauty is we can mutually chosen a miserable marriage.
And the beauty is we can choose a not miserable one.
And I think that agency of choice has been taken away by a culture of disempowerment. So I think the idea of like it's either bail or suffer in silence. I think that's a,
that is, I don't think it's that binary. I think you can also both be like do we chose suck and I chose
I did something whoever you may be I
stepped out on the marriage I
Gambling a bunch of money way. Like I did an extra bad thing. If you want to frame it like that
we can both choose something different and
That to me is a it's not on the table anymore
But if you look past the same thing
happens relationally those who stick it out and they choose something different
choose something magnanimous which is very on Romeo and Juliet right you're
supposed to just be star-crossed lovers. It's stupid it's nonsense you choose it
and you keep choosing it and you keep choosing it. Man you see people who've
been through hell and they're on the other side that's the goofy guys that
have real short shorts on and no business wearing
that short of shorts at the beach and they don't care.
Right.
Cause that's because she loves them.
All right.
Right.
And it's, it's a different kind of, it's a, it's a different kind of depth that love.
I've heard you say before about how the time, I think this was your
conversation with Arthur Brooks.
Uh, the time when you want to pull away the most is the time when you're supposed to
head in.
I did it last night with my daughter.
She nine years old, man.
She's got a supernatural ability.
She knows where every single hidden button buttons.
I didn't even know I had, she just knows.
And she screaming and hollering and yelling and doing her nine-year-old stuff
and started to walk away. And I literally went downstairs to head out the door with the dog
to go for a walk. And I stopped. This is that moment. That's what Arthur Brooks is ringing in
my head. And you turn around, you walk back in. And I went and climbed into bed with her. And my
wife's reading a book. And I just climbed, she shoves me out of the way,
I move and whew.
And then within 30 seconds you hear her breathing different
and then she reaches over and grabs your hand
and that's what dads do.
Emotionally immature children run off.
Dads go right through it.
Oh yeah, you had a child on child war about to begin.
It's my in a seven year old.
Bro. That's right. Dude's my in a seven year old.
Bro.
That's right.
Dude.
It may have been.
It may have been Sal DeStefano that I called recently and was like, Hey, I'm having a disagreement
with my 14 year old and he just started dying laughing because I was going to stop you right
there.
And I was like, what am I doing?
And I was like, I'll call you.
No, it was Lane Norton.
I called him.
I was like, Hey, I'm arguing my 14 year old.
And he goes, how about I just stop you right there? And I was like, what'll call you. No, it was Lane Norton. I call him. I was like, Hey, I'm arguing my 14 year old. And he goes, how about I just stop you right there?
And I was like, what do I do?
Right.
Yeah.
I use for living.
It happens.
Yeah.
Right.
That's fucking funny.
And then you, uh, roll it off and you move on.
Right.
You know, one final thing that I heard that I thought was such a fucking great
rubric for, um, how do you know if you've sort of really given this as good of a
shot as you can in
a relationship before you decide to pull the pin?
It was you know that you've made a serious effort by
comparing the level of effort that you've put in to
the people that you admire and the level of effort that
they bring to something before they decide to quit.
Just think about that. Think about how much effort,
the people that you admire, the friends around you,
people in your life, the people you look up to, think about how much effort they
put into something before they go like, it's time to stop trying to grow roses
in this parking lot.
I think that gives you confidence in your view that it's time to move on.
She go, any other reasonable person would have said this is too much.
Even the best of the reasonable people, which are the people presumably that I admire. Any other reasonable person would have said this is too much.
Even the best of the reasonable people, which are the people presumably that I admire.
So I think what, what everybody wants to hear when they've got a really existential disagreement
in a relationship is, you know what, man?
You're not crazy.
Yeah.
You're not crazy for thinking that.
And you go, that's it.
Oh my God.
Cause I was fracked with so much self doubt and I
thought this was me being petty.
I thought this was me.
And a lot of the times it is right.
And you need to know that's why you got to have
a fucking blame on the phone.
People.
That's right.
Um, but I thought it was me being petty.
I thought it was me being juvenile.
I thought I was being rash.
Uh, and someone goes, you're not crazy.
You're not crazy for feeling like that.
I think, I think that's, that's completely an acceptable position to hold.
Well, what do I do now?
I actually have a firm, because you get stuck in, are my desires legitimate?
Should I be able to, is it okay to want what I want?
And you know, if you've had a life of marshmallow testing your way through
things, you have learned to not want what you want.
That's it.
You've learned to put off the things that you want in place of doing something
that's harder or more boring.
I think the illusion though, is it's going to feel a certain way.
Right.
When, if I get what I want, that is it's gonna feel a certain way. Right?
When, if I get what I want, that suddenly it's going to
extrinsically fill that gap in my chest.
And I think when you, I remember telling my counselor recently,
my therapist recently, I just want to feel what I know.
And that was a heavy sentence that I'd never said before.
But it's like, I know these things to be true, but I want to be able to feel them here.
Right.
And that becomes the word getting from here to here.
And that's a lot of, a lot of people, especially now, uh, you know, how do you
say physiologically decapitated from the neck down, you know, they just exist.
And you know, this is me speaking to me as I desperately tried to get more
embodied with, with stuff, but dude, feeling feelings is really fucking hard.
I went on a journey over the last year of trying to do it, speaking to Conor
Beaton speaking to every different expert that I could find to talk about, okay.
So what does it mean to tap into your emotions?
What does it mean to feel feelings?
You know, Joe Hudson, you're familiar with him, art of accomplishment, going on a seven-day retreat
the back end of September with him called Groundbreakers.
And they've got clinical studies showing that it moves neuroticism,
longitudinally nudges neuroticism in the direction that you want it to.
It makes a bunch of other personality changes.
But he was like, it's like Navy SEAL Hell Week for your emotions.
So don't book anything for the next week. Yeah.
And I'm really excited.
I'm going to get daunted as I get closer to it.
But yeah, man, it's a, one of the most interesting questions talking about wants
is what do you want to want?
Yeah.
I adore that question.
It's an essay by Kyle Eschenrode from years ago.
His website has now been taken over by like a Ukrainian porn thing.
You know, someone's got ahold of the WordPress logins and
they've changed his website.
Um, but I downloaded the PDF, so I revisit it pretty regularly.
And, um, yeah, the question of what do you want to want, you know, because
your, your desires define the path of least resistance that your life is going
to take and a lot of the time people, your desire.
So the things that you want, your desires will pull you in a direction
that is the easiest for you to go.
Even if, even if that is very difficult.
