Modern Wisdom - #931 - Arthur Brooks - Harvard Professor Reveals The Secret To Lasting Love & Happiness

Episode Date: April 21, 2025

Arthur Brooks is a social scientist, professor at Harvard University, and an author. Can romance and love be decoded? From falling in and out of love to finding “the one,” what does the science sa...y about what makes someone a good partner, best friend, and lifelong companion? Expect to learn if men need marriage more than women do, why women tend to leave bad relationships faster than men, why falling in love makes us do crazy things, what the brain chemistry of love is, if we should be careful about who we let ourselves fall in love with, how you can tell if you’re a compatible romantic partner, but not a compatible best friend, how to overcome contempt and insecurity in a relationship and much more… Sponsors: See discounts for all the products I use and recommend: https://chriswillx.com/deals 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 a Free Sample Pack of all LMNT Flavours with your first purchase at https://drinklmnt.com/modernwisdom Get $350 off the Pod 4 Ultra at https://eightsleep.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

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Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 I think if I was to give myself the three traits that I've managed to hold on to, I pay a lot of attention to detail. I have an unusual capacity for suffering, or doing a delay in gratification might be an easy way to put it, and I'm just consistent. And those three things seem to be pretty fucking potent fuel, no matter what industry you try and get into. Yeah, but then of course there's the natural
Starting point is 00:00:26 level of curiosity, high level of cognitive ability, right? I mean, those are table stakes though, that's your point, right? You've got to have that to play the game. Yeah, yeah, because otherwise you have that to play the game, but then when things are slow at the very beginning, that's when you stop your podcast. Right.
Starting point is 00:00:42 And you didn't. A lot of questions come through from people who say stuff like, hey, man, in the beginning, when you didn't have any plays or anything, like, you know, what motivated you to keep going? I was like, to be honest, man, my motivation waned way more in sort of year three and four and five. Because you're getting bored. Yeah, it's like, well, I've been there.
Starting point is 00:00:59 There's this, you're trying to inject novelty into what you do. And you're trying, even less than that, you're just trying to not let it get stale. And how many books deep are you now? 15. 14 and 15 are coming out in the next year. There's a new one about meaning.
Starting point is 00:01:21 The one that's coming up about meaning is coming out one year from the 14th. Unreal. April 14th. I'm so fired up for that. I've been thinking about me. I remember I read this Roy Baumeister. Yeah. Buddy of mine. A essay article, a journal post from like 2011.
Starting point is 00:01:35 Contrasting meaning and happiness. That one. Fucking legendary, dude. Yeah, yeah, totally. And my whole concept of happiness rolls meaning into happiness, thus incorporating unhappiness into the process of getting happier, which of course is the standard experience of being fully alive. You want to be happy? You better be unhappy.
Starting point is 00:01:53 Let's see how unhappy you can be before you can be happy. And people who try to avoid their unhappiness paradoxically avoid their happiness, which is the problem. Yeah, how do you sort of square the circle of the fact that there seems to be some data that comes out around the more that people focus on trying to be happy the less happy they become. That's what's going on. What they're really trying to do when they're focusing on being happy, they're focusing on eliminating the unhappiness from their life and paradoxically miss their happiness. That's the problem. That's what they're doing. So they're hiding from bad vibes, not just expediting good vibes.
Starting point is 00:02:22 Exactly right. And that's what's, that's really the bad advice that they're getting from the therapy industrial complex in America today and around the world is that if you're unhappy, if you're suffering, it's evidence that something's wrong and broken and you need to eliminate it. That's exactly wrong. That's exactly incorrect. If you had eliminated the sources of unhappiness from your life, the
Starting point is 00:02:42 sources of suffering and, and you would, it's not a question of whether you delayed your gratification. It's a question of whether you embrace the suffering that comes along with doing a hard thing, you would have missed your success. That's what you would have missed. And so therefore the process of getting happier means accepting, embracing, being grateful for
Starting point is 00:03:02 the unhappiness that comes along, along the way of being fully alive. That's what meaning is really all about. It's like, you know, the masters of meaning, they don't start each day going, I'm truly grateful for all the nice things gonna happen to me today. They wake up and they say,
Starting point is 00:03:16 I'm truly grateful for all the things I'm not gonna like today. That's what the master says. Dude, you're so awesome. Yeah, I hope you take a moment to reflect on just how great it is that we've got scientific insight, fantastic communication, illustrious career of teaching this to people, and then the ability to communicate it. You're so fucking great. I really appreciate your work. I appreciate that a lot.
