Modern Wisdom - #930 - 3.5M Q&A - Dating Famous People, Naval Reflections, & Marrying Douglas Murray
Episode Date: April 19, 2025I hit 3.5 million Subscribers on YouTube!! To celebrate, I asked for questions from YouTube, Twitter, and Instagram, so here’s another 90 minutes of me trying to answer as many as possible. Expect t...o learn what it is like dating semi-famous people, what I think of the new Sleep Token songs, if I am finally getting a new haircut, reflections from the Naval interview and who is up next on my "Mount Rushmore" for podcast guests, how I grew my forearms, tips for being kinder to yourself and much more... Sponsors: See discounts for all the products I use and recommend: https://chriswillx.com/deals Get 35% off your first subscription on the best supplements from Momentous at https://livemomentous.com/modernwisdom Get 4 extra months of Surfshark VPN at https://surfshark.com/modernwisdom Sign up for a one-dollar-per-month trial period from Shopify at https://shopify.com/modernwisdom Extra Stuff: Get my free reading list of 100 books to read before you die: https://chriswillx.com/books Try my productivity energy drink Neutonic: https://neutonic.com/modernwisdom Episodes You Might Enjoy: #577 - David Goggins - This Is How To Master Your Life: https://tinyurl.com/43hv6y59 #712 - Dr Jordan Peterson - How To Destroy Your Negative Beliefs: https://tinyurl.com/2rtz7avf #700 - Dr Andrew Huberman - The Secret Tools To Hack Your Brain: https://tinyurl.com/3ccn5vkp - Get In Touch: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/modernwisdompodcast Email: https://chriswillx.com/contact - Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Bonjour, friends! Welcome back to the show. It is a 3.5 million subscriber Q&A episode.
I ask for questions on the internet. You give them to me, then I choose only the ones about
the Gaza Strip and trans issues, and I talk about them for an hour and a half, so let's
get into it. The Mr. Wyatt, what's your favorite new sleep token? Caramel or Emergence? For
the few people in the audience that don't know who sleep token are, they're a band.
They're a band that I'm a big fan of and I've been listening to for quite a while. And they
knocked Chapel Roan off the number one spot a couple of weeks ago, which was pretty fun
to see given that that song has actual death metal pieces in it. I have got Caramel on repeat.
Dude, I adore that xylophone at the start.
I think his voice is the lyrics.
They're super meaningful as well.
It does track a little bit.
I suppose he's talking about
the challenges and perils of fame and
increased attention and scrutiny
and not really knowing how to deal with it.
So yeah, if you need to listen to a new track, Sleep Token's song
Caramel is we bueno.
Paul Irish 1165, when will you be in Toronto next for a live event?
I am about to announce my first ever
US and Canada live tour.
That'll be happening at the end of this year
and tickets will go on sale soon.
And if you want to sign up to get first access to tickets,
first access to dates, VIP, VVIP, meet and greet,
all of that shit, you can go to chriswilliamson.live
and Toronto is one of the cities that's on there.
And I'm not gonna say what any of the others are, cause that's what the
announcement is supposed to be about, but chriswilliamson.live and you'll
find out before anybody else.
Daniel Semper Pico, how do you deal with judging yourself for judging
yourself in your latest vlog?
You talked about how you weren't kind to yourself after your Joe Rogan
interview, then you seem to be judging yourself for that.
Yeah, dude, it's so funny that you say that.
I don't know whether this got left in the vlog, but I did a section, I spoke to Max,
videographer Max, about how I was trying to be unkind to my unkindness to myself. So how do you deal with judging yourself or judging yourself is a super smart question.
And it's tough, man.
You end up with this infinite regress of feeling bad and then feeling bad about feeling bad
and then feeling resentful about feeling bad about feeling bad
and then getting frustrated at your resentment and then getting anxious about your frustration.
And yeah, these second, third, fourth order and then getting frustrated at your resentment, and then getting anxious about your frustration.
And yeah, these second, third, fourth order emotions that go all the way back,
especially when the very thing that you need is the very thing you're complaining about, right?
You weren't kind to yourself and now I'm not being kind to myself about not being kind to myself.
It's tough.
I mentioned on the vlog, if people haven't checked it out, it's pretty cool.
It's probably my favorite thing we've done.
It's strange if you have a period where your confidence gets knocked and mine certainly
has over the last couple of months.
Being ill, still trying to sort of hold on to the same work rate and output and mood
and stuff, whilst just not really, really not having it in the tank, it can chip away
your self-belief.
And then someone saying, hey dude, why don't you go on the biggest podcast in the world
and then record the biggest podcast you've ever done within four days of each other.
Oh, by the way, you've got to travel in between to like two other cities.
Uh, that just really sort of pushed it.
That's also for the people that watch to the end.
I have a little sad boy moment.
Um, that's the first time that I think I've ever cried on camera, which I was so
fucking close to cutting it out.
I was so close to just saying, get rid of it.
It feels too uncomfortable.
I can't bear to see myself be such a pussy.
But it was real.
It was definitely how I felt at the time.
And yeah, trying to be kind to my unkindness is a skill that I'm yet to develop, but I, it seemed to resonate, which was
beautiful and no one said too many mean things about it or not many people said
that many mean things about it.
I get the sense that if I was a fan of this show or, you know, I think about
shows that I'm a fan of fucking like Huberman, right?
Let's say that I'm watching one of Andrew's shows and he gets a little bit
emotional talking about the challenges that he faces.
And I think, oh my God, like he's so, he seems so smart and well put together.
And he's got all of this stuff going for him and wow, like he feels
the same things that I do.
And I'm proud that I was able to say it on camera and I'm proud that we left it in the vlog.
So if it resonated with you, then I appreciate you.
But unfortunately, I do not have anything remotely appropriating a solution for this,
because as you may have noticed, I'm still going through it.
So I will tell you when I find one.
And hopefully, you know, the fact that I'm kind of growing with you on this
journey of self discovery, whatever it is that we're all doing, hopefully that
is reassuring because I, I'm on the same trajectory growth trajectory thing
that everybody else is, I'm just, I guess, doing it in public.
And if that makes everyone feel a bit less alone and helps me to work out my
own emotions publicly, then I consider it a win.
The magic Lima.
You often say about all the millionaires leaving the UK, but
where are they going and why?
Yeah, this is a stat from last year that UK was second in the world for
millionaire exits after China, but it's got 4% of the population of China.
So per GDP by far the highest.
There's some fuckery with those numbers.
Some of it is to do with non-dom ex-pat people who don't live there and
were then they had their income cut.
This special carve out that they
had where they were going to have to start paying taxes in the UK and now they've left,
but they weren't living there.
But I still get the sense even when you account for that, I get the sense that the UK is losing
brain drain might be another way to put it.
I get the sense it's losing some talent and not only that, but some capital and some people
that own businesses and those businesses help to provide employment.
And more importantly than that, as far as I can see, they provide role models for
growth minded people within the UK to look up to, to think, holy shit, like
that's somebody that made it work.
Like that's a, that's another Ben Francis or that's an Alan Barrett that started
Grenade or, you know, that's, uh, Ollie that started MyProtein.
Like these are guys that really made it. It didn't matter how big the business is, you know, that's, uh, Oli that started my protein. Like these are guys that really made it didn't matter how big the business is,
you know, a small local gym or whatever, right.
Um, where are they going?
I would guess places like Bali, like Dubai, especially, um, the U S is a little
bit probably less popular, just it's hard to get into if you want to get a visa to
come over here, it's,
I was going to say, I was going to make a joke about crossing the border illegally,
but that's kind of been clamped down as well since Trump's come into office.
So yeah, I would guess places in Asia, the sort of Thailand's of the world,
the classic sort of boho work from anywhere thing, Dubai.
Outside of that, I'm not too sure why I would hazard a guess that the quality of
life you have in the UK compared with the opportunity to earn and the laid on top,
the level of taxes that you need to pay.
I don't think that's particularly great cocktail.
So for the people that don't know the way that the UK works, especially
if you're a business owner, there's something called VAT, which is a value
added tax and that's a deduction of 20% on applicable sales.
Now, a lot of the time you can claim that VAT back, but that's 20% off the top.
And you can't claim all of it back all of the time.
So that's 20% off a, let's can't claim all of it back all of the time. So that's 20% offered.
Let's say you have a pound sale, right?
20% comes off the pound sales.
That's like 83 P or something leftover.
And then there's something called corp tax, which is on your net profit.
So let's say that you had, let's say it was all profit, right?
Let's say it was the best, best, best, best case scenario.
The corp tax was 25% on your net profit.
So 83 P 25% off that's like 60 P something left.
And then let's say that you wanted to draw that down as a, a, a personal
um, dividend payment to yourself.
So you've got it in the business.
You've had the corp tax off the top.
You've had, sorry, you've had the VAT off the top. You've had the corp tax off the top. You've had, sorry, you've had the VAT off the top. You've had the corp tax off the profit.
Then you've had the dividend tax off the like additional rate.
Taxpayer that you need to draw it down to yourself.