Even if it's very difficult.
Yeah, of course.
Okay.
And even if it is painful, even if it's toxic, even if it's
malignant to the world at large, the things that you want, it's the old, um,
the man who loves to walk will work.
There you go.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
The man who is forced to walk or whatever.
Yeah.
Um, your desires define the path of least resistance inside of your life.
Okay.
So what you want to do is align the things that you want with the things that you want to want.
Okay.
Because if you don't ever step in and ask yourself what you actually want to want, you end up having
your desires defined for you by the worst parts of yourself.
That's exactly right.
And by society at large and by the way that you've dealt with past traumas and by the paths of least resistance
and all of this stuff, it all comes together.
And then if you're not careful, you end up in a place not only that you don't want to be,
but that you didn't even mean to get to.
Yes. And it doesn't solve the problem you thought you were trying to solve.
Because what you wanted was not what you wanted to want. So my wife's way of asking that question, we were sitting at that table, was one hand on the table like,
how do you want this house to feel when you walk in every day?
And dude, I vomited.
I was like, dude, I want you to want that I'm here.
I want you to be happy that I'm here.
I want my daughter to come running at me.
Like she had a daddy, daddy, daddy with. With like a, like a, inside of a wrapping paper roll.
I'm always in this sword fight with her.
They don't even know I'm right.
I want my son making fart noise.
Like I want the house to feel warm.
She's like, okay.
Then you can't bring that last meeting in here
and you got to work out.
And you and I both know when you eat like this
and this and this,
we get the downstream grumpy dad three days later.
And it became a very, but it became that, how do you want this place to feel when
you walk in the room?
What a great question.
And let's reverse engineer that.
Who the fuck's your wife?
She's Yoda, dude.
Yeah, she's a Yoda.
Absolutely.
She's just a wise, still.
I didn't realize that you were the relationally retarded one.
Oh, are you kidding me?
Yeah, dude. The guy that's got the calling show isarded one. Oh, are you kidding me? Yeah, dude.
The guy that's got the calling show is the one that actually doesn't know anything about
it.
But she never would have been at a punk rock mosh pit if it wasn't for me.
So there you go.
Very important.
We each bring our pieces to the relationship.
Yeah.
Okay.
Taking one step forward, what is your advice for how people can better move on from breakups?
They've got this-
Gosh, that's a great question.
Ruminations, they're struggling, checking the social media, everything reminds them of them.
I'm never going to find anybody as good. How do people move on from relationships?
We've got an allergy to grief in our culture. That's a natural process. We used to have a
room in the house called the parlor where the body would rest for
two to three to four days before it was buried.
And now we outsource that and we call it the living room.
I think it was a Southern living that declared it in the early 1900s.
Like it's no longer the parlor, it's now the living room.
Right.
But we've just plucked grief out of our lives.
Just this reality that things don't always work out.
And we had a collective group of people.
You sat in the home with a dead relative right there, right?
That was just a part of the grieving process
and the body's got ways that you begin to breathe again.
And somebody shows up with food and somebody shows up with food
and somebody shows up with food and right?
It's like being at the beach and it feels like you're drowning,
but you stand up and the water is just only three feet deep, right?
And we've just, so if you leave a long-term relationship, It's like being at the beach and it feels like you're drowning, but you stand up and the water is just only three feet deep, right?
And we've just, so if you leave a long-term relationship, dude, the number of students that would come into my office and be like, Hey, I'm
depressed, my dad just moved out of my mom.
And I would always like, maybe you're clinically depressed, but I bet you're sad.
And they didn't have a psychology for that.
Like we don't do that.
That's the thing we solve.
We solve for sad.
Like, no, man, that's a basic human emotion.
Let's just be sad.
Like your family broke up, your dad left.
Let's sit in that.
And so if you lose an important relationship, man,
your body's working right
if it wants you just to stay under the covers for a while.
Your body's working right if you don't wanna go out. Your body's working right if it wants you just to stay under the covers for a while. Your body's working right. If you don't want to go out, your body's working right.
If you don't like, if you're like wondering, am I lovable?
That's not something to be solved, man.
That's something to just sit with.
And if you don't have people in your life, man, your body's going to spin out on you,
dude, cause it knows it can't carry that burden alone.
That's it is we have to have, we have to have a place for grief for being
sad and I think in our current world the only way to do it is to be what looks
radical right? I'm gonna block people, I'm gonna delete people, I'm gonna take my
phone off, I'm gonna have a group of people that are gonna come to my house
every every night for two weeks, I'm gonna play stupid board games, something
stupid right or whatever. I'm gonna give myself permission to not go out for a
month because I'm tired.
I just feel dry.
Like, man, that's just, that's called just honoring the system, man.
You know what I mean?
It's honor the system.
Cause you're going to duct tape over that thing.
In counseling, we, we, we say it's called, call it leakage.
It'll find a way out and it usually finds a way out at a real inopportune time.
Or you can honor it and invite somebody to sit in there with you.
How can you tell if you've got leakage?
What sort of, what are the most typical forms of leakage?
Oh, rage.
Uh, saying the words if they would just, and I don't even care what the, I don't
even care who and what you're talking about.
If they would just.
The guy in the car next to you.
Doesn't even matter if they would just.
Yeah.
If you start making up imaginary stories about people, like the, uh, I hear from most folks across the country that happens in the car next to you. Doesn't even matter if they would just. Yeah, if you start making up imaginary stories about people,
like the, uh, I hear from most folks across the country that happens in the shower.
You start having imaginary conversations with people that you'll never have in real life.
If I see Chris again, dude, I'm gonna tell that dude that you're never gonna do that.
It's your body just trying to spin up.
Uh, Brene Brown calls it dress-worshipping tragedy.
When you are just constantly in a loop of planning the next sword fight that
you're going to just do the super move at the end, man, and your body doesn't
know the difference, man.
So it goes to war in the shower.
You ever done that?
You step out and you come out of your bedroom and your partner's in there
and you're mad and they have no idea and they're just eating, right?
You're like, how can you just be eating?
You've got a 15 minute argument with you there.
Dude.
And by the way, I crushed you in that argument.
It's insane.
Where you see your boss the next day after a night of like,
I'm going to tell you, you're not going to tell him anything.
Right?
So it's when you go into solution solving mode,
I'm braged, fighting, running, hiding.
And we broke up.
We had plans.
I'm gonna sit here.
Hey, this is gonna be weird.
You come over to my house, bring tacos,
and I'm not gonna talk to you,
because it's gonna be weird.
So I'm just gonna say, we're gonna play video games, right?