Starting point is 00:03:41 It means a lot to me coming from you. You've talked to everybody in the world. I'm slowly taking off the list. You actually know what you're talked to everybody in the world. I'm slowly taking off the list. You actually know what you're talking about. It's great, I'm slowly taking off all of the list. But yeah, I just think this, you were saying it before we got started, whatever we wanna talk about this,
Starting point is 00:03:53 this intersection of life advice, philosophy, science, research, insight, wisdom, like the contemporaries. Is this, it's hardly the fucking Roman Agora, right? But you know, the opportunity to go jump from Mark Manson to an Alex Hormozi to a Naval Ravikant to an Arthur Brooks to a Dr. John DeLoe, you know, like it's epic. It's really cool. It's epic.
Starting point is 00:04:19 And you know, this is the time, you know, where you run the seam between the scholars who would be indecipherable and the influencers who have all the audience in the world, but they don't do the science. You run the seam between them. Why? Because you're connecting the best ideas to the people who can use them. That's a big deal. That's a huge service. I'm trying to.
Starting point is 00:04:41 I think, I wonder what I would be like. You've got a choice of something caffeinated and non caffeinated. I think I would probably, I've had a lot of caffeine already, so it was good. Good, good. Time for more. Time for salt.
Starting point is 00:04:51 Time for more. Yeah. I really wonder what, I wonder how different, this would be a cool experiment to run if you could split test the universe. I wonder how different people's experience of the world would be if that burgeoning industry sort of hadn't kicked off for some reason. You know, how much of it is window dressing and how much of it is really making an impact in people's lives?
Starting point is 00:05:16 I do think about that because it was very formative for me. Yeah. I know that. But yeah, I wonder just how much of an effect it's having on mass. I know a lot. So there's anecdotal, I have anecdotal information about that. I mean, I've got the data on how much more people know than they did before and because of the new ways of learning for sure.
Starting point is 00:05:34 There's a ton of research on this. But also, you know, it's very interesting to me. So, two of my kids went to college and one didn't. And, you know, my older son went to Princeton. My younger daughter is graduating from Providence College, a nice Northeastern college. My middle son didn't go to college. He joined the Marine Corps
Starting point is 00:05:51 and he's a sniper with the Marine Corps. He's a Marine sniper, like he's total maniac, right? Six foot five. He looks like me, but six foot five, a lot of tats and hair. Oh, I was gonna say, has he got the hair or lack of? Yeah, well, he's gonna lose his hair too because he's a friend of tats and hair. Oh, I was going to say, has he got the hair or lack of? Yeah, well, he's going to lose his hair too, because he's a fucking-
Starting point is 00:06:07 Welcome to the family. ... the universe every bit as much as I did in my misbegotten youth. And so, this is Carlos. And Carlos' friends in the Marine Corps, none of them went to college, and they were all tough guys. And they were all diagnosed with ADHD as kids, all of them.
Starting point is 00:06:24 But what ADHD kids all have in common is not that they can't concentrate, it's just that they have a difficult time concentrating on things that they find boring and incredibly easy to focus for long periods of time on what they find interesting. So my son can sit in a bush, in a desert, behind the scope of a rifle for four straight hours with a tarantula on his arm. No problem.
Starting point is 00:06:47 Right. But put a book in front of them, it's a problem. So these methods of learning for my son and his friends have been miraculous for increasing the base of knowledge that they possess. Because this is how they learn. They learn from conversations between other people. They learn verbally. Their auditory learning is superior, absolutely. It's not like reading books. There's something about the dopamine levels in the prefrontal cortex that makes that a harder thing to do and to maintain focus, et cetera, et cetera.
Starting point is 00:07:17 So this is a miracle for a whole class of people that were kind of dismissed. Well, you get to create your own education piecemeal. I was always very wistful that I didn't do philosophy or psychology at uni. I did a bachelor's and a master's in business and marketing, neither of which I can remember any of. I'm sorry to say that as a business school professor.
Starting point is 00:07:37 Look, Newcastle University is prestigious and fantastic in the UK, but I was disenchanted with academia within about six months of being there because I was running a business and I wasn't seeing anything in the real world that represented what I was learning in the UK, but I was disenchanted with academia within about six months of being there because I was running a business and I wasn't seeing anything in the real world that represented what I was learning in the classroom. Right. You know, I was operating this big nightlife business
Starting point is 00:07:52 and I was HR, marketing, I was accounts, I was doing the advertising, I was B2B, I was B2C, I was vendors, all this stuff, licensing, local councils. I was like, why am I learning Henry Ford's theories of scientific fucking management? Like, I don't care. I was like, why am I learning Henry Ford's theories of scientific fucking management? Like, I don't care. I don't care. And I get the sense is pre-social as Facebook
Starting point is 00:08:09 was coming out, I think the year that I went to uni, you needed a university email to get Facebook. I remember thinking, I get the sense that this is not going to be useful in future. And sure enough, Kaizen lean management strategies and stuff have not come up despite the fact that I've run businesses for two decades. Yeah, you know, that's right.