That ends up at 40% or if you earn more than I think about 150 grand, 200 grand,
it's at 45%.
So you end up from one pound, you have 38 pence left. One pound goes into your business.
38 P goes to the business owner. If you are the only person that owns it, if it was a
hundred percent profit margin, obviously if you didn't get to claim the fat bag, all of
that is to say, it doesn't matter about the details too much, I guess. It's not that fantastic
when you don't have particularly good weather. There aren't that many places I guess. It's not that fantastic when you don't have particularly good weather.
There aren't that many places to go.
It's just not that big.
The culture isn't fantastic.
It is becoming diluted culturally.
I think that's a fair thing to say.
If you walk around most of the big cities in the South, I don't think
many people would be surprised by that.
So not good. And I don't think many people would be surprised by that. Um, so not good.
And, uh, I don't relish.
It might sound sometimes like I relish in this sort of fleeing of the UK. And I'm, you know, I managed to get on some Titanic life raft and I'm over
here having a great time and I, you know, just sort of pity or, or scorn all
of the people that are back in the UK.
Dude, I really tried for a long time.
You know, I employed between 1500 and two and a half thousand people
over the space of a decade and a half career.
And they were all 18 to 25.
They were university educated, highly, highly motivated guys and girls.
And, you know, these are little seedlings that mean my business partner tried to leave our stamp on.
And I hope that we did a good job with them.
Some of them went on, many of them went on to do like amazing things, but
there's only so much that we can do.
So for the, uh, you should stay and fix your country crowd.
I, I spent my time in the trenches and, uh, I, I wasn't able to make that much of a dent.
So yeah, it's sad. It's sad. I don't know what the solution is. Wild48267, how did you
get your forearms so big? Yeah, this is, these things seem to be at the live shows. It's
the invariably the first thing that people
mentioned that fucking hell they're really big in real life, aren't they?
And, um, I don't know what to say.
It's just genetics, dude.
It is, I've never done, I did direct forearm training once with Mike Israel
and it really hurt, uh, there's a lot of receptors in these bad boys.
I really don't know.
It's, it's the same.
Everybody's got one body part.
Every person has got one body part that just grows freakishly big.
Uh, mine happened to be maybe the most obvious one on your entire body.
So parents, I got my forearms from my parents.
Guacamo Criden 47.
How is dating being famous or a public figure?
Is it harder to trust people's intentions?
Do you get asked out more often?
I mean, look, I'm not famous.
I do think it's important to put that caveat in there that it's like
niche degenerate internet micro fame.
Um, but whatever level I've managed to get to, it certainly kind of gets
in the way of people behaving normally around you, which is not great.
Um, because for instance, I saw this with Rogan, right?
If Rogan walks into a room, let's say we're in the mothership or whatever,
and you're downstairs in Mitzi's, which is the bar attached to the mothership.
And sometimes they close that off and just the comedians and their friends
and family are in there.
And if he walks into the room, there's this distortion field that follows him
around where people are just, most people are unable to behave normally.
And it's wild to see what just very, very, very high levels of fame and status have this odd,
warping effect on the way that people are able to show up and just be normal.
And what that means is that if you're Joe, everybody must seem weird to you. Everybody must seem like they're being a little bit contrived or obfuscatory
or disingenuous in some way.
And maybe some, maybe many of them are.
And then some of them are just looking at you going like, holy fuck, it's Joe Rogan.
Holy fuck, it's Joe Rogan.
Holy fuck, it's Joe Rogan.
And they're trying to hold it together and you don't know which one's which.
And, you know, in whatever micro niche equivalent
it is for me, I guess that that might be the same thing.
That status and fame can be warping.
And yeah, it is a little bit harder
to trust people's intentions.
Not necessarily because you're skeptical,
but because people in many ways just struggle
to show up in a normal manner.
That there's things that they could get from you or they have a preconceived
idea about the way that you want people to behave or, or whatever.
And again, I, I'm fortunate whatever period, I mean, now it's the perfect level of fame.
People say hello once every 15 minutes on the street.
If I'm in a gym, there'll be, you know, 10 or 20 guys that'll come up and give me a fist bump and, and let me get back to my training session.
It's, it's really nice.
And everyone's got cool stuff to say.
And I don't need a fucking security or anything like that.
Um, but that's going to keep getting more difficult, uh, over time.
And I don't know what the optimal level of fame is.
I know that to use an example from earlier, I know Huberman, he needs
security outside of the lecture theaters that he's speaking at.
I think he's teaching undergrads this year or next year at Stanford
and he needs two security guys.
Uh, that's, that doesn't sound fun.
That sounds kind of shit.
Um, so, but you can't sound fun. That sounds kind of shit.
Um, so, but you can't switch the tap off and you can't slow down the sort
of roller coaster that keeps going up.
And again, that's why to fly the flag for sleep token again, that's
why the sleep token song resonated with me.
Uh, you know, he's talking about the stage being a prison and sort of
how he's getting bitter in the lens. He needs to sort of feeling constrained and constricted by this reality that he's made
for himself.
And again, champagne problem.
Oh boo hoo, poor, poor person that's got too much fame.
But I've seen, you know, firsthand from some friends, the prices that they need to pay to deal with this stuff.
And it is fucking rough.
So unlike, I'm pretty sure Naval turned up to the episode in a Waymo.
No security, no nothing.
So maybe he's got the optimal level of fame.
What's his thing about you want everybody to know your name and no one to know your face?
Perhaps that's the level that he's got to.
Anyway, the dating thing.
Do I get asked out more often?
Definitely not.
Uh, I think there is a sense that you must have lots going on.
Um, even this happens with friends.
Like how many times would someone, if you were at an event, a
pickleball party or something else, how many times would people invite you to go
and do something afterward?
But I think there's this metacognitive, I don't want to be the person that says
to the person other people want to say things to, do you want to come to this
thing after because that seems baggy and that seems like people just get in the run heads and I'm sure that it's the same for girls too.
So yeah, I don't know.
I'm not paying too much time trying to pay attention to that.
Carter Vallasa, as a fellow giant brow bone haver, I was wondering if you know where it comes from genetically.
I took a DNA test and it turns out I have more Neanderthal DNA than 99% of people.
I heard you mention you had done one, so I was curious if you know what your Neanderthal
percentage is.
I do have a prominent brow. Thank you for reminding everyone about this.
You see, how can I, so the problem, oh, there we go.
There we go.
For the people that are just listening, I'm kind of using my forehead as a, uh, solar panel.
Someone actually said, put a petition on a petition on the podcast to make
Chris's forehead into a solar panel.
Um, someone else said that watching me and Mike Israel talk was like
sealing to alien head races forehead into a solar panel. Someone else said that watching me and Mike Isretel talk was like
sealing two alien head races meeting for the first time.
It's very charming.
And we did need to actually change the lighting setup previously because
it had a grid on the big key light that I've got here had a grid on it.
And it was just forming a perfect reflective surface in the middle of my forehead.
All of that is to say,
the DNA test that I did just looked at pairs of alleles.
It wasn't a 23andMe or an Ancestry.com.
So actually, you don't know that number.
I think I know everything else about my genetics except for
that and whether I'm mostly Irish or French or something.
So I should do that.
I would hazard a guess that I do also share in a high percentage of Neanderthal DNA.
What I do know about the brow ridge for men is that the reason it seems men have got bigger brow ridges than women is that it would be protective if you were in a fight.
Same reason, bigger knuckles, bigger hands, these are your weapons, this is your defense.
So I don't know if you're suggesting that I, like you, am a high percentile Neanderthal
descendant. Does that mean, Carter, Valaasa, that me and you are the descendants of men that were punched in the head a lot, but survived.
I'm not sure if that is the lineage that I want to be a part of,
but alas, here I am. Please don't punch me in the head, but apparently I can take it.
So I might find that out and come and tell you soon.
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Daa walk. How do I get you to read The Will of the Many by James Islington?
So I think this is the, it's sort of set in quasi ancient Rome, Greek times.
And my friend Ricky told me that I should read it a couple of years ago
after I was lamenting the fact there wasn't another Red Rising book.
And I've been told it a few times and I just saw on Reddit yesterday in r slash fantasy, someone else harping on about it.
But I tried, I tried for the first chapter and I couldn't get into it so I'm going to give it another crack, darwock and I will report back and if it sucks I'm going to come and find you.
R Campbell 2321, do you ever pause interviews to pee? That is an error on your part, typically.
I would say virtually, as in the virtual ones I do, never.
In person, very rare.
You know, you talk about having the memory of an elephant.
What you want is the bladder of a podcaster
because we're like the
fucking Navy seals of holding it in.
If, especially if you're in the zone, you don't get up, you come back.
Where were we?
The flow's all broken.
Um, it's very rare, but Rogan did it.
Me and Rogan did it, I think on the second episode.
Um, if this is the way that it works, this is great.
This is a good one.
So if you really need to pee, what you should be doing is trying to
encourage the other person to drink more so that they say to pee and if they say.
Then you can go with them.
You're like, Oh cool.
I'll come with you.
You know, I don't really need to go.
Meanwhile, you're sort of walking to the bathroom like this.