You can watch this stupid game with me.
I'm going to a show.
I bought two tickets.
We're going to a show.
No asking me about so-and-so, but we're just gonna go.
You're too old to be mosh-pudding, John.
I know, we're going anyway, right?
Ha ha ha ha ha ha.
And it's just honoring.
You're supposed to be sad.
You're supposed to be sad.
And then if you wake up 90 days later
and it becomes, you're skipping work
and you need to call somebody, right?
That's when it becomes a pathology.
You gotta call somebody.
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I seem to remember in Lost Connections, Johan Hari's book.
Yeah, man, what a great book.
That there's a carve out in the DSM for grief around depression.
Yeah, which to me undermines the whole, dude, don't get me started on DSM.
That's a whole other thing.
It makes sense to me though,
that if you were to say, I feel depressed,
my dad died yesterday,
I broke up with my girlfriend yesterday,
you're well, that, okay,
the emotion might be that of depression, right?
So the symptoms are correct,
but the diagnosis that's caused the symptoms
or the cause of the symptoms seems to not fit.
It's completely irrelevant.
Yeah. All diagnosis is the DSM was a symptom of cluster.
I mean, a cluster of symptoms, right? That's it.
But it's totally devoid of context.
The point being...
You should be sleep...not sleeping or you should be sleeping all day.
You should not be able to control your thoughts or have this fog in your head.
Correct.
All those things are right. Your dad died.
There's not a, there's not a, it's David Kessler, who I think is the world's foremost guru on grief.
He says it's like a fingerprint, man. Everybody looks different.
And that's what's trying to solve it.
Huberman, I spoke to Huberman about this years ago, first ever episode that we did.
And I was talking about getting over breakups.
And he said that it's the exact same circuits as grief.
That's exactly right.
As death.
The problem is that they're still alive and you can be in touch with them.
You can resurrect this dead person.
So imagine that a person that you felt the closest to died, but you had a button
that could resurrect them and it happens to be in WhatsApp.
Yeah.
closest to died, but you had a button that could resurrect them and it happens to be in WhatsApp.
Yeah.
And there is always this sort of rumination, this potential, this, so I think, you know,
that's why.
It sounds cheesy, but I always recommend somebody have a ceremony.
Okay.
Like a funeral, funeral.
Yeah.
And that can be like Sex and the City, like this big glory.
It doesn't have to be that.
But it is, and I love Kessler also says grief demands a witness can't agree by herself.
You just biochemically, you can't do it by yourself.
You got to have other people.
And so I'm going to sit with you and we're going to burn the letter.
We're going to write the mean, whatever the mean thing is.
But when we wake up tomorrow, probably a little bit hung over a little bit
exhausted, uh, there's going to be a period at the end of that sentence.
And I'm just going to be sad because I'm going to reach to grab my phone to call
her and she's not, I'm not calling her. I'm gonna reach to grab my phone to call her and she's not I'm not calling her
I'm gonna pick up my phone. It's gonna be no text. It's so interesting the ceremony
Yeah, you have to but you have to give your body a period at the end of that sentence and we just rob ourselves of it
We just go to the next go to the next go to next swipe right swipe right and we got an exhale
You're not broken. I love that that circuitry that gets reused was really eye-opening for me.
It's a loss.
It's a loss.
It happens a lot with parents too.
When you become 35 and you're like, Hey, that was abuse.
And they're like, you're coming for Christmas?
And you're like, I don't know, man.
You know what I mean?
That one's a tough one.
It happened a lot during, uh, uh, during me too, where, huh, that wasn't, that
wasn't so dialed that he touched me like that.
Well, it was like, well, it's like, he's a great dad.
We have three kids.
He's a good provider, good husband.
We have great time.
Hey, I think that was right back in college.
What do I do now?
Right.
That was right back in college.
What do I do now?
Right?
And it's a, yeah, you're, you're talking about like a real psychological train wreck, man, that's tough.
And those are hard things to navigate.
I mean, fuck that.
This is one of the challenges, I suppose, of doing inner work, of doing any kind
of introspection that you say turning over these rocks or looking through,
I'm going to open these doors inside of this house I've lived in my entire life.
And then you realize that every so often you open one and there's a fucking demon hiding in there,
covered in shit.
Yeah. Well, and I wonder if we...
Man, if we can get on a whole rabbit hole in this, that's for another show.
I remember my high school metal band.
We played at this event at the end of our senior year
called, it's called Mike Stock.
It was an old skating rink.
And Chris, to say that we crushed it, bro.
I'm talking legend.
Any record exec on Planet Earth
would have signed us that day.
It was legend, Crushed it.
I went to college with my head held high.
The band kind of dissolved.
Then like my sophomore year of college,
I'm at home back in Houston with my family.
Somebody calls.
Right.
Bro, we found a VHS of the show.
Somebody had one of those big box VHS.
Dude, we piled around the TV.
Yo, it was not good.
It was so bad, dude.
I forgot the words.
It was a disaster.
It was not good.
I forgot somebody broke a string
and it got me thinking evolutionarily,
like my body created a story for that moment.
And me going back, this technology that has never existed, those
old photo albums that have never existed for all of human history, I don't know if that's
super good for us. And it's magnified now with kids who are like, mom, take a picture. Mom,
let me see. Can I see the video of me, the thing I just did? That sort of recursive world.
Man, we're just, we're playing roulette with our nervous system.
Strange, right? Because in one-
We're not designed to see that stuff.
Yeah.
But as you just mentioned in one way, sometimes we don't want to
remember the shit that happened.
That's exactly right.
So there's a protective measure to it.
Correct.
Yeah.
The psychological immune system as it's known.
Adam Mastriani has this thing where he says, the closest thing to an equation
in psychology is tragedy plus time equals comedy.
And yeah, something that's atrocious that happened a while ago can actually be funny.
That's what healing is, right?
That my body doesn't go to war again.
It doesn't act as though it's happening again.
Let's say...
But you experienced it with your psychoanalysis, right?
It opens a bunch of loops, man.
And now it's like, oh, I got a whole bunch of other work to do now.
Yeah.
And I think a couple of the things that happened there, Stan Tatkin,
your brain on love, best, best book on attachment that I've ever listened to
only exists as an audio book to your brain on love by Stan Tatkin.
Fucking outstanding.
Okay.
And he talks about how, um, memories get moved from short-term memory to
long-term memory and sometimes they sit in both.
And if you've got them sitting in both, that's really, really dangerous
because the short-term memory is this is still salient and I
need to keep a hold of it.
The situation's live.