Starting point is 00:08:29 And it's not just that it's not practical, it's that it's irrelevant. And irrelevancy and practicality are totally different things. And that's one of the reasons that at Harvard Business School, generally the teaching method is case studies, is case studies of people in actual business. That's not how I teach. I think I'm the only faculty member that teaches science in terms of lecture and discussion. But
Starting point is 00:08:53 the whole point is they form the corpus of knowledge along with me in terms of the questions that they're asking about their lives, becoming happier, seeing their lives as a startup where the currency of their fortune is love and happiness and then how they can become happiness teachers in the course of what they're trying to do in business. So I'm bringing the science along, bringing the science along and then they're actually applying it to their own lives and to their own business careers. Perhaps unsurprisingly, my business education was slightly different to that. That was,
Starting point is 00:09:21 I would say that's unrepresentative of what I learned. You do something about how to fall in love and stay in love. Yeah. That's a lot of what I talk about is how to fall in love and stay in love. And part of the reason is because that's the most complex thing that we're going to do. And what people, so the modern world teaches us how to use complicated formulas to solve problems. That's what social media is all about. That's what technology is about.
Starting point is 00:09:44 That's what all of the engineering solutions that we find in life is there's an app for that. There's not an app for the most complex thing in life which is falling in love. It's funny because you know exactly what it is, but you can't simulate it. You can't predict it. You can't solve for it. And even though I've been married almost 34 years, I don't know what's going to happen today. My wife will get really mad at me probably today. My wife is Spanish and so, you know, they're very quarrelsome people. It's a diplomatic way to put it.
Starting point is 00:10:14 Yeah. And she would say that we're a defensive group. Fuego. Yeah, that's right. So we're defensive. We're Americans and Brits. So the result of it is that we're going to have a conflict today, but I can't predict what it's going to be.
Starting point is 00:10:26 I don't know what it's going to be, you know? And, and I've been married for almost 34 years. I'm in love. I have a great marriage, but I still can't solve my marriage. I can't solve for it. I can only live it. So this is the thing. Everybody wants to solve problems that are complicated and they need to live the
Starting point is 00:10:44 problems that are most important to us in life, which are complex. Complex problems can't be solved. They can only be experienced. A football game is a complex problem. That's why you watch the game. You don't just simulate it on a computer because that would be impossible. Your marriage is a football game, right? And that's kind of, and so that's the spirit in which you go into it, which is I'm going to, I got to go live this thing. I gotta go make a mistake and get my heart stomped on and learn and live the thing again and live the thing again.
Starting point is 00:11:11 And so when I'm talking about it, I talk about, number one, the brain science behind what it means to fall in love and experience that. And then the ways that we get it wrong, the ways that we chronically get it wrong. And of course, that's the unit of the class my students are most interested in. Talk to me about the brain science.
Starting point is 00:11:27 What's going on with love? So falling in love is a five step process in your brain. Four steps, depending on how you count it. Number one is the, is the ignition of falling in love. Ignition is attraction in falling in love. This is one of the reasons that, you know, even people who aren't shallow want to look good. Because you actually, if you're going to start the falling in love process, you actually
Starting point is 00:11:48 have to have sex hormones involved, estrogen, estradiol, testosterone. Both men and women have both have both just in different ratios and you need both for the ignition of the attraction for romantic love. But that's just the very beginning. The second stage is where you actually start getting neurotransmitters involved, most notably norepinephrine and dopamine. What those do is they bring anticipation of reward, which is dopamine, and a sense of euphoria,
Starting point is 00:12:14 which is norepinephrine produced by the adrenal glands, read with the kidneys. That's what makes you go from, I'm really attracted to this person to, I think she just sent me a text message. Like a text message, who cares, right? But it's the anticipation of reward and the euphoria that comes from seeing the thing pop up on your phone.
Starting point is 00:12:33 That's really, I mean, psychology, Chris, is biology. And this is a perfect case study of that. And that's the second step in falling in love is those two neurotransmitters kicking in. Okay. I just want to get, I don't want to forget our train of thought here. So you'll have seen Adolescence maybe on Netflix. I haven't actually, everybody's talking about it. I haven't seen it yet. Yes. I had William Costello sit in that seat last week. He's the number one researcher of
Starting point is 00:12:57 incels in the world. Interestingly, he, as an academic at David Buss's lab here at UT, Austin, had to repurpose his introduction of how he described himself. He says, I'm an incel researcher. Says, I'm a researcher of incels. No, I'm not. Very interesting way that you formulate the sentence. And in that, one of the claims, one of the challenges
Starting point is 00:13:22 that some of the darker areas of the sort of Manosphere and Black Pill movement online have is that you basically can't fake attraction. Yeah. And that there is, in their opinion, a certain class of men who do not reach a particular threshold of attraction that is going to cause them to be as they would refer to it, genetic dead ends. Now, I and many of my friends in the scientific world would believe that the bar that they claim that that's at is significantly higher than it actually is. And we'll see all of the time people who were able to punch outside of their weight. But you are suggesting that, Hey, even the people who are there, they're just raw
Starting point is 00:14:01 academics, they're just their noses in books all the time. If they're going out to a party on an evening, they're gonna try and make themselves look nice because we have in the back of our minds, this sense that sort of the advertising boarding upfront still does have an impact no matter how deep and meaningful and looking past the skin and the hair. Storefront, it's your storefront, right?