Uh, but no, it's rare that you've got to time the hydration properly, which I do.
I actually try and drink a ton of water.
Also, this is from my speech coach, Miles, the way that your vocal folds get hydrated.
It takes, I think between two and four hours for them to be hydrated.
So you want to pound water for the morning and then you want to cut it off about an
hour before you go and then out it is.
And then obviously on the show, I'm just swimming in all manner of stimulants and
hydration drinks and nootropics and nootonic and everything, but you know, I'm just swimming in all manner of stimulants and hydration drinks and nootropics and nootonic and everything, but you know, I can usually hold it
together for a few hours. George Swain 99. You like outcomes over inputs. Top footy
coaches say focus on inputs leads to best outcomes. Discuss please. Footy for
the Americans listening is football with your feet, not your hands.
Outcomes over inputs versus inputs leading to the best outcomes.
Okay.
I agree.
And I think that the James Clear approach of not focusing too much on goals and
instead focusing on systems, you don't rise to the level of your goals.
You fall to the level of your systems. you fall to the level of your systems, you fall to the
level of your habits.
I think that's a good way to think about things, especially in something like
football.
The problem is if you are in a less bounded game in football, you will always
just try to get the round spherical thing into the square box over there.
That's really it.
There are different ways that you can get there, but largely you're working on
individual skills and you've got a very tightly defined goal.
The reason that I like outcomes over inputs is in a much broader environment where your goals are
more poorly defined. So if you don't know whether you're sitting down with your instrument today
to practice or to, uh, learn a new song that you're going to play on stage or to
try and work out a new tune that you've been thinking of in your head or to
refine and record that tune that you've already recorded, like think about all of
the different ways that this can go.
And that's just a musical instrument.
Then you get, get yourself into a business.
I want to grow.
I want to build a business.
I want to run a business.
Okay.
Well, what are you going to do?
You're going to build your brand.
You're going to work on your supply chain.
You're going to try and hire people.
You're going to work on your marketing.
Maybe you need to sit down and do your account.
Like there's so many different things that you can do.
And if you all, all you were to focus on was I'm going to sit down and be focused.
You could be focused on completely the wrong thing and end up putting tons and tons of
effort into stuff that doesn't actually yield any outcomes.
You could spend your entire day labeling your inbox.
Well, I mean, that's lots of inputs.
And I'm sure that in many worlds of productivity, that would be
something that's really helped.
But what have you achieved?
How much closer have you moved yourself towards your goal?
And at least for me, as somebody that really took the sort of James
Clear red pill when his book came out, I just realized that growth without goals
is kind of like having a super, super fast, well-tuned up car that you can be
driving in entirely the wrong direction.
And that sometimes you've got your foot to the floor and you don't realize that like the tires aren't on the ground.
Um, so yeah, focusing on outcomes for me, like, cause even ultimately the football
coaches say a focus on inputs leads to the best outcomes, but the goal is still
the outcome, right?
Nobody is doing inputs just for input sake.
Very rarely.
The only reason that you focus on inputs is to detach yourself from the emotional connection
to the outcome and to not get sort of drowned in this movement toward the goal.
Outcomes is ultimately what you want to do and I think that the broader the environment
that you're working in and then wider the number of roots that there are in order for
you to move toward what you would call success?
I do think that maybe the more focus on outcome would be better and
a more bounded game, something like a sport, maybe something like, uh,
uh, working on a musical instrument.
Maybe you would be looking at focusing on inputs a little bit more because
the outcome is much more tightly defined.
Maybe that helps.
Jaffe Ryder, how come you haven't tried a new haircut yet? the outcome is much more tightly defined. Maybe that helps.
Jaffee Ryder, how come you haven't tried a new haircut yet? 3.5 million subscribers have all seen the same suspiciously Neanderthal hairline
said with love.
Any chance to grow it out and be a wild man?
Love you.
Well...
I didn't realize that the prehistoric human noticing crowd was so strong today.
Uh, I haven't tried new haircut.
Remember this, I look, this haircut is a COVID haircut.
Okay.
I am still really, really riding, rinsing out the coattails of COVID is happening.
All the barbers are shut.
Just shave my head mate to my housemate that I was living with.
Um, I am going to maybe try to grow it out, but the problem is I'm going from
so short to a hair length that has got five embarrassing midpoints between it.
Cause my head doesn't get longer.
It just gets bigger and be careful what you wish for man, because this thing is
unruly, um, but yeah, I'm actually, I'm interesting that you say it.
I'm in the middle.
You may notice it's a tiny little bit longer than usual.
Uh, this is three weeks, three or four weeks, perhaps.
Uh, anyway, we'll see.
I may bail out.
You honestly, I may get five weeks deep and go,
I can't deal with this fuzz anymore and just pull the ripcord and eject myself out of it.
But yeah, this haircut's only existed for the last five years and the show's been going for seven.
So if you go back to pre-COVID, you will see me with hair.
Chad Preet, a good name. Like Indian, like fucking jacked guy, Chadpreet.
When are you updating book list?
Name some you would add.
Good question.
So I have a reading list.
I'm really proud of it.
I wrote it four years ago.
It's a hundred books you should read before you die and you can get it at chriswillx.com
slash books it's completely free and like 300 000 people have got it
and a lot of people have asked for a second one uh so many people
that i actually wrote one so i've done it it's finished so there is another
modern wisdom reading list volume two with another hundred books
coming uh it's with the designer. He'll be putting it together.
Uh, and this will be available.
I would imagine end of the month, maybe probably before may start of May,
something like that, um, there'll be a different landing page.
It'll be offered to people who are on the other reading list, uh, list first.
So I guess, uh, sign up chriswellex.com slash books and you'll get a hundred and then you'll get another hundred at the end of the month.
So yeah, I'm updating it soon.
Name some that I would add who is in there that's really cool.
Um, uh, from Vikings to Tinder, uh, by Mads Larsen.
So I've got some stuff in that.
I've got poetry in there for the first time.
I've got free books like Mads's book.
Uh, so most of it is stuff that you would buy, but I've got more shit that's on, I
suggest that you listen to on Audible as opposed to just being a consumer, however
you want.
So I tried to refine it a little bit more, but, um, I'm happy with it.
It nearly killed me to do it again.
Such a mind numbing task to do a hundred bucks all with custom written by me
summaries about why I like them.
And then I create my own categories for them and then I got to reorder them
so I think they work and yeah I realized partway through it why I hadn't done it
for four years since the last time I did it but it's done with the designer and
you'll get it soon. Chobra, when are we getting the modern wisdom t-shirts? Yes I
know every time I do a Q&A I I give you the same answer, which is we're working
on it, but we're working on it and you'll get it soon.
And the first drop will be an exclusive, you know, first edition of what it is we're going
to do.
It's going to be a slightly adjusted brand, which I adore and I can't wait to release.
And I really, really think is one of the coolest things I've done in branding probably since
Newtonic.
So it's fun.
I haven't got, you know, modern wisdom is kind of locked in and I don't get to.
Play about with new ideas from branding and get to do copy for the
episodes and the titles and stuff, but it's not something brand brand new.
Uh, and this is brand new.
So, uh, I'm excited.
I'm really, really fired up to show you what we're working on. But the answer's not yet.
Maybe within a few months, hopefully.
Daniel Haraj, 5218.
Do you plan on getting your own pet Jamie like Joe Rogan?
That's not nice to call Jamie.
He's a agentic, strong, independent woman who has a lot to add.
I fucking love that guy.
He's great.
We went to go and see Bill Murray play together at the start of the end of the summer.
Uh, he's not a pet.
He's great.
And unfortunately, if you realize how great he is, uh, you will also realize that he is
kind of hard to come by to find someone who's
got that full skill set. That being said, I'm in the process of trying to find a location in Austin,
Texas to use for a studio. So I'm going to build my first studio here in Austin, maybe have an
office on site, a little office on site too, but mostly it's going to be
the recording spot. I guess, fuck it, we're half an hour in, I can break the fourth wall. I got a few
ideas for the show, like new things that I want to do. I'm really keen on the idea of
having a little bit more of a hang with some of my friends. I love all of the
dusty academics that I speak to. I love how tight and lean the conversations are. I love
that we get straight into them and it's no fuckery. I love that you know that you're
always going to leave with something of value, even if it's a topic that you didn't think
you were going to be interested in. I love that the conversation moves forward at a quick
pace but doesn't sound, I hope doesn't sound too sterile or sort of stripped of all personality.
But even I find sometimes when I listen to episodes, I fuck like there's so much
practical applicable stuff in this.
I almost feel guilty if I don't start applying it to my life.
And I don't want this show to always feel like this homework on the other side.
And I think, uh, when it comes to the Q&A's, I know that these are some of the most popular
episodes that people tell me about.
This Christmas episode that I do once a year with my friends back in the UK.
And I just have this sense in the back of my mind that kind of like giving you guys
a palette cleanser every so often. And also for me, doing, you know, multi-guest
episodes that's just a little bit more slow pace, doesn't necessarily have a tightly defined outcome
before the episode begins. I'm going to test some of those over the rest of the year, but the problem
is I want to do that. I don't want to be flitting around, building pop-up studios and doing it
with the sort of cinema style that we've done before.