It keeps on feeding it and feeding it and feeding it.
And yeah, what you want to do is like clear that shit out.
So he has, he has two really great bits of advice for relationships.
He doesn't want stuff to get into long-term memory.
So he says, you have an incident that occurs
with your partner, a triggering event of some kind.
And he says, your goal should be,
you need to be able to do this in less than about two minutes.
So you need to plan and you need to talk
about how you do this.
Something happens, your partner sort of jibs you at the dinner table and need to talk about how you do this. Something happens.
Your partner sort of jibs you at the dinner table and it really sort of sets
you off, you're in front of someone that you're trying to get a promotion from,
or somebody you respect, or just a friend or a family member or something.
And your partner does something that really, really gets to you.
You need to be able to as quickly as possible in less than about two minutes,
go to one side and say, Hey, look, like that thing that just happened.
And the partner needs to be able to at least bring you back down.
They don't need to fix it.
It's like, look, we can talk about this properly later on.
I just want to tell you how much I love you.
I'm really sorry that I didn't need to do that to just like, yeah, because the
longer that you leave that is that unspoken expectations are premeditated
resentment and that gets poured it over into long-term memory and that's going
to stick about the other problem that you have is when, as you know, from CBT, which is that,
what's that eye tracking thing that they do?
EMDR.
Yes.
What are you doing with that?
You're trying to move things that are already too locked into short-term memory.
Your body still thinks that they're longterm memory, but they're in short-term.
They're trying to get it out of short-term memory and push it across it.
Cause you're not going to be able to get rid of from longterm memory anymore.
So you have two choices, cut it off.
So it doesn't go at all, but then sometimes it's gone and it's still here in short-term
memory.
So you need to get rid of it from that too.
So you've got EMDR for the stuff that's stuck about for too long.
And basically, as far as I can tell, um, if when you think about a memory, an
uncomfortable memory, traumatic thing that happened in your past, if it still
creates an emotional response inside of you, your heart rate rises,
you get hot, you get flustered.
It makes you feel agitated.
Um, if you see it from a first person perspective, if you're watching it
through your own eyes, as opposed to sort of watching it from above and behind.
Um, if you can still sort of hear the sounds very viscerally, all of this
suggests that it's still in short-term memory and I'm going to guess there's like a million ways.
Dude, I love that.
Ethan Cross talks about a great way to get out of loops is to
talk to yourself in the third person.
Yes.
That's the reason you won, right?
Yeah, it's fantastic.
Like, Hey John, we're all right.
What are you going to do about this?
Yeah.
Instead of, what am I, what am I, what am I, what am I?
All right, John, you messed up.
John, you should go tell her you're sorry.
Oh, I need to tell her I'm sorry. And man, you were off to protection.
Your ability to argue with yourself is impressive.
What would you say, you know, maybe someone's listening and, hey, fuck, I think that thing
that happened to me earlier on in my life, I think that was like kind of messed up and
huh, I haven't really dealt with that thing.
And I think it's still playing in my mind a bit.
Where do people start with processing bad events like that?
If it's a traumatic event, if it's, I think it was rape, I think it was assaulted, I think
I was abused, then I always think it's good to start with somebody.
Yeah.
It's always good to put it on the table.
And man, it can be really tough doing it with the person who like going to your parent or
to your partner who may have done the thing because they're going to instantly
have to defend themselves. And man, that, that cascade is, is messy.
So that's when you get a trusted friend or a, or a counselor, just to say,
Hey, this happened going back to what you said earlier. Am I crazy?
And someone might say, yeah, a good friend will say, yeah, you're kind of crazy.
It's not a big deal. Um, uh, or just, I sat with a counselor recently and she was like, no, that's a
big, that's a big one.
What about, what about something which is not quite, if that's a nine or a 10,
right.
What about, what about stuff that's fives?
That's right.
It down an exhale and there's something I think, I think there's something
transcendent about getting out of your body and looking at it on a piece of paper.
Like scriptively, what are you doing? Are you reliving it?
Are you allowing yourself to feel the emotions of it?
I think initially I want to know and I want to be able to write it down and say, my fifth
grader has really been pissing me off lately.
Right?
And then you can exhale and say, does a fifth grader have the ability to piss you off?
Because if so, you're a really dysregulated adult.
Right? And you can have that conversation. have the ability to piss you off. Cause if so, you're really dysregulated adult. Right.
And you can have that conversation.
If it is, I'm feeling like I want to hit my fifth
grader, like I'm feeling this need.
I just want to punch them through a wall.
Go talk to somebody because you're going to hurt
somebody, right?
So some of that is, and then, uh, gosh, what's the
guy, he did all the great work on journaling.
I mean, there is something really profound about
15 to 20 minutes
of sitting in it and writing.
I, I haven't seen a lot of success with people do that by themselves,
doing it with somebody else.
Um, so what do you, how do you journal with somebody else?
Oh, I do that now with a guy named Luke LeFever.
Like you, like they give you prompts and then they have you think through it
and they have you exhale for a bit and they have you write 10 minutes free style. So this is like guided
journaling? It's not like you're sitting with another person. No, no, no. Right, that's cool.
And what's that called? It's just a thing he does. But, um, his name's Luke LaFever.
Okay. He's out of Nashville. He's out of Nashville. Yeah. Yeah. But he's a guy that
always, he's always pushed journaling and pushed journaling and pushed
journaling.
And I always kind of rolled my eyes like I'm a grown man.
I don't need a diary.
Right.
And I knew the, I knew the, the therapeutic literature about like write down the stuff.
That's good.
But what I got really sophisticated at was writing down my injustices, writing down my
gratitudes and writing down my things I needed to do to fix it. And all of that was neck up.
Correct. And no point in tapping into emotions.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
So there's a, I mean, that's awesome.
And I, is there a name of his course?
Do you know?
Is it?
I don't.
Um, I can send it to you.
Cool.
Yeah.
But it's excellent.
Yeah.
So Rick is, is really, really good with this as well.
Rick Hansen from Hardwearing Happiness.
And, uh, what he has is the HEAL framework.
Okay.
So have, enrich, absorb, and then optionally link at the end.
So, uh, have a good experience.
So a good opportunity right now might be, fuck, it's the first time I've
met John and like, I'm really enjoying this and I feel competent and.
Ah, that's really fucking nice.
This is my, this is my job.
This is my life.
Yeah, we're at work right now. Yeah. Yeah. Look, millions of people that get to listen to this and I really hope it's helping them.
And fuck, that's awesome.
So have a good experience.
You need to notice it, right?