Starting point is 00:14:23 Once you get people into the store, okay, but the storefront is really important, right? Because if you don't have the storefront actually looking good, people are gonna walk on by. So that's critically important. Now, this is actually one of the reasons that dating apps are so problematic because they don't go past the storefront,
Starting point is 00:14:39 storefront, storefront, storefront, storefront, right? When you're stuck talking to somebody at a party, there is the initial impression, which is largely physical, which instigates the, the, the chemical response in the sex hormones. But then you have a conversation with the person and it turns out they're intelligent, turns out they're funny, turns out they're
Starting point is 00:14:54 interesting, and then that, that can solve, that can just cover a multitude of sins, physical sins, right? Okay. Then if you actually get to the next stage, that's when the, that's when the neurotransmitters start to kick in and that's when things start to get weird. That's when the whole thing, it's like suddenly the outsized importance of a text message that comes
Starting point is 00:15:14 because of this anticipation of outsized reward and the sense of euphoria that actually comes in around these little things that wouldn't matter. Uncertainty, variable schedule. Exactly. But then it gets even weirder because that's when the misery kicks in. See the process of falling in love entails a lot of jealousy, a lot of surveillance behavior, a lot of suspicion. These are not emotions that are, that are typically associated with happiness. Right.
Starting point is 00:15:39 And the big part is this third step where, where serotonin levels dive. So low serotonin levels, as we all know, are markers or they're associated with clinical depression. And part of the reason is because, I mean, it's not well understood, but they know, they notice that when there's low serotonin in the synapse, that that has a huge correlation with clinical depression. Okay. So what do they do? They give you Prozac, for example, which is a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor. It leaves serotonin in the synapse longer and it alleviates depression symptoms for some non-trivial number of depression sufferers. Well, what's going on
Starting point is 00:16:16 there, there's a lot of theories about this, but the best evidence suggests that there's a part of the brain called the ventral lateral prefrontal cortex that's especially active when serotonin levels are low. That makes you ruminate and ruminate in sadness, for example, is a characteristic of clinical depression. Ruminating on another person is how you bond to that other person. That rumination machine happens when serotonin levels go down. By the way, it's also really, really characteristic of artistic temperaments because you're ruminating on a creative product, like a poem or a symphony or an opera or even a business plan for when you're ruminating,
Starting point is 00:16:51 you can't stop thinking, you're waking up thinking about it in the middle of the night. Usually, me and serotonin levels are low because you're ruminating on something that's really important to you. That's why artists, they tend to be depressive and romantic because it's all the same part of the brain and the same neurotransmitter associated with the behavior of how the brain works.
Starting point is 00:17:08 So what's somebody who has very high serotonin like? What's their demeanor? That's somebody who's really calm and mellow and it's like no problem and I can go think about something else. So, yeah, I guess I'm falling in love, but you know, I got a lot going on. It's all good. Right? And so this is one of the reasons that some people will say that when they're on selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors,
Starting point is 00:17:27 SSRIs, it's hard to fall in love. Because you don't have that, what's she doing right now? Rush, obsession. Yeah, obsession. And so that's, in that period in the falling in love process, you send a hundred text messages in an hour, like an idiot, and you don't know why. It's because you're ruminating, ruminating, ruminating,
Starting point is 00:17:44 ruminating, ruminating. Is this the most insane part of falling in love? Is this the one that rips you away from yourself the most? And a lot of jealousy and a lot of behavior. That's the surveillance behavior, for example, and things you wouldn't otherwise do. You're going back into your new partner's ancient Facebook past. It's like, are you kidding me? Three dudes that year?
Starting point is 00:18:06 Really? You're reading into text message. Well, why was there no kiss at the end of that message? She was last online at four in the morning, but didn't message me until 8 AM. Why, why, why, why was she awake? You're right. And with, with sufficient serotonin, you'd be like, means nothing. Okay.
Starting point is 00:18:21 She just writes. Okay. You said, so I'm going to, I'll see you at eight. She said, okay. But when you're in low serotonin, you'd be like, it means nothing. Okay, she just writes okay. You said, so I'll see you at eight. She said, okay. But when you're in low serotonin, you'd be like, I don't like the tone. Of that okay, those two letters. I don't like the tone of those two letters.