It needs to be in a spot that's mine.
And we would need to have a Jamie there because it's going to be more complex
to be able to piece together and for stuff to get put up onto a screen.
If someone wants to reference it.
But I think you'd be seeing more of Jack, more of Zach, George, Mac is also
moving to Austin, so he'll be here and a of Zach, George, Mac is also moving to Austin.
So he'll be here and a ton of other friends.
Heubmann's moving out here.
Brian Callan's moving out here.
So, uh, yeah, I don't know.
I'm going to test some of those and having my own pet, Jamie will be, uh, an
important part of that.
So if you happen to have a huge warehouse space in Austin that you want to give me that I can build a studio in. Hooray. Pete Cuddy. You've said that
someone who is super successful should be pitied rather than envied. Why? Um, much
of the time I think we should default to pity rather than envy. Not always, but very successful people have been
driven to create that world of success by something and looking at them as non-typical
outgrowths of probably a pretty sort of mean, uncomfortable childhood, a requirement to be seen by the world, this requirement, need for external
validation is not something that you probably want.
I don't think that you would envy most of the richest, most successful
people on the planet, if you could see the inner texture of their minds.
And when you look at them, you should think, holy fuck, what had to happen
to that person to cause them to build that business or that body, or it's
spent so long curating their writing ability or their speaking ability
or their singing ability.
And yeah, from the outside, what you see is a success, but from the inside, what
you see is the journey that it took to get there and the motivation that started the journey.
A lot of the time, I don't think that you would pay the price that you need to be
the people that you admire and, you know, admiration is fine, but it should be tempered.
And I think a little bit of pity, especially if you're a happy person,
if you're someone who is able to be comfortable in your own skin.
Holy shit.
You have got it sorted.
You have got the thing that successful people are trying to find.
They're just taking the long route to the top of Everest.
And yeah, I think pity is not necessarily a bad default.
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Zachary Sparks, five Oh seven eight.
Is it better to hustle in your twenties and thirties to find financial
stability and success in your forties and on, or should that energy be
directed toward finding a healthy equilibrium early in life, even if it
means less financial stability in your later years?
All right.
Uh, usually I'd give some equanimous, equivocating, caveated fucking answer here.
My belief is that you should probably try and bury yourself in your 20s and your 30s.
It's okay to push yourself as hard as you can when you don't have the same level of responsibility.
You have the capacity to bounce back from
it.
You can take bigger risks and move back in with your parents if you need to.
I don't think there's ever going to be an easier time to hustle than in your 20s and
30s to find financial success, stability, to build confidence in yourself that you can,
if the business breaks down, if the wife leaves you, if everything goes to shit, that you've got this demon mode
inside of you that you can flick the switch of.
I certainly know that, you know, it was very confidence building for me to see what I could
do in my twenties.
Now, yeah, did I have a healthy equilibrium?
No, didn't.
I didn't have a stable sleep and wake pattern until COVID ever.
My entire adult life, the first time I went to bed and woke up at the same time,
seven days a week was COVID when nightclubs were shut down from the age of 18 and I was 32.
So it's not the most holistic.
It's not the most holistic. It's not the most healthy.
Uh, but I think you can front load that pain and that hustle.
And I do think that it pays, uh, benefits on the back end.
Is there some survivorship bias here?
Yes, of course.
How many people in their twenties and thirties that hustled their ass off
and then didn't get to the level of financial success and stability that
they wanted and also paid some prices in terms of the
health and finding an equilibrium.
Yep.
Those are going to be there, but yeah, I get the sense that it's not okay
to work your life away, but it is okay to work your twenties and your thirties away.
And that's what I did.
So totally motivated reasoning.
Faboolean7039, what's your dream podcast set location and who is the
best guest you would take there?
Dude, I mean, I, this is total pipe dream, but first podcast in space
would just be so fucking cool.
You know, like I don't think it's probably going to happen in my lifetime,
but first podcast either in some floating vehicle in space or on the
moon would just be outrageous.
It makes me so fired up.
I don't really actually even care if it's me that does it.
I just want someone to do it, but I don't know how many other people
would be bothered about it.
It's like, well, you went all the way to the moon.
Fucking did what?
Are you retarded?
You recall all of the things you could have done.
I'm like, yeah, sorry, sorry.
Yeah, fuck.
That was a bad idea.
Um, I've said this thing before.
I'd love to do Graham Hancock, uh, in front of the pyramids of Giza.
Um, that would be, I don't know, just kind of epic.
Uh, I'm aware that everyone hates him because of his archeology, the
spurious ideas and stuff, but that would be one hell of an experience.
So the pyramids of Giza would be, would be pretty dialed.
I'd like to do that.
Mellaniac.
In knowing that you do not like to caveat yourself into oblivion about how, of
course women have their own struggles as well, but I am talking about men right now, do you
think there is a level of growth where you would feel comfortable just approaching a
men's issue with no caveat and eating the backlash from people who obviously aren't
long time listeners or are just looking to nitpick for the sake of nitpicking?
Great question.
Yeah, um, I had it out with Richard Reeves about this.
I was kind of sick of this weird land acknowledgement that needs to be done
before you talk about men's issues where you have to say, well, we, we, we understand
that the gluten intolerant community is really struggling and can't forget about
the challenges that women have and people who have got a club foots and so on and so
forth.
And after we've got that all out of the way, then we can finally talk about men.
I it's frustrating to me, uh, because the reverse doesn't need to happen.
Uh, nobody says we do know that men are killing themselves at three times
the rate of any other group.
And we do know that there's half a million more men than women that
took their own lives between 1999 and 2020.
We do know that men are falling behind socioeconomically at every age
level, every class level, but after that we can finally talk about, no one does that.
And it just feels clunky and unnecessary and unsophisticated.
Problem is, if you don't do it, the, so what you're saying is nitpick crowd have a vector for attack.
And I get the sense that if you had reached some kind of narrative escape velocity where
everybody knows you and everybody knows what you're talking about and everybody knows that
you're coming at this from a good faith perspective, any criticism would very
quickly be rebuffed by fans of yours that were saying, mate, you don't, why
are you bringing this up?
You know that that's not what he thinks.
Joe Rogan, N-word video.
Uh, Joe did, it got pulled up about saying the N-word a lot.
It was like five minute montage.
Um, and people said, you can see this is proof that he's the racist, bigoted,
homophobic, xenophobic, transphobic, whatever that we've known that he was all along.
This is just the tip of the iceberg, but trust us, there's a big iceberg below it.
And everyone said, nah, I don't believe you because I've watched 500 hours, even
a casual listener of Rogan will have done maybe 50 or a hundred hours.
I've listened to a lot of him and I don't think he is what you say he is.
So you get to this, let's call it narrative escape velocity.
Um, I don't think I'm there, especially not on this topic and especially not
given the way that I present as like fucking Andrew Tate from Wish.
Um, I don't think that I could get away with it.
It would be nice. It would be with it. It would be nice.
It would be way easier.
It would be much more slick, but I know I'm starting.
I'm trying to cultivate fuck you energy.
I am.
And it's going to be more important over the next few years to be able to have that I
Not actively that I don't care about what you think but that you willfully
Misinterpreted what I said and go fuck yourself because you know that you did that and it happens so much
It already is happening and it's super annoying
but I
That's something that I need to build up the preparedness to not care
about the opinions of people who don't understand what I'm doing and don't like
me and don't care about making the things that are contributing to the stuff that
I'm trying to create.
Um, but it is kind of stupid to think, okay, so this person doesn't understand
what you're doing.
They don't care about you.
They don't have your best interests at heart.
They're not one of your people and they don't want you to be better.
And you are believing and putting faith and stock in what they say about you or to you.
Why?
Why would you do that?
Like they're not impressive people.
They're not nice people.
They're not people that you respect.
They're not people that care about you.
They're not doing this to They're not nice people. They're not people that you respect. They're not people that care about you. They're not doing this to try and make you better.
They're simply doing it to try and stand on the shoulders of some
supposed error or, or, or slip up or smoking gun of yours.
So really when you think about it rationally, when I think about it
logically, there's no reason that I should care about it, but it's something
I'm working through and I guess you'll find out if it gets to a stage where I go, you
know, we really need to be worried about men and I just jump straight into it. You'll know
that I've reached escape velocity. So hold on. Dave Kiers, you mentioned feeling unwell in your last Q and A, how are you feeling now? Uh, yeah.
Um, it's all right.
I'm a little better in terms of brain function, which is good.
And the Rogan and Naval weekend was formative for me because I
felt so shitty going in.
I felt so, my brain was so slippery.
I call it slippery brain.
I had such slippery brain where I wasn't holding onto thoughts.
I wasn't recalling well.
I wasn't precise with my speech.
All of the things that I really take pride in.
And I think I contribute well.
It just weren't there.
And I was like, for fuck's sake, the very thing that I'm supposed to be good at
is, has been taken away from me.