So you need a degree of mindfulness.
So you need to be able to see, have the experience and notice it.
So then you have enrich, which is sort of, I'm allowing it to sort of fill a little bit
and you're sitting with it for as long as possible.
30 seconds to a minute is really good.
And then you have absorb and absorb is imagine the experience sinking down and to sort of fill a little bit and you're sitting with it for as long as possible. 30 seconds to a minute is really good.
And then you have absorb. And absorb is imagine the experience sinking down and becoming a part of you.
So I think that's a little bit more embodied, right?
So you've got, oh, this is nice and I'm kind of up here and I'm high in rich.
I'm sort of feeling it's expanding and I'm sort of sitting in and then absorb.
It's like sinking down into me and that's becoming a part of me.
And I think you can do this.
I mentioned before and I did for a very long time, like 10 six month journals in a row,
basically with like minimal breaks in between it for the end of my 20s until a couple of years ago.
But a lot of it just ended up being homework.
It's like admin.
That's it.
And I'm like, I'm just paying fucking, in retrospect, I thought I was doing the thing and I can't,
I shouldn't shout at a previous
version of me who did the thing he thought he was supposed to be doing.
Yeah.
But I was largely just like filing stuff.
Um, whereas now, and this is half Tony Robbins, half Rick Hanson, and I've dispensed
with most of the other stuff from journaling on a morning and just three
things that you're grateful for, but as opposed to just writing them down, like take one minute for each thing and just really, so I had a call with
my best friend, the guy who's
best man I was at his wedding, I had a call with him yesterday for like 45 minutes.
I was like, I fucking love Zach. Like he always listens. He's always got awesome advice. He's in a good mood all the time.
He's really receptive. He's so fun. He's really receptive. Uh, he's so fun.
Like he really cares.
He really cares about me.
That's so nice.
And you like allowing that sense.
I think, fuck that took a minute to do.
What was the other one?
The fresh air this morning just smelled awesome.
Like coming through the window in front of my bedroom smells so good.
Like it's really, really refreshing.
What was the other one?
Uh, uh, I developed, uh, bravery and courage to overcome difficult things.
And I wouldn't have done that previously.
I think about how proud of yourself you are that you've done this stuff.
Like three really, but one of them was literally the fucking wind.
And I just, you know, I finished that and I was like, I only had three
minutes before the gym in any case.
I was like, that was so fucking nice.
What a lovely way to start a morning.
Yeah. And yeah, I get the sense that a lot of journaling done badly kind of ends up being a, like a highlighter girl from school who has a very well organized ring binder of what
she was doing that day. Yeah. For me, it becomes like a weekly report for a business. Correct.
What did I do? Yeah. What was Yeah, what was my up or down?
Yeah, yeah, it's a P&L.
That's exactly right.
A buddy of mine is going to a retreat right now
and his wife reached out and said,
hey, would you, the retreat director ask
for a few of his closest friends to write a letter.
And I don't know what he'll get from that letter,
but I tell you what, it really was transformative for me.
It was so much so that my 14 year old comes bebopping in just, you know, in his underwear
and like, Hey dad, like I said, Hey, I want you to read this.
I'm going to read this to you out loud.
This is me.
This is a letter I'm writing to my friend.
I want him to hear what his dad, that his dad's got adult male friends like this.
And it was cool for him to hear that.
And at the end he was like, cool dad.
Like, and you know, I don't, I just have to hope it's downloading somewhere.
But it was like, I had this big spiritual moment and he's like, all right, dad, that's cool.
He's upside down on my, on that little teeter thing, just hanging there.
Um, but man, it, it lifted my spirits to know, Oh, I got a friend that good.
I got a friend that good, man.
And so maybe, maybe that's an important exercise, but it takes you back, right? He's the guy I called my wife when I did labor. I don't know what to do, man. And so maybe, maybe that's an important exercise, but it takes you back, right? He's the
guy I called my wife when I did labor. I don't know what to do, man. He's the guy who I called
when I thought I was going to get let go from a job. He's the guy I called before the very first
parent I had to tell their kid that I called him because I'd heard him do it before. And I was like,
I want to make sure I'm doing this right. And he said, you're doing it right. Don't ever call me
again. You got this, right? And that kind of blessing that everyone wants from their dad. Right.
And so it was, but, but it took me back to those moments.
Just you're, you're remembering those moments and man, but that was me
writing him a note, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, what's it like for him to, but in some ways, you know, being
selfless is one of the most selfish things you can do, right.
Because you get all of the positive sense of that.
But yeah, you know, male normative X alexithymia,
like it's so common now among men to not feel feelings that it's got a fucking name.
And yeah, it's like, that's like spray painting your, your dashboard.
Like that doesn't make you tough on your cool Texas pickup truck.
Just spray painted black. I don't need these gauges. What a moron. That's dumb.
You're going to run out of gas and get a wreck.
Yeah.
Right.
And also if you drive constantly looking at your dashboard, you're going to crash too.
Right.
Gosh, man.
I just don't, I don't, I don't get in, you're in this world more than me.
I just, I don't understand the, um, the tribal disassociation from reality.
It's just so strange. I don't, I look. It's bananas. I reality. It's just so strange.
Look.
It's bananas.
I think.
It's bananas.
I think that there is a big cohort of people in
the world who need
David Goggins screaming in their face to go harder.
That may be.
Do they need that or is it pornography?
Because I wonder from that.
Perhaps it's some sort of like.
Is it so like insanely sensational that it becomes...
You get what I'm saying?
Yeah, I do understand.
I...
I get the sense that...
Most people that listen to shows like this are type A people with a type B problem.
They're hard charging, insecure overachievers that need to learn to
chill out and play video games.
But there is a really big cohort of type B people with a type A problem who are
too lazy, not sufficiently disciplined.
They don't have upward mobility.
They don't have a sense of agency.
They don't feel like they have control over their life.
And the problem is that people that have got type A, type A people with type B
problems, like, oh my God, sorry, you've just got too much
discipline. Like you keep winning the marshmallow test all the time. No one's
going to give you sympathy for this.
And, but they'll see your heart attack from space.
Oh, of course.
Right.
But it sounds like if you are a David Goggins, like hard charging, pick yourself up.
Don't you don't need to fucking worry about how you feel.
Just keep on going guy.
That sounds like every underdog movie that you've ever heard because every
underdog movie has a dude down on his luck who needs to sort himself out by
getting disciplined.
And there's an old Japanese guy who teaches him how to do Kung Fu and he gets
the girl and everything's great.
Right.