Starting point is 00:18:33 So I did, this is really cool. I'm not sure if you're familiar with it. IntellX DNA, cheek swab, put in a tube, send it off, full genetic profile. And then mapped onto what is the likelihood, what is the prevalence in the wider population of this, and what is it predictive of. So MTHFR gene, things that are to do with your processing of gluten,
Starting point is 00:18:57 your predisposition for different maladies, for heart stuff. But the interesting shit for me, obsessed with human nature, was how is this predictive of different things in my psychology? And the particular suite of genetics that my parents decided to either bestow or curse me with, are all the same cluster,
Starting point is 00:19:20 and they just pile on top of each other. It is all dopamine, epinephrine, norepinephrine, does not clear cortisol or adrenaline particularly quickly. It's like may struggle to stop tasks once begun. It's just like if you wanted to construct an obsessed human, you would just give them that. And you're an anxious person. Yes, yeah, I have a tendency.
Starting point is 00:19:39 I would call myself an insecure overachiever, yes. So there's a lot that you can do behaviorally by the way, once you understand the nature of anxiety, but we still haven't gotten to the end of the, of the neurochemical cascade of falling in love. So, so this is actually one of the reasons that that relationship struggle is when one person is going through the neurochemical cascade faster
Starting point is 00:20:00 than the other and certain people, they tend to go through it real quick. There's actually a malady. There's a pathology called emophilia, not with an H, it's not a blood disorder. It's E-M-O-philia, which is people who fall in love too quickly. And what that means is they're just, they're just falling through this cascade really, really quickly and they're just going jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjj doing surveillance behavior and jealousy and sending a million text messages. And so it happens to women more than men. And the guys are like, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. Like this is too much.
Starting point is 00:20:29 But guys do this too. They fall in love super fast. And the more they understand this about themselves, the more they can kind of hit the brakes and say, oh, I'm doing that. Knowledge is power, man. Because then when you bring your prefrontal cortex into the business, you can actually start to manage the process more and not let it manage you. So you don't feel like you're, you're possessed by a demon or something every
Starting point is 00:20:50 time, and then you're not freaking out and scaring away girls is how this would work. Which obviously I've never done. Uh, okay. So that's, that's three. No, that's three is, is the serotonin stage. Yes. All right. And stage four is, is four is really where you wanna get
Starting point is 00:21:05 in a relationship and ideally on the same schedule. And this is where relationships become pair bonds and pair bond mating is the goal, right? I mean, what we all want, I mean, except for people who are really, really modern, but this isn't common. People want to fall in love and stay in love with one person for the rest of their lives. That's what people want, right?
Starting point is 00:21:25 For a good reason. And I think that this is sort of the natural order of things when things are working properly. The last one is, is usually characteristic of oxytocin and vasopressin, which are the bonding hormones. And when this really kicks in, that's when you're at the point where you adopt somebody as your kin. This is, this is, this becomes your family.
Starting point is 00:21:44 And you know, somebody from a neighboring tribe that you've never seen before, somebody from the other adopt somebody as your kin. This becomes your family. And you know, somebody from a neighboring tribe that you've never seen before, somebody from the other part of the world who doesn't even speak your language, you can adopt that person into your kin group. And that's when the oxytocin, which largely is mediated by activities like direct eye contact in real life, by touch in particular, that's how you know somebody is your kin and they know that you're theirs. That's why it is so great when you, when you have children, you'll see this.
Starting point is 00:22:10 When you lay eyes on your newborn baby for the very first time, there's an explosion of oxytocin in your brain. It's like the 4th of July inside your head. It's, it's magic actually. It's a gift from God. It's wonderful. And, and when you fall in love with somebody new, get through the agonizing stages of one, two, and three, which by the way, you're still
Starting point is 00:22:28 going to have those things. I mean, my wife really, really mad at me. I'm like, I'm pretty bummed out and I've got some of those early stages still going on. And of course there's still, you know, tons of attraction, the whole thing. Your, your surveillance behavior is still a little vigilant
Starting point is 00:22:41 here and there. I'm trying to be vigilant. I'm not, you know, that much surveillance behavior at this point. I don't think I could face that, but, um, but yeah, she's looking at me. I'm fine. My friends, where is he? Which isn't surveillance behavior. He's just curious about where I am because I'm traveling all the
Starting point is 00:22:56 time on the road every week. So traveling should be about. The pleasure of the trip and not the stress of packing, which is why I am such a huge fan of Nomatic. This travel pack, the 14 liter travel pack is what I wear every single day. It is the biggest game changer and it genuinely makes spending your day lugging your possessions around infinitely more enjoyable.
Starting point is 00:23:18 They've got compartments for everything, your laptop, your shoes, your sunglasses, so well organized that even your toothbrush will feel important. It's like the Marie Kondo of luggage. Everything has got its place. And if you're still on the fence, their products have got a lifetime guarantee. So this is the last backpack you'll ever need to buy.