And I didn't, I have no doing of my own.
All I've done for over 12 months now, like 14 months, maybe more, all I've
done is try and fix my health.
Unlimited numbers of saunas and coal plunges and phosphatidylcholine and glutathione and 25 gram bags of vitamin C IV and blood cleaning treatments in
Tijuana and peptides and, and a gut detox protocols and everything, like the list
of things that I've done is huge.
And I will do, I know that a lot of people that suffer with sort of like, uh,
complex chronic illness and tinnitus and all of the shit that I've
EBB mold, toxic blood, all of the stuff I've talked about.
Uh, I know that I kind of owe in a way, I do actually feel a little bit of a
sense of a debt to be more open about it and be a little bit more of a plant flag
in the ground for how difficult it is. so that other people feel a bit less alone.
Um, but I'm, I just can't do it while I'm still in the trenches.
I'm sorry.
I can't be the person that's, you know, delivering this, this message,
hopefully one of hope that you look at all of the things that I did and did.
I came out the other side while I'm still in it, it's just, it's too much for
me to juggle.
And also something I've learned is that if you tell a sad story about yourself,
but that isn't resolution because it's still going on, people don't feel hope.
They feel pity and they feel sad for you.
And it's not the vibe that I'm trying to give off.
So, you know, at the moment, uh, that I'm trying to give off. Certainly not at the moment.
Uh, so I guess that's a long winded way of saying largely I'm feeling the same.
Uh, I'm tired.
I fall asleep at eight or eight 30 PM at night.
Most nights my sleep's disrupted.
I wake up, not feeling particularly rested.
I can't train at more than 50% capacity.
I've got slippery brain.
My mood's low.
Um, but I have bits of respite and the bits of respite are, uh, a
little bit more controllable now.
Uh, but I've had so many times where I've thought, Oh yeah, I'm out.
I'm out the other side.
Like this is great.
I I'm on the up and up and it was just a brief upward swing before it gets
lower to a new all time low.
So, uh, we'll see.
I got some big treatments coming up over the next couple of months.
Hopefully they will have a big impact.
And, um, I did a sleep.
So I did an at-home sleep study.
The only lab quality at-home sleep study that you can do outside of literally
going into a sleep lab to do it.
I did that.
So that was an assessment really.
I've done everything to try and work out what the fuck is going on.
Uh, and it's not overworking because for the last six months, I dialed
back how much I worked, I stopped traveling as much, I did the trainings
at 50%, all of the things, right.
I've covered all of the bases and I will detail it all at some point eventually.
Um, but for now I'm just plotting on.
Hivanagibi1998,
I absolutely loved your episode with Alain de Botton.
Thank you.
He was incredibly insightful.
Is there any chance you'll have him on again in future episodes?
So yes, I emailed him, I think, a week after.
We've been emailing for forever, maybe five
years, six years, back and forth, back and forth.
He was doing it.
I think he had some health things.
He stopped doing podcasts.
He came back, he got rearranged, we weren't able to do it.
I wasn't going out there.
My dates changed, his dates changed, and then we finally got him.
And there was a bit of me that thought that was so good, but fuck, it was like, it was
5% of the things that I want to talk about and it went for two hours.
So like, I need a lot of time.
Okay.
Alan.
So I emailed him and I said, uh, Hey dude, I just wanted to say how much I
enjoyed the episode, how great I thought it was, how impactful I think it is.
And he basically said, yeah, I'm ready to run it back when we're in the same city
again, so you will be getting more Alain at some point soon.
JvisionTV287.
When you were growing up and building the person you envisioned, how did you go
about breaking up those steps into more achievable goals in the meantime?
How did you go about keeping that same fire to improve even when you
weren't everything you wanted to be yet?
Yeah, I'm going to give you a probably quite unsatisfactory answer here,
which is I'm really not good at having a long-term plan.
I am a good avatar for the person who kind of just focuses on what's in front of them
and doesn't have a big picture.
I know that productivity wisdom is to have a write your gravestone and
then work it back in 10 year periods and then chunk that down into three
year sprints and then put that into 90 day goals and then break that into daily
actions.
I know that that's the way that you're supposed to do it, but it just
never really seemed to work for me.
So building the person that I envisioned, I really didn't envision any outcome.
What I actually thought was I want to be more mindful and the most direct goal to
being more mindful is to meditate.
I want to be more, I want to be fitter.
I want to be more peaceful.
I want to have more gratitude.
I want to be able to sleep better.
I want to be more consistent.
I want to be a better speaker.
Um, it wasn't necessarily this sort of destination I was moving toward.
It was a very simple outcome goal and just one modality that helps get toward that, which was meditation
for mindfulness, it was journaling and formal gratitude practice for gratitude.
It was breath work for nervous system regulation.
It was walks and taking a lot of time walking to, you know, work out what
was going on inside of my mind and, um, keeping the same fire to improve even when you want
everything you want it to be yet.
Well, as someone who, although I'm battling through a ton of shit, which
is kind of new and novel to me right now, but I guess I have reached escape velocity
on at least some of the things that I wanted, a lot of the things that I wanted
when I was 28, 29, when I started doing this properly, when I, you know, I went sober
for the first time at 20, 28 and I stopped partying.
Oh my God, that was revolutionary.
Um, and now I don't think about drinking and every single thing that I wanted to
do, build a meditation practice, blah, blah, blah, blah, get better at speaking,
build the business, move to another country.
All of the things that I wanted to do, uh, talking about keeping the same
fire to improve, even when you weren't.
Everything that you wanted to be yet as someone who's kind of got to a place
closer to where he does want to be, keeping the fire going now is probably
harder because what's driving you like this, such a Delta between where you
are and where you want to be.
So you keep pushing to get there, but gold medalist syndrome is fucking real, dude.
Like you, you arrive at what point do you arrive?
And even if you think I haven't arrived yet, I'm kind of close to it.
Like, Oh, fuck.
What do I do now for so long?
I've been, you know, pushing and pushing and pushing to find this thing.
And then when you get there, why do you need to keep pushing so hard?
The reason you did it previously was this desperate need for validation
and recognition and to actually make something of yourself, go, you
made something of yourself.
Now what?
It's a difficult one.
So, uh, I chose very simple goals that were, uh, upstream of lots of things
that I wanted to be better in.
I wanted to be a more peaceful person.
I wanted to be more mindful.
I wanted to have, um, a better quality of thoughts.
I wanted to be able to think and speak more clearly.
And I just did one modality for each of those things and basically
didn't stop for about the way the best, but now approaching 10 years.
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Chris, I want to order new tonic in Canada,
but the shipping costs are equal to the cost of the product.
Is there any alternative?
Yes, I know, I'm sorry.
Fucking international shipping dude
is rough with an RTD, you know, this is element.
And it's not good. It's not easy to, it's not easy at all to do that.
Um, we would get a three PL or a fulfillment center in Canada.
Uh, the Canadian audience for this show, at least for my audience is bigger than
everywhere else on the planet per capita, except for Australia.
So it goes Australia, Canada, Canada, Canada, Canada, Canada, Canada, Canada, for this show, at least for my audience is bigger than everywhere else on the planet per capita, except for Australia.
So it goes Australia, Canada, Ireland, the UK, the USA in terms of, uh, like per
capita audience size.
So I want to get it there, but it's a nightmare.
Um, what you can do in the meantime is use the focus blend, the stick packs or
the brain capsules, cause they'll be way cheaper to ship, which I think will be where most of the
cost is coming from, unless there's some sort of import duties and fuck knows
what's happening with Trump's tariffs, dude.
And maybe everything's going to triple.
So stock up while you can.
Alantis 94, how long have you been married to Douglas Murray?
Yeah, that was awkward.
Um, for the people who don't spend much time on Twitter, I, somebody tweeted.
If you, in fact, let me see if it's still there.
Douglas Murray, husband, Douglas Murray, husband images.
Yep.
Okay.
So the top line is, uh, Douglas Murray, husband, him and Candice Owen.
Second image is Douglas Murray and me.
Third image is Douglas and Dave Rubin.
The fourth image is, I don't know who that is.
Sam Harris is up there.
Oh, I'm up there twice.
How great.
It's me and Coleman Hughes.
So that's like an interracial triplet marriage.
Yeah, someone tweeted saying that I was his husband
and that I was also like of a different name. And I quote tweeted saying that I was his husband and that I was also like of a different
name and I quote tweeted saying that it was a skill issue and then all hell broke loose.
So I've been married to Douglas apparently since, what, 2022.
Tom Chappell, where's the glasses from?
Okay, these are the ones from Rogan, I'm going to guess they are Moskots.
They are monochrome Moskots in blush.
So Moskot is a British glasses manufacturer.
They do prescription stuff.
And I went to Jimmy Carr's Savile Row suit, menswear store.
He owns part of it and we were hanging out and we wanted to go for a coffee.
So I went there with him and I saw this pair of pink glasses two years ago.
I was like, those are sick.
I'm going to buy them.
And I have, and they are functionally useless.
They don't do anything.
They're not blue blockers.
They don't help down regulate your melatonin.