There are no movies about how to log out of Slack at 6 PM or learn to spend a day
under a tree, right?
Because that sounds opulent and bourgeois and privileged and a champagne problem.
It's like, dude, just, just chill out.
No one gets told to just work harder. It's like, well, you need instruction to work harder. You don't need instruction to just chill out. No one gets told to just work harder.
So, well, you need instruction to work harder.
You don't need instruction to just chill out because the assumption is that
chill is the set point and work is the aberration, but that's not the case.
For a lot of people, that's not the case.
A lot of people.
Great frame, dude.
Yep.
Type A people type B problems, type B people type A problems.
Huh.
That's a fantastic frame.
I've always thought that the way the internet has taken Gaga's message and spit it out,
it makes it look like a running Rocky IV montage.
Correct.
It's just a clock.
It's actually happening at all, like in real time.
Yeah, but it's happening in his life, but everybody likes Rocky.
You would not have liked that workout.
It was cold, man.
Like, you know, I would have stuck it out, but it looks cool with the music.
Everyone wants to feel like if things go badly for me,
I can get myself back to where I want it to be.
That's right.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah, dude.
As opposed to, if everything's going right for me,
I need to learn to chill out.
But you're right.
I mean, you will see.
A few years ago, I joined a, like, just a local,
you've got to be kidding me, like, church league basketball. And my knees were like, no, bro, we had a deal, you gotta be kidding me, like church league basketball.
And my knees were like, no, bro, we had a deal.
Yeah, we're going to stop.
And, uh, yeah, it was two surgeries worth, man.
But like, we had a contract, but I was like, no, no, I can be 19 again.
The most common, I used to be a college athlete and I'm about to give myself like
a double fucking tendinopathy
is basketball by far, by far. So I played cricket until I was 20, 21. I got my grades
reduced to get into the university I got into because I was going to go and play at a high
level for them. It was, I had done everything. It was my entire life throughout my childhood.
And I stopped playing for a decade and a bit, and then COVID came along and I was
like, I should play cricket again.
And the first game back, I snapped my Achilles and that was 12 months of rehab
and three and a half months in a boot and a surgery, the first major surgery I've
ever had, and I learned a lesson I already knew.
One of my friends like snapped every CL, every CL in his knee, all of the CLs went.
Tom Segura managed to snap his knee and his arm in the same move playing basketball.
It's like guys, look, if you used to be fit and you're now 40 pounds heavier.
Don't, don't.
Than you used to be and you've not conditioned anything.
And the only running that you do is to like, you know, avoid the rain
going from the car to the house.
Don't try basketball because you're going to fuck something up.
But we do it with everything.
We do it with drugs, we do it with relationships.
Oh yeah.
Like if people who abstain from cocaine.
Oh, I'm going to fucking run this back.
Watch me.
I'm going to, I'm going to start where I ended.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah.
This is, it's essentially like I press pause on a video game and the like
sniff a 1000 video game, and then I'm going to immediately rebeg- you're going
to the gym, taking a break, everybody knows.
Or marriage, right?
You get out of a divorce and you try to date at the level of the marriage you
just left, like, what are you doing, man?
Yeah, no.
It's not going to happen. Uh, dude, marriage you just left. Like, what are you doing, man? Yeah, no, it's not going to happen.
Uh, dude, you're fucking awesome.
You're absolutely awesome.
And I can't wait to have you back on. And today was so much fun.
And, uh, where should people go?
They want to keep.
Hey, before we kick off, can I ask you a question?
You got time?
No, as long as you want.
I got two questions for you.
Okay.
So, uh, I'm your ability over the last few years to dig in at the, what I would
seriously call the doctoral level at evolution psychology.
Tell me about that.
Like, I'm just thinking of you as one of my grad students.
Like it's been phenomenal to watch.
Thank you.
Um, I don't know, I guess.
And that's not me blowing smoke.
Cause I'm going to all bait and switch here in a second, but I'm going to,
like, tell me about that.
I got interested in it.
Um, toward the backend of 2020, 21, I really started thinking about mating
dynamics and I think it's so fundamental to how the world works, you know,
survival and reproduction.
Okay.
Survival thing has been sorted by medicine.
So let's talk about reproduction and reproduction is mating dynamics.
And I just really fell in love with understanding, I guess, the nuts and
bolts of how human attraction works, about how mate values work, about
mate guarding, jealousy, male parental investment, all of this stuff.
And I kind of got welcomed with open arms by the EP world, which I was very
fortunate about, you know, people like Rob Henderson, William Costello, Dr. David Buss, you know, Dr. Robert Plowman, even though
he's behavioral genetics, all of that world of unspeakable fucking like
totally cancelable academics really were very kind to me.
And I don't think anyone had fully stepped into the world of EP at the
level that
this show was at and is at now.
I don't think anyone really opened it up.
And I think that it's very interesting.
I think that fundamentally my question is,
why are we the way that we are?
That's, you know, I'm trying to understand myself and the world around me.
And I think that EP gives us a really wonderful look into it.
And then you can look at human behavioral ecology,
you can look at evolutionary biology. But I just found it so compelling that I didn't stop.
And then I spoke at HBES.
I spoke to the human behavioral evolutionary society in Palm Springs.
Um, I gave it, I was part of a symposium there.
Uh, I'm about to get my first, uh, whatever it is, citation authorship on a study.
Congratulations, man.
So this is going to be cool.
I'm going to do this with Candice Blake and Mack and Murphy about, I have a theory that,
uh, people who are in shape will be more threatened by potential as
MPQs than people who are out of shape.
Absolutely.
Despite the fact that people who are out of shape would be having their, um,
who are out of shape. Absolutely.
Despite the fact that people who are out of shape would be having their, um,
like true selves denied as the fat acceptance movement falls away.
You know, Lizzo's like in good, like moderately all right shape now.
I don't know if you've seen it.
She's lost like, it must be over a hundred pounds.
Um, so she looks very different.
Uh, but the reason being that if you are someone who's quote unquote in shape,
I'm aware that Ozempic doesn't make you in shape, it just makes you skinny.
But, um, if you're someone who's in shape, your fitness signal is being
derogated, attacked by this person, being able to get an easy route to something
that you had to use willpower to do.
And you're going to see that as a threat.
And, uh, yeah, I've, I've moved a little bit.
My, my, I'm still super interested in. And if anyone's bringing out a new book,
and I just had Bill Von Hippel on,
he's I guess, evolutionary anthropology, technically.
So I'm still balls deep in it.