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Starting point is 00:24:00 getting to that is really important and staying there is the ultimate goal of relationship. The early stages are passion. The bonding stage is what's often called companionate love, which sounds as my kids remind me, it sounds not hot, right? Correct. Companionate love, but companionate love has lots of passion in it.
Starting point is 00:24:17 But this is, it's, you want to get, if you, if you're going to fall in love and stay in love, your goal is best friendship. You want to spend every night with your best friend. That's the goal. And you can't get goal. You can't get over the agony, you got to go through the agony. That's the reason the friend zone almost never leads to these relationships because you've skipped the early stages. Fascinating. Yeah. The friend zone is really,
Starting point is 00:24:40 I mean, I've heard people is like, yeah, we said to each other, look, if we're still not married in five years and you know, we really, I mean, we get along so great, then we'll just go get married. And I've heard of that actually kind of working, but I don't believe it. You've said you want to, your partner should be your best friend or you should be best friends with your partner, but marrying a best friend is not. No, no, you got to go through one, two, and three.
Starting point is 00:25:04 You got to have a ton of attraction. You have to have lots of anticipation euphoria. You have to go through the bonding stage of rumination on the other person. And then you have to arrive at best friendship through that particular process. You can't just leapfrog straight to the end. Yeah, exactly right.
Starting point is 00:25:20 So this is why a lot of the stuff that we see in modern life is screwing up relationships so much. So dating apps, for example, they short circuit this process. They don't let you get into later stages because you're rejecting people at the storefront. Rejecting too many people at the storefront. That's why you can't solve for love. Plus people putting together dating profiles, looking for themselves. You curate your choices on the basis of your tastes and
Starting point is 00:25:45 you want somebody who matches your tastes. Do we not mate assortably love? We have a minimum, pretty minimal level of compatibility and then what really attracts us is complementarity. And dating apps don't actually give us complementarity because you're not like, I want somebody who completes me. I'm a Democrat. I want somebody who's a Republican. You don't say that. It's like, I'm not going to be the big majority. 71% of Democrats won't date a Republican. 41% of Republicans won't date a Democrat. Why is the different?
Starting point is 00:26:14 Quiz me this, Chris, what's the, why the difference between Democrats and Republicans in a sordid and political meeting? Uh, I would guess. Well, Democrats, I would assume are more open to experience as personality profile, but they're more likely to not data republic, that's my point, but they're more open to experience as personality profiles. So that seems to be, so they're not only having to whatever it is, whatever
Starting point is 00:26:38 the effect is, it's going on. It's having to compensate for their openness, their increase in openness. So this is even more strong. It's having to compensate for their openness, their increase in openness. So this is even more strong. I could try and pull out as much bro social science as I want about purity, spiral, sense of ideological, rigidity.
Starting point is 00:26:57 It's actually simpler than that. So that's good. That's that's good stuff. Okay. It's about gender. Okay. Who's choosier, men or women? Women.
Starting point is 00:27:05 Uh huh. Who's Democrats, men or women? Women. Ah, men are more likely to be Republicans. And they're like, yeah. It's like, Democrat, I don't know. Show me a picture. Like, yeah, exactly. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:27:16 How Democrat? How Democrat are we talking? It's like, and more beautiful. It's okay. And, and so that's just choosiness is kind of the way that works. But we set up, we, I mean, I've never done it because I did my pair bond mate. You reached escape velocity.
Starting point is 00:27:32 Yeah, exactly right. And 19, I think my last date was in 1989 or 1988 or something like that. The year I was born, fantastic. Nice, I know. Thanks, man. That's okay. That's okay.
Starting point is 00:27:43 And, but the dating app, you set it up so that, it's like, I like Sriracha, and I want somebody who likes Sriracha. I want somebody who thinks Austin's cool. And pretty soon you're looking at a mirror. Also not hot, you're getting your sibling. That's not what we want. We think we want that because we're narcissistic,
Starting point is 00:28:02 but we actually don't want that. The happiest couples have lots of difference. They have lots of interlocking personality parts. Do you think that that's a psychological representation of the way that we look for immune profile difference? Yeah, that's the MHA. That's the, no, the immunocomatibility complex, the MHC. That's from the, all that stuff comes from the mid 90s t-shirt smelling tests, you know, all that research, right? Where you can, the olfactory bulb senses
Starting point is 00:28:34 the major histocompatibility complex in others to get an immunological profile, a repertoire that's larger. So you want somebody different than you. And there is no doubt that that is, that is displayed not just in how your t-shirt smells, but actually how you display your personality. Oh, you show up in the world. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:28:50 Is that an adaptive explanation for why humans kiss? No doubt. You're sampling the saliva. You're sampling the saliva. You actually want to exchange something that's, you know, I mean, it is, it has pathogens in it, but it's not like dangerously pathological in the broad scheme of things. Yeah. That's probably why. That's mean, it is, it has pathogens in it, but it's not like dangerously pathological in the broad scheme of things. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:29:06 That's probably why, that's probably why it is the case. Uh, I'm fascinated with evil. There's more saliva exchange, the more passionately you kiss somebody. Uh huh. Uh huh. Uh huh. Um, can you just explain sort of those five steps there with a bit of an adaptive lens, like what is, what is our,
Starting point is 00:29:26 what are our genes ultimate reasons for behavior trying to get us to do here? Presumably it's become attracted to something very quickly, ta ta ta ta ta all the way down. What's the reason for those five stages? You, you, okay. So the first stage is that, that's how you can actually link up
Starting point is 00:29:41 with somebody potentially. The second stage is one in which you have a strong sense of wanting to be with that other person. So you will pursue getting to, getting to greater depth with that person. The third stage is when you're really bonding to each other. And the fourth stage is when you're actually create kin and, and, and, and you will be with each other now and forever. That's the whole idea.