Um, and then I took them off on Rogan and he encouraged me to put them back on.
And then I wore them for three hours.
So, uh, yeah, mascots in monochrome blush.
They've got them in blue.
They've got them in green and they're pretty cool and they're super comfortable,
but they're not cheap.
They're about 250 bucks.
So, or maybe 300 bucks.
So go study JJ Thomas 10.
If you could sit down and have a conversation with your 21 year old self, what would you say?
I
I guess it depends how long the conversation is, but I'd probably just say fearless
so much of
My life, especially in my 20s even still now, is driven by this fear. It's driven by uncertainty.
It's running away from something that you don't want is running towards something that you do.
And that will push you to do lots of great things and maybe become a very impressive person.
But it's not the fuel that you want to be using for a long time.
So first off, I would probably say, I understand that you don't feel very recognized,
or very validated, or very seen by the world.
That's fine.
That's not some personal failing of yours.
That's kind of just a by-product of being a 21 year old guy that doesn't
quite know what he wants yet and is struggling to connect with the
people around him.
I would say fall in love slowly and break up quickly. Because much of your twenties, if you're not careful, will be spent in
relationships that you should have left sooner for both of your sakes.
Don't be guilty about disappointing people.
Don't fear the repercussions of putting yourself first.
Don't subjugate your desires. Don't fear the repercussions of putting yourself first.
Don't subjugate your desires in order to keep somebody else happy.
Don't make yourself unhappy in order to keep somebody else happy.
Buy Bitcoin and do 531.
That's what I'd say.
Ramo Parmo.
Under what conditions do you feel the most mentally
sharp and able to perform cognitive tasks?
That's a good question.
So I've got a pretty dialed routine now before the big episodes,
which is no carbs at all.
So bacon and eggs, sausage and eggs, breakfast, minimal caffeine earlier in the day.
Minimal caffeine earlier in the day, maybe one coffee on a morning.
Go and train moderately hard, but not super hard. So RP7, RP8.
Then I want to be a little bit hungry and then I want to have probably one
new tonic about an hour before and then sip on a new tonic throughout whatever it is that I'm doing. And if I get one or two more, I'm going to be able to be a little bit hungry and then I want to have probably one new tonic about an hour before and then sip on a new tonic throughout
whatever it is that I'm doing.
And if I get all of that in and I've got sunlight in my eyes and gone for a walk
and I've been moving, I'm, I'm pretty fucking dialed and that can last.
Can hold onto that.
As long as I keep the new tonic levels up, I can hold onto that for probably
about four hours.
And then it starts to sort of become psychotic after that time, because I'm you'd fighting this tension between fatigue and stimulants, but more, more
stimulants aren't necessarily fixing the fatigue.
Uh, that's just making more stimulated.
Um, yeah.
JD fits.
Do you create for yourself or for your audience?
That's a good question.
And unfortunately, it's probably the biggest middle finger.
Uh, I create for myself.
Um, this show has always been a thinly veiled autobiography.
Um, whatever it is that is on my mind, whatever it is that I'm dealing with,
whatever it is that I'm interested in, uh, what's happening to me professionally,
personally, um, much of that is the inspiration.
Now, not everything obviously.
Um, but much of that is the, at least the beginning, it's sort of the spark of the
direction that I take the show in.
You know, I fell in love with evolutionary psychology because I found it really insightful about understanding the sort of why you are the way you are.
It's really sort of seeing the source code of human behavior, at least from a sort of conditioning sense.
And then obviously that gets coded into genes.
That was a huge part of understanding me because I wanted to,
it was a big period where I was into productivity. So I was just rinsing through every productivity guy, David Allen coming on
and get Tiago Forte, Peter Ackies, you know, getting all of the, the big names
in productivity on to help organize my things three GTD process and, and, you know,
what's the best email client I should be using.
Um, it's just me.
And I think the best, sure.
There are some artists or creators out there who can make content for an
audience and really enjoy the process.
But for me, the more that I don't follow my own curiosity and the more that I
don't make it for myself, the less I enjoy it and the less successful it is.
So I genuinely think, and maybe again, this is just Stockholm syndrome.
I genuinely think that the best way to serve you guys is to just follow my own
curiosity because I'm not, I'm not that the best way to serve you guys is to just follow my own curiosity
because I'm not that much of an outlier. I'm not that different. I think a lot of the challenges
that I face and a lot of the interests that I have are really representative of those that any other
thoughtful, sensitive person has. And that means that if I follow my instincts, some non-zero portion of other
people are also interested or care about this thing that I'm thinking about.
And it gives me a unique insight because everybody has access to what the audience
says, every other creator, thinker, artist, songwriter, whatever, they all have
access to what are the trends that are going on online.
Everyone can see what's happening on Twitter.
Everyone can ask chat GPT what the most search search terms are on Google.
Right.
So that means it's a very unique body of work and not necessarily accurate.
And not necessarily accurate, but if you follow what you do, I think that that really elicits a unique fingerprint and one that absolutely resonates.
And even if it doesn't, you pursued something that you found interesting.
And the more that I try and reverse engineer, what will click, what will
resonate, well, maybe I should be doing the Q and A, maybe I should have someone
asking me the questions on the Q and A.
Maybe, maybe the Q and A should be done live or maybe I should be
streaming on Twitch or whatever.
And if it doesn't speak to me, not doing it is the best strategy because even
if it would be optimal, even if it would be
better in some way for audience growth, if it doesn't speak to me, it's not
going to be authentic.
And there's always this tension, right?
Everybody shows up in, you show up differently when someone else steps
into your room versus when you're on your own.
So when it's audience, there's all of these perverse incentives and trying
to be 100% yourself is essentially impossible.
But you can get closer and closer to that and you can also get further and further away and you train yourself in either direction.
So for people that are wanting to create a body of work, you need to play the game. You absolutely need to play the game.
There is a game to be played. There are mechanisms in place, growth loops that you need to take advantage of. So you do need to play the game.
But you need to know that it's not about the game.
Play it.
But it's not about it.
I think that's really important.
And that's a strategy I'm holding on to.
Sean Spooner.
Millions of people now have an idea in their head
of who they think you are.
But it's still just you.
Do you ever feel any pressure to live up to that imagined ideal
even when you're having a tough week or going through your health challenges?
Yeah.
I mean, this is kind of actually what I was just talking about that, um, with
the Rogan, he walked into a room, there's this fucking reality distortion field
that appears around him.
Um, there is this sense of performance that everybody has, even if it's just you
talking to someone else over dinner.
It's very difficult to be unencumbered.
That's a good definition, I think, of who your best friend is.
You know, most people after the age of 15 don't really have a best friend, maybe.
But I think a good way to define your best friend is the person that you can
speak to with the least amount of filter.
to define your best friend is the person that you can speak to with the least amount of filter.
That gets more and more insulted the bigger and bigger the audience is and the tighter and tighter the feedback loop. So you know, if you're a comedian or a singer or something and you're on stage,
fuck, like you're seeing this feedback loop immediately. It's so dopamine-y, at least with what I do, there's a little bit of lead time
and I don't see people immediately.
Now, in some ways that's crap because I get no motivation from positive feedback
other than, you know, nice comments, which is good, please send more.
But it's also less perverting, I think, I have been trying increasingly over the last four months or so, I think
since the beginning of the year, I've really, really been trying to lean into
just being me as much as possible, whatever that means, whatever it fucking
means to be yourself.
I'm really, really trying to do that.
Opening up about health challenges.
Somebody asks me a question that I don't know someone on stage.
I was at this health summit thing this weekend and I gave a
chat and someone asked a question from the audience and I was like, Hey, there's
like a thousand people looking at me and I'm going to give the answer that I know
no one wants to hear, but I don't have an opinion on that, um, which is just so
unsatisfactory, but it was true.
Um, which is just so unsatisfactory, but it was true.
I don't have an opinion on quantum energy and vibration consciousness. I can't remember the question was something to do with that.
I'm like, perhaps unsurprisingly, this isn't my area of expertise.
Um, I don't have an opinion on that.
So I'm trying to release that pressure to live up to some imagined ideal.
Now, I definitely don't want someone that cares about the show to meet me and be
like, Hey, he was really fucking unimpressive, dude. Like he was so, but I
don't, I think at least as far as I can see, getting to the stage that I have
now and actually being able to hold on to some sense of humanity is kind of like a
superhuman task and this is an experiment.
I'm going to continue to try and be open.
Jesus Christ.
I let out a tear, let out a single tear on a vlog a couple of weeks ago.
So that was real.
It was true.
It was how I felt at the time. And I get the sense that if I don't have to live up to some imagined ideal, my longevity
in loving what I do will be greater because I'm not going to feel puppeted by ventriloquized
by a group of people that I've never met, even if they're ones that I love.
Matthew Bellinger.
How long did you contemplate podcasting before starting?
How long did you contemplate new tonic before committing?
It took six months contemplating podcasting before running it.
It was the backend of 2017.
And then I launched it in February of 2018.
The name took a while. The name took a while.
The logo took a while.
The strategy took a while of how I was going to launch it.