Just did a great conversation with,
who the fuck did, Matt Ridley about,
it's like Bird's sex and Darwin or something,
which is all about sexual selection.
That was yesterday.
I love it.
And I'm super interested.
I'm now moving a little bit more neuroscience, emotions, feeling, feelings.
Um, I really adore the neuroscience stuff, but.
So what is as, can you point to something that EP has given you, um, in
terms of, it's a self-serving question.
Like if you exhale and say, okay, here's what this has given me in my day to day life over
the last four years of just swan diving into this.
Because your grasp of it is profound.
What is it?
What is it?
What is the insight and the knowledge given you? Hmm. I think understanding that all, even the most mindful person in the world, even
you at your most peaceful, you have a sense that you are the author of your
own desires, of your own needs, of your own wants, of your own actions, but
realizing that you are basically a of your own desires, of your own needs, of your own wants, of your own actions, but realizing that you are basically a
vehicle for your genes and understanding the myriad of different ways that they
pull a bait and switch on you.
And just realizing how little you're in the driver's seat has been oddly
reassuring in a way, because it makes you feel less alone because you
understand that you're not personally cursed by this thing.
Perfect example.
Here's one good example.
So basically, your pathologies are not some unique idiosyncratic issue that only you
deal with.
They're endemic and they're a part of being a human.
That would be like kind of, I guess.
Or they're not characterological.
Yes.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Exactly. So perfect example of this.
Dr.
David Buss writes a book and in it, he talks about how there is a part of the
male brain, which is rewarded, rewarded with pleasure for looking at
things that just look sexual.
He talks about how guys will happily look at a pair of rocks that look like boobs.
Right.
And they go, okay, it is inherently rewarding for guys to look at
stuff that looks sexual.
And he got this letter from a man who said, I just wanted to let you know
that your buck saved my marriage because I was looking at other women and I was
finding them attractive, even though I wasn't going to go and do anything.
And I thought that there was something wrong with my relationship.
I thought that there was something that was an indication that my marriage was
broken because I found other women attractive.
I wasn't going to cheat on my partner.
I love it to death, but I saw other women as attractive.
And your book told me that, yeah, you're a guy.
You're going to see other women that are attractive as attractive.
And you have a system that's inbuilt in you that you do not have control over.
And that, okay.
So when I don't eat for a while, I get hungry.
Sense, but for every, you know, behavior for a lot of things.
It just makes me feel like, Oh, I'm, you know, the, the things that I struggle
with aren't some personal deficiency.
Yeah.
They are just part and parcel of you being you.
Huh.
That's fantastic. Hmm. I'll have to think about that. I like that a lot. They are just part and parcel of you being you.
That's fantastic.
Hmm.
I'll have to think about that. I like that a lot.
That's good.
One more question.
And you can say, I don't want to talk about this and that's fine.
Um, I've been wrestling with the weight.
And so when I think of not weight physically, but weight of the jobs we have, and when I
go back to like an EP mindset, there's no way in your at like X's and X's above where
I'm at, there's no way we've got the cognitive or the physical wiring to hold this.
Right? And so I'm wondering if things like anxiousness or depressive symptoms or a need,
there's just kind of a path. There's a path. I'm watching people like head down spiritual paths.
I'm watching folks wrestle with autoimmune disorder. Like I'm wondering how much of this is,
there's a huckster on every corner saying, here's how much of this is, there's, there's,
there's a huckster on every corner saying, here's why you feel this way.
Here's why you feel this way.
Here's why you feel this way.
I'm wondering if there's not something on the squat bar.
There's just so much weight and I don't have a, I don't have a,
it's just a hypothesis I'm wrestling with that at some point, every body,
every physical and body body has a different program for how do we,
like some people shake, some people just throw the bar off, some people try to do it anyway
and they, you know, they blow their knees out. If there's something in Chris's body that's saying
this thing's gotten really heavy. Yeah, that's a good question. Yeah, perhaps. Your discussion, the one podcast I just picked up,
you had a really eloquent discussion, and I know you don't like talking about it,
but I was really captivated by the, just wrestling with the weight of somebody going to war,
with their body going to war with them, right?
Yeah, I mean, look, it's been a rough 12 months, physically for me.
America is a fantastic country, but it tries to kill
everybody that enters it.
Yeah.
That way I can sell you a cure.
That's the food, the water, the air, the building materials, everything, the
cars, the fucking everything.
And, um, perhaps, I mean, you'd look, someone asked me a question about, uh,
and this is self-serving too.
Cause I got my own stuff, not that, but the way.
Here's a way to look at it.
Um, most people are stuck, most people that are hard charging are stuck somewhere on the
spectrum between guilt and overwhelm.
Hmm.
Right? It's like, choose your direction, Western man, because if you've got that type A energy,
you are going to
continue to want to do stuff.
You're going to want to drive harder, more, more, more.
I just did the number one best seller, but let's look over the shoulder of it.
As I'm receiving it to ask what's next.
And, you know, I, in some ways this is very early because I'm still in it, right?
I haven't fixed it.
And if you haven't fixed the thing, you can't fully feel sort of appreciation for
it, but trying to find some of the silver linings.
One of the things it's really done is it's taught me the value of a slower pace,
slower pace of life, taking pleasure in simpler things.
Because when your capacity gets restricted, and this is for anybody that's
going through health problems, it brings you back to a much more.
Sort of pure sense of yourself.
You're not able to use bravado or momentum or distraction in the same
way that you would previously.
It's like stripped back, right?
You really see or a YouTube milestone doesn't matter when you can't breathe.
Right.
Yeah.
See, you see who you are underneath in many ways.
And I think it reminds you of the stuff that really, really doesn't matter
because if you can't do all of the things, you have to do a few of the things.
And presumably the few things you choose to do are much more important.
So my feeling around this is I do not want to look back on a life or a career of
miserable successes.
I don't want, and this is where, you know, uh, I love Hormozi.
He's a fantastic friend.
Um, but he is a one in a couple of hundred million constitution.
And I don't think that most people are built to work like he is.
And that's where if I had two, if I had an angel and a demon sat on
80 shoulder, the angel would be Chris Bumstead and the demon would be Alex Hormozi.
Chris would be saying, you should just chill out and, you know, eat some
chicken with your friends and Alex should be saying, like, don't listen to
your feelings, stop being such a pussy.
And, uh, I'm way more in the C-bum energy than I am in the Hormozi energy some chicken with your friends and Alex should be saying like, don't listen to your feelings, stop being such a pussy. Yeah.
And, uh, I'm way more in the seabum energy than I am in the
Hormozzi energy in the moment.