Starting point is 00:30:02 It's the whole concept of your mind, we're together. This is it. As opposed to if you just stayed at stage one, which path a lot, people who have real pathologies in their relationships, it's just basically stage one, stage two, stage one, stage two, stage one, stage two. That's hookup culture is one or one and two over and over again, or the, the emophilic problem of, of careening through. And then the other person going, Whoa, and then starting again and starting again and over again, or the, the hemophilic problem of, of careening through, and then the other person going, whoa, and then
Starting point is 00:30:27 starting again and starting again and starting again. So you're looking for somebody, people who go through the stages together and wind up bonding together permanently, but they need to go deeper and deeper and their brains need to imprint on each other in these particular ways. That's how the psychology of falling in love is really just the biology of falling in love.
Starting point is 00:30:44 Okay. Talk to me about the fellow dopamine norepinephrine addicts out there, about how they can, it sounds to me like biology is psychology. We're along for the ride here. We don't really get to choose much of the time who we fall in love with. You know, if you spend enough time around the person and you go, fuck, like they, all of the things I said I wasn't gonna fall for and there they are. So this is true. And this is, there's a really interesting research
Starting point is 00:31:11 going back to the nineties on this. You know, the work of Art Aaron, Arthur Aaron as Sunni Stonyberg. This actually got news because it was covered in the New York Times and it became sort of pop social psychology research. This was love in the lab where he was actually simulating the neurochemical cascade. And here's how he did it.
Starting point is 00:31:28 Autophysically? Yeah. So here's how he did it. He brought people into his lab and it was people who didn't know each other, but who based on surveys beforehand were theoretically capable of falling in love with each other.
Starting point is 00:31:39 So it wasn't people who were 30 years apart in age. And it was people who are opposite sex attracted and who would rate pictures of attractiveness 30 years apart in age, and it was people who were, you know, opposite sex attracted and who would rate pictures of attractiveness more or less the same. So it was men and women, it was all heterosexual potential couples, and they came into the lab, they come in opposite doors, they sit down at a table across from each other, and they don't know each other at all, they've never seen each other. Of course it's undergraduate students because they'll do anything for 20 bucks.
Starting point is 00:32:03 And he starts asking him questions. He asks him 36 questions that escalate in terms of intimacy. So question one is, if you could have lunch with anybody or dinner with anybody in the world, who would it be and why? Right? Let's say it's an icebreaker at a party, right? Steve Jobs, you know, whoever it happens to be. Well, why?
Starting point is 00:32:24 Question 30 is, when's the last time you cried and why now your mom doesn't know that. Your actual partner probably doesn't know that, but you have to answer the question and you're going super deep. So this is simulating. You're just, you're screaming through the process of intimacy with this person.
Starting point is 00:32:41 And then, haha, now it's when it gets really good to the end. They have to gaze into each other's eyes, blinking as little as possible for four minutes to release as much oxytocin as possible. And they would walk one after the other at a lab saying, I feel like I just fell in love. I feel like I just. It's horribly manipulative. Could you, could you get it past an ethics board now?
Starting point is 00:33:04 Do you think? An IRB, I don't know. One couple got married. Okay. I mean, not that day. Yeah. Right. But a bunch of the couples wound up dating, a bunch of them, the couples wound up dating and one actually after college got married.
Starting point is 00:33:14 Wow. Yeah. Yeah. No, it's, it's unreal because we think that there's some sort of, you know, Disney soulmates kind of metaphysical thing going on, but we're made for pair bonds. Humans are made for pair bond mating. This is one of the most important imperatives
Starting point is 00:33:34 of human life and our brains are built for it. But this is the important thing that this is one of the things that I teach my business students and my clients is be careful with this. So, you know, I'm in my company, in my unit. I need more, I need a team building exercise. You know what I'm going to do? I'm going to do an offsite. No spouses so that we can really get to know each other better. I just put them in the lab, man. And so when you're all day long with somebody and you're working with somebody with whom you
Starting point is 00:34:03 could conceivably have a relationship, even though you don't want to, you're paired up and you're looking into each other's eyes and you're talking about things that are important like your work. And then you go on a lazy river like canoe trip and you're telling each other stories around the campfire. That's the reason that 31% of extramarital affairs start at work. Have you heard of workplace plus two? Do you know what this is?