How long did I contemplate new tonic before committing?
The committing thing was actually relatively easy,
but the building before launching took 12 months.
So I am, as anyone who's ever worked with me,
will attest to painfully pedestrian in pre-launch and then kind of unrelentingly rapid in post-launch.
So I kind of have this Dr. Jekyll, Mr. Hyde thing where I want everything to be
absolutely perfect up until the point at which it gets shipped.
And then once it's shipped, I try and iterate very, very quickly.
It seems to work for me.
I do have a sort of perfectionist streak to me and sort of an obsession with
detail, which is good in many ways.
And I think here's my theory.
There are certain things that you need to get really, really right once, and
then you rinse and repeat it.
So the can design for new tonic, I was kind of tyrannical, just tyrannical.
Um, when it came to that, because this is the thing for the fucking rest of time.
There is no getting this most of the way there.
It needs to be perfect.
It needs to be perfect.
Now it needs to be perfect in five years time.
It needs to be perfect.
When we exit the business, it needs to be perfect. It needs to be perfect now. It needs to be perfect in five years time. It needs to be perfect when we exit the business.
It needs to be perfect.
And the same thing with modern wisdom.
Me and Dean worked, you know, once he came on board after a couple of months,
so fucking hard at dialing in the colors, dialing in the sets.
This is how we want it to work.
This is how we want the pacing of the cuts to be everything.
But once we've done it, you've got a signature style and you can sort of run that forward.
So, um, decision latency is a big deal.
Uh, but I think we're talking about sort of preparedness or launch latency here as well.
Uh, I would hazard a guess that most people in the audience probably need to make
decisions more quickly, launch more slowly and iterate more quickly.
So, uh, stop fucking about not doing the thing and commit to a thing as an
experiment, spend a good amount of time preparing it, getting it right, dialing
in, whatever the structure is, the brand, the style, the format, whatever it is
that you're going to do, and then once it's launched, go really, really fast and
hard. So at least that's launched, go really, really fast and hard.
So at least that's how it works for me.
Stefanowicz, how to deal with the anxiety when you're working hard versus
the depression when you're taking an EC.
That's funny.
How to deal with the anxiety when you're working hard versus the
depression when you're taking an EC. Dude, it's funny. How to deal with the anxiety when you're working hard versus the depression when you're taking it easy.
Dude, it's tough.
I mean, like your calendar is a lovely way to assuage your deep feelings of insufficiency, right?
It's an anesthetic that sort of smooths over your need for validation because it keeps you busy.
And then when you start to take it easy, you start to ask yourself questions.
But you're right, when you're in the midst of calendar life, there is this sort of rush,
but this rush comes along with a fear.
And I think that's the anxiety that you're talking about.
Look, I have found that periodizing is the easiest way to do this, that basically humans
are absolute creatures.
So if you put a packet of biscuits, Oreos in front of me, and you say you can either
eat all of them, or you can eat none of them.
Easy task.
If you tell me I can eat two, go fuck yourself.
Like I'm not, I can't, it's impossible.
No one has ever in the history of the world has ever just eaten two Oreos.
They've eaten all of them or they've eaten none of them.
And I think that the same here with the working hard versus taking it easy thing.
Shock, horror, there used to be a thing called weekdays and weekends.
And you would tend to work on weekdays and not on weekends.
That's not a bad model.
work on weekdays and not on weekends.
That's not a bad model.
Uh, I think if you know that the working hard will come to an end and that the taking it easy will come to an end and that the working hard will come, I think
that the anxiety and the depression both get ameliorated, they get smoothed out a
little bit if you know that they're time bound and it's not going to be like this
forever and that allows you hopefully to lean in actually enjoy your relaxation because you go, yeah, I'm back at it, I'm back at it on Monday or whatever, whatever cadence you want to work at.
You can do this.
You can do this one month on one week off, you know, whatever it is that works for you.
But I would maybe try periodizing.
Wannabe.
I think it's a good one.
I think it's a good one.
I think it's a good one.
I think it's a good one.
I think it's a good one.
I think it's a good one.
I think it's a good one.
I think it's a good one.
I think it's a good one.
I think it's a good one. I think it's a good one. I think it's a good one. I think it's a good one. I it is that works for you, but I would maybe try periodizing.
Wanna be what's your five year goal and what's your ultimate goal in life?
Dude, I said it before, I suck at this, at this longterm planning thing.
Uh, I know I want to be a dad.
I know I want to start a family.
Um, I know that I really want to fix my health.
I want to keep on learning about myself and the world around me.
And I want to keep doing the show and I want to keep writing.
That's kind of it.
Everything else will fall into place.
I've got a good, and most of us do.
I really think that, and maybe this is just because I've gone around the
houses so much with being deliberate, especially with the health shit and the
productivity and the last seven years.
Our instincts are such good guides.
Once you've sort of boxed them in a little bit, the certain things that
you need to learn to avoid, like fucking gambling.
Just don't bother fucking about with gambling, right?
It's kind of pointless.
Same thing goes for heroin and trank and fentanyl.
Like there's certainly drinking to get rid of your problems, using stimulants
to wake up on a morning and using sleeping pills to go to bed at night.
You know, there's some real red areas.
Once you've boxed those off, once you've started to structure
yourself a little bit, you're in your, you know, I think this is probably
something you, you're going to struggle to achieve before you get into your thirties.
Uh, but once you've been deliberate for a long time, you can start to ease off
the deliberateness and have a few very small sort of broad goals, a few very big
broad goals, sorry, the direction that you're going in, small sort of broad goals, a few very big broad goals, sorry,
the direction that you're going in,
small number of them,
and just allow these trained instincts, I suppose,
or you would say maybe curated instincts
to just kind of carry you through.
So you would say, I wanna keep traveling,
I wanna live a life of adventure,
I wanna have novelty,
I want to contribute to something that I care about.
Who the, like who doesn't want that? who the fuck doesn't want that everybody wants that.
So I don't think that you need to think about it.
And I think that actually by thinking about it, sometimes you, um, you
stick a middle finger up at the fact that you can look after you.
You're the sort of person that can deal with change and with unpredictability
and with circumstances that you didn't plan for really well.
And you probably don't need't plan for really well.
And you probably don't need to plan for them in advance. And that's again, I'm speaking to me, right? This is me speaking to me because I'm someone that likes control. I like things to be
planned. I like an itinerary. I like things to be laid out. And I know increasingly I've become
more free flowing and more at ease with that not being the case.
Zane Butler, who's on your next Mount Rushmore of podcast guests?
Yeah.
Well, I've actually had to turn it from Mount Rushmore into the Infinity Stones
from Avengers because Jordan Peterson, Sam Harris,
Alanda Boton, Naval Ravican, Joe Rogan, right?
Five.
And I've got four.
And then after the episodes that I did with Rogan, the day after he texted me
and said, uh, re really enjoyed the chat, blah, blah, blah.
Some bullshit about the chat.
Um, don't forget that we need to get an episode done on your podcast.
I was like, cause I asked him two and a half years ago, nearly three years
ago now on his show, really appreciated this man.
I've got to get you on the show at some point.
And he was the one that brought it up.
Like I wasn't going to bring it up again.
So once I get that and I do that snap and 50% of every living creature dies.
I don't know what to do.
Maybe do you make another one?
Do I make a second?
I guess I've got another hand so I can make it another glove.
Get another five infinity stones, but I kind of don't know who would be on that.
Ryan Reynolds was on there for forever and now he's like the
most hated person in the world.
Um, yes, he's on the shit list.
I don't know.
I have to, I, I really do have a bit of gold medalist syndrome at the moment,
especially after the Navarro thing.
Like how the fuck am I supposed to top that?
Not that you need to, right?
I need to be better, bigger, more expensive, fancier, anything longer, more insightful, denser than need to be.
It's like, it was beautiful and then it was done.
Um, but when you start to think on, in terms of goals, outcomes, Mount Rushmore,
you're like, fuck, well, it's a pretty good one.
Like I'd put mine up against pretty much anybody else's.
Carson Hoffman.
What was the hardest part about being broke when you first started
from a mindset perspective?
Can you guess that you mean money broke here?
Unless you mean broken, mindset wise, which I was both.
Um, yeah, I had, I think the poorest I ever was, was when I was 20, 20.
And I remember I spent my last 10 pounds on petrol to drive from Edinburgh to
Glasgow to see Under oath play on my own, because they were my favorite band.
And I think they were doing, they're only chasing safety and dividing
the great line back to back.
So I went to go see a band.
I went to go see a Christian metal band that I love.
Uh, and I drove back and I remember looking at the fuel gauge and thinking
that's all the money that you have.
Then you just spent it to go and watch a fucking band play.
Uh, and I had a friend that was staying with me who had been used to being
poor for longer than I had.
Um, and I remember him saying, he just had, he just instantly that it was as if it was so natural to him.
It was really kind of disturbing.
He just said, uh, don't worry, man.
Like I'll just go and steal some food from the shop.
And I was like, we're at the stage where we need to fucking steal food.