And I think you can switch between the two.
Sure.
But.
Or seasonally, right?
Yeah.
I mean, yeah, but I just get the sense that if you want to enjoy, presumably the
reason that you want success and you want to work hard is so that you can find some
sort of enjoyment at the end of it.
And you have to be careful not to sacrifice the thing you want, which is joy and happiness,
for the thing that's supposed to get it, which is success.
Like you're literally cutting off at the knees the opportunity for you to enjoy things along
the way because you're so concerned about getting the thing that gets you what you want.
That's it.
That's it.
The reason that you wrote the book was to enjoy something.
During the process of writing it, you were thinking about whether it was
going to be successful during the promotion of it, you were thinking about
whether it was going to be successful.
And during the success of it, you were thinking about whether the
next one would be successful.
You go at no point have you arrived.
It's like running toward a mirage.
Every step you take toward the horizon, the horizon moves one
further step away from you.
towards a mirage, every step you take towards the horizon, the horizon moves one further step away from you. And, um, yeah, the only fucking way to like win any game is to stop,
first off, stop moving the goalposts. Because if every time you try and fucking kick the ball
toward it and it goes about across the line and then you like move the goal another hundred
yards back, well, that's not going to work. So I'm very much in my, at least trying to embrace my sort of slower, more
considered energy, um, really like really, really hard trying to not take the same
levels of satisfaction and dopamine from, uh, like chaotic busyness.
Um, you know, what you should be trying to do is move your life
toward an outcome that you want.
And you have proxies for that because like the outcome that I want, like
a good life, real amorphous.
So you have stuff like I go to the gym every day and I make sure that I speak
to my wife and I have a project that I care about and all of those are broken
down into sub components, right?
I lift the weights in this sort of a manner and we have these kinds of conversations at this sort of a cadence.
I have to answer Slack and I have to do emails and so on and so forth.
But don't mistake the little steps that you're supposed to take to get somewhere for the thing that you're supposed to be doing.
And you need to regularly be reassessing is the thing that I'm doing moving me toward my goal.
Because when you start on a journey, a lot of the time you need to be answering every email
and checking Slack all the time,
and you need to be like chaos, go, go, go, go, go,
like super adderall mode.
And then a little bit later, you think,
well, I kind of don't need to do that quite so much.
Maybe you're part of a team now
in the organization that you're in,
or maybe it's your own business
and you've got some people that can actually do that
on your behalf.
You go, your entire reason for doing this was to not have to do
things you don't want to do anymore.
You are at the stage where you don't have to do things you don't want to do anymore.
And you were addicted to still doing them because they gave you such a sense of
comp of completion and you have existential angst if you're not busy every single day.
You, you look at your calendar as a judge of your self-worth.
If your calendar is stacked, how can you be a piece of shit?
I can't be useless.
Look how many people need me.
Look at all of the people that need me.
If I wasn't here, what would they do?
What would all of these just reaching out to check calls?
That's why Americans won't take vacations right there.
Oh, because they feel like they always need to be on the grind.
Is it not because they're all poor and they don't get any maternity leave?
Well, there's definitely that.
Structural issues also.
No, there's not a psychology for what if I'm not needed.
It's not restful.
There's a pastor in Nashville that says,
if busyness is your drug, rest will feel like stress.
You can't. It's like being off-cope for a week.
A beautiful equivalent of that is the ancient Greek word for work
is translated as not at leisure.
So the Greeks saw leisure as the set point and work as an aberration.
Oh wow.
Now in the modern world we see work as the set point and leisure as an aberration.
So we've turned it upside down.
And just to go back to the, you know, the, how are you dealing with, uh, like, is it
pressure of doing all of the stuff causing stuff to arise in your body?
Perhaps.
Um, and you know, it's too late to fucking turn it around now.
So I'm just doing my best.
I'm doing it.
It's a, it's a realization.
You know, I said to, uh, the fuck was I talking to about this?
I can't remember who I was talking to.
I do know, I do know who I was talking to CEO of one of the companies that I work
with and, uh, he's about to have a kid and he was saying, Hey man, I, um,
like my drives dropping a bit.
I was like, you're doing your wife's eight months pregnant.
It's like, yeah.
And I was like, well, you know, the science on this testosterone drops in men
when they get into a relationship, it drops again when they get, when the wife
gets pregnant and about to give birth.
Like, you know that that's your kid.
Like you're, you're ready for this to happen.
So yeah, yeah, yeah. And I was like, can we just for a second imagine
that you might have had an aneurysm in five years time and that this has saved you from it?
Because we don't know.
We don't know what was coming down the path.
Can we imagine just for a second that this gives you a new,
more nurturing approach to being able to run your business,
which actually stops some impending catastrophe that would have happened
if you'd gone more hard charging?
We just don't know where it's going to end up.
And to, for the first time in today's conversation to talk about faith,
George Janko refers to periods where people are struggling.
And he says, every man knows God when he's at his lowest.
And I think about that going back to a more sort of stripped back version of you,
um, sort of remembering, okay, I don't have momentum.
I don't have ego.
I don't have bravado.
I don't have the charisma.
I don't have the charm.
My stories are less compelling and my aura is less energizing and all the rest of it.
All right.
What's left?
Yeah.
Like who am I deep down?
Who am I now?
Yeah.
Yeah.
One of my values and my virtues when I'm not quite as flamboyant as I usually am.
Yeah.
And do people still like me?
Do I still like me?
And I think, again, it's still early days, but I think I like me a lot more now than I did
before I had to fight a ton of health problems because it's reminded me that sort of the person that's
underneath all of that stuff, when I have to go to bed at 8pm every night and when I'm
tired all the time and when my mood's not right and when I need to rely on people more,
like, I think that's a good person.
And I don't think that I would have realized that or I don't think I would have known that
if it hadn't happened.
That's fantastic.
Or that Chris is a guy worth taking care of.
I, Chris is a guy worth feeling good.
Yeah.
I think I like me.
That's fantastic, man.
What a gift.
Thanks for sharing that with us, man.
I appreciate it.
It's awesome.
Dude, I can't wait to bring you back on.
Appreciate you, man.
You're fucking great.
Where should people go?
They want to check out all of the stuff you do.
Um, um, I've got, uh, I co-host the Ramsey show with Dave Ramsey, talking about
money and then I got my Dr.
John Delaney show.
It's an old Dr. Laura show.
People call in mental health and marriage problems and we get them solved.
That's awesome.
Right.
Everyone should go and subscribe, dude.
Until next time.
Appreciate it.
Thank you, brother.