Now the difference was I was probably too proud to message mom and dad and say,
Hey, can you send me a hundred pounds, please?
So I can eat this week.
Um, because I was doing this placement year from university and we weren't
getting paid until the events were done.
This is one of the problems with running events that all you do is spend money,
spend, spend, spend, spend, spend, spend, spend, and then finally you get this big
injection of cash and you repay yourself.
That means that if you're running low personally, you do is spend money, spend, spend, spend, spend, spend, spend, spend. And then finally you get this big injection of cash and you repay yourself.
That means that if you're running low personally on liquid capital, to be able to actually keep the lights on, keep the food in your mouth, you end up in a, you
end up in a situation where she's pretty ugly.
So, uh, I dunno, it's, it was, it kind of sucked, I guess, but I, there was a bit, there
was something liberating about it as well.
It was as close to financial rock bottom as I'd got.
Um, but I, I did have faith.
I've never really had money worries.
Existentially or psychologically.
And it's also not a very big part of my life.
I don't really care that much about money.
I like nice things.
Like I like nice coffees and, and I like coffee. existentially or psychologically. And it's also not a very big part of my life. I don't really care that much about money.
I like nice things.
Like I like nice coffees and I like being able to fly to places
and not think about the dinner bill.
Um, I really don't care that much about, about money, which is
something I'm very grateful for because I think some people are
kind of cursed with a high materialism set point.
Uh, but hardest thing about being broke when you first started from a mindset perspective. because I think some people are kind of cursed with a high materialism set point.
But hardest thing about being broke when you first started from a mindset perspective,
actually with the show, I had to take a step back.
So I was gonna have to let go of the business
that earned me all of this money.
This is now a decade and a bit later, 31, 32, COVID happens.
I'm like, right, I need to make this decision
about whether or not I'm gonna go back
to doing the nightlife thing or try and talk to people on the internet and make it into a job.
Um, but there's something cool about having nothing to lose.
Homeozi talks about this.
He says, you know, someone that's got nothing to lose is very dangerous
because that they can do anything.
They give your situation, can't get worse.
Um, so yeah, I guess wasn't being broke sucked, but, uh, actually kind of.
Liked it for a very short period of time.
Well, I'm sure that I would have fucking hated it if it had been protracted.
Thickman 17 Pierce Brown on the pod.
When good question.
Pierce Brown is the author of bread rising and a fucking legend.
Um, he actually DM me the other day. And then I must've mentioned red rising on an episode. Maybe I said it to Naval or maybe I said it on Rogan.
I said it on some big episode over the last few weeks.
And he DM me again.
It's the same guy that I was talking to the other day.
I said, I'm going to send you a message.
I'm going to send you a message.
I'm going to send you a message.
I'm going to send you a message.
I'm going to send you a message.
I'm going to send you a message.
I'm going to send you a message.
I'm going to send you a message.
I'm going to send you a message.
I'm going to send you a message. I'm going to send you a message. I'm going to send you a message. I'm going to send you a message. I'm going to Naval or maybe I said it on Rogan. I said it on some big episode over the last few weeks.
And he DM me again.
It's been a while.
I think I was left on read or maybe even left unread a couple of times.
And I didn't want to push him like, you know, he's balls deep in writing this hugely
complex fantasy series and there must be so much pressure on him.
He doesn't need this podcaster reaching out and chirping him going, excuse me,
mate, can you come to Austin?
Uh, and he messaged and said, Hey man, thanks this podcaster reaching out and chirping him going, excuse me, mate, can you come to Austin?
Uh, and he messaged and said, Hey man, thanks for shouting the bucks out.
Uh, sorry, I've not been in touch.
Um, kind of balls deep in the writing thing, but, um, I'm still down.
When the time is right.
So we'll get to, I think we've got him.
I think actually he can be.
Pierce Brown can be on the new Mount Rushmore and the new Mount Rushmore is not going to be about sort of the biggest names.
It's going to be about the people, the sort of niche underground winners.
So Pierce, you can take the first spot on the,
the next, the next infinity stone is going to be Pierce Brown.
I wonder who gets the middle finger.
It's kind of an important one.
I think Hank health and fitness.
How do you balance introspective thinking and learning, but not overthinking?
Fucking perennial problem, dude.
Uh, it is...
It's the golden mean of this.
You need to do enough reflection to be able to actually work out what to do.
But if you get stuck in too much reflection, it's trapping and you
don't end up actually doing anything.
It's tough.
So it's a balance that you find over time.
It is something that you end up coming into land with age, at least for me,
I've got better at balancing the thinking and learning whilst not being paralyzed
thing.
It's also fixed by being busier.
And I know I'm kind of like the anti-busy guy at the moment.
Your calendar is a better indication of your wealth and your bank account,
blah, blah, blah.
Like your productivity obsession is killing your productivity stuff.
I'm very Joe Hudson, Pilled and Seabum Pilled at the moment.
But as even at this level of
busyness, as you get busier, it squeezes out the inefficiencies
in the way that you operate because you just don't have
fucking time for them.
It's like you don't have time to scroll on Instagram that much.
You don't have time to worry about whether or not this is the optimal
diet or that's the best way to organize your email inbox because you just need to eat and fucking send emails.
So you stop.
And in my experience, uh, creating constraints, uh, through pressure,
through busyness, uh, through time duration, you know, when does this need
to be submitted by that's a good way to stop yourself from overthinking.
You just need to ship it.
So avoid Parkinson's law work expanse to fill the time given for it.
Um, put some deadlines in place and just sort of hold on, keep on being deliberate
about stuff, but eventually you will come into land at a right balance because you
will either survive and thrive or you'll die.
Those are the only two that you're going to end up either being kicked out the
side of whatever project you're trying to do because you couldn't come to a
balance of it, in which case it's no longer a problem or you will, and you
will end up with a perfect balance.
And almost everybody that I know that's kind of of this world, this
degenerate personal growth, self-discovery, wisdom, bro-wisdom thing, almost everybody gets it right.
Like, in fact, I can't think of anybody that doesn't.
So you'll be fine.
Hi Patno.
What was the process like getting the O1 visa?
Can you go into a bit of detail?
It's long.
It is, I submitted a 700 page, three inch thick portfolio of every high relevance
status for guests that had been on the show, two independent news stories showing that they were a person of note within the industry.
And then for each of those news sites or sources, uh, an independent verification
showing that the new site was one that had high circulation.
So it was this tree, this branching tree of who it is I've spoken to, proof that
they're important and proof that the thing that said that they were important is of note.
And that just rinse and repeated that I submitted it again through the start of this year.
And this was the last one plus the new one.
So this one was twice as I don't know, I didn't even see it, how big it was once it was printed
off. But yeah, I mean, I've, forests have come down to create the O one visa process.
I used an attorney, Lehatch Philippa, I think throughout over New York.
L E H A H C H Philippa F I L I P P A I think Lehatch Philippa.
And they were great. Really, really good. C H Philippa F I L I P P A I think, like at Philippa.
Uh, and they were great.
Really, really good.
Um, Mike, I think he was the owner there was, was phenomenal with me.
It was phenomenal with me.
And I started doing this in 2020 and he was phenomenal with me.
The next time that I did it too.
Um, and then you fly to an embassy after you've submitted, you go back and forth. You do all of these things.
You submit this special form and then this other one, and then the
website is so archaic backward. And then you go to and forth, you do all of these things, you submit this special form and then this other one, and then the website is so archaic and backward.
And then you go to an embassy, but it can't be an embassy in the U S and you don't
want it to be an embassy in somewhere that's popular because the wait time is
forever.
So you end up in places like El Salvador or Guatemala, where I did my first one
or Kingston, Jamaica, where I did my second one.
And then you stand in a massive line with people that are, you know, from
countries that don't have great passports who don't, I can't necessarily
get into the U S and they're wanting to be workers that wanting to be, they
wanting to visit family, they wanting to see, you know, friends dying, dying
relatives and stuff, and you're there going, yeah, I talk to people on the
internet and I'd love, I'd really like you to extend this
visa that allows me to basically lop in and out of the country a lot.
So yeah.
Anyway, I'm going to love you and leave you.
This is all, 3.5 million people on this channel is, is berserk.
And I hope that it's not too sad to see somebody that you listen to whining about their health,
but I am getting through it.
I genuinely do appreciate everybody reaching out and saying nice things.
And the live show, the US and Canada live tour is going to be announced within the next
couple of weeks, including all of the dates, pre-sale tickets, chriswilliamson.live.
If you want to sign up and be the first person to know about when those are and where you
can get tickets.
And then the new reading list will be out soon.
And that is a lovely little treat.
Me, person dying.
We're all dying.
I'm dying more quickly.
Person who's dying quickly spent a week burying himself, writing this new reading list, and now it's with the designer.
So be grateful.
We'll see you next time.
If you are looking for new reading suggestions, look no further than the Modern Wisdom reading
list. It is 100 books that you should read before you die. The most interesting, life-changing
and impactful books I've ever read with descriptions about why I like them and links to go and
buy them. And you can get it right now for free by going to chriswillx.com slash books.
That's chriswillx.com slash books.