Starting point is 00:34:25 No, tell me. It's that she's a five on the street, but she's a seven in the workplace. It refers to precisely this, that there's something about working with this person in the office who you might not really even think twice about looking at, in a bar or a restaurant or something.
Starting point is 00:34:44 They wouldn't get passed step one in the cascade. But workplace plus two turns them from a strong seven to a nine. Yeah, you got to be careful. And so if you're a boss, every boss watching us here, be careful. Don't ruin people's lives. You know, it's like no outside work activities that don't include plus ones. If people have partners or spouses, they have to be invited to these things. And you should be going with your partner or your
Starting point is 00:35:12 spouse to the Christmas party. Isn't it interesting, you know, there is this sense of self and sense of attachment and something transcendent and greater than just and, uh, greater than just the neurochemical cascade that's going on. It's not just neurobiology. It doesn't feel like it's just neurobiology that's going on. And yet you can manipulate people into that situation, largely through neurobiology. And you need to account for it.
Starting point is 00:35:39 And you think, well, what, so you're saying that my partner's, my partner doesn't actually love me that much. that I think you can just put them in this, you can ask these fucking 36 questions and put them on a lazy river and there's a 50% chance, 30% chance that he's going to cheat on me. You're telling me that that's the, that's the depth of our love. That's what this transcendent, what about the,
Starting point is 00:35:58 you know, until sickness and health and yeah. Kind of. Respect the biology, man, because we have brains. That's a good way to put it. You have to respect the biology. And this is important about everything having to do with psychology, about anything about behavioral science is that there's such a strong biological
Starting point is 00:36:14 component to it, which is why you go back just a few decades when they weren't talking about the biology very much. They weren't, they were missing a lot about this. You know, the way that I teach this is that all the interesting questions come from philosophy and ancient wisdom or even modern wisdom. There it is.
Starting point is 00:36:34 There you go. Um, then you talk about the biology to understand the mechanism of action. And then you talk about behavioral science to get the data, and then you talk about management science such that you can actually use it. So it goes one, two, three, four, all the way through, and this is an entirely multidisciplinary
Starting point is 00:36:50 understanding of human life. But if you skip one of those stages, you're going to, you're going to miss the boat. If you don't know any neuroscience, you can't be a good behavioral scientist. If you don't know any behavioral science, then your neuroscience won't mean anything. It's not practical.
Starting point is 00:37:02 Yeah, exactly right. And so this is, this is a lot of what I, I wind up teaching is, is for my students to respect their own biology and respect the biology of other people and, and, and manage their lives accordingly. Don't put yourself in, you know, just like you wouldn't walk in a bad neighborhood of $20 bills
Starting point is 00:37:19 hanging out of your pockets. Don't do something that actually, it doesn't necessarily put you at risk. It just puts you at emotional peril. You know, why would you put yourself in a situation where you find yourself unduly attracted to somebody and you don't know why and mess up your relationship? Even if you don't do anything, it just, it doesn't make sense. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:37:36 Cause you're going to be in turmoil. Avoiding temptation is way easier than resisting it. It's the same reason that if you're on a diet, you don't have cookies in time. That's right. The near occasion of sin. Yeah. David Buss wrote. He's fantastic. He's fucking phenomenal.
Starting point is 00:37:48 I don't even know him and I love his work. His work on jealousy. It's unbelievable. The evolutionary basis of the differences in jealousy between men and women. Do you know that well? Can you explain? Yeah. So the whole, David, I mean, he's everything he writes is visionary.
Starting point is 00:38:03 He's a God. Yeah. It's fantastic. So the whole idea is that whole, David, I mean, he's everything he writes his visionary. He's a god. Yeah. It's fantastic. So the whole idea is that in surveys, you find that men are especially jealous of the concept of their mate having sex with another man. Women in heterosexual relationships are driven mad by the concept of their, or the vision of their mate saying, I love you to another woman, emotional versus
Starting point is 00:38:25 physical jealousy. And that has a biological basis to it because in, in the ancestral environment before DNA tests and before evidence is abundant, you got to know if you're a man that you're raising your own offspring. And if you're a woman, you have to know that your mate is not going to run off and raise somebody else's offspring.
Starting point is 00:38:49 And so that's why you have these differences. And this really explains a lot. So for example, one of the things that you find from this is that if a man wants to be forgiven for infidelity, he should say, according to this theory, right? I'm not advocating this because don't be unfaithful but to be forgiven for infidelity according to this theory he should say Look, I mean, I didn't love her. I only love you. I don't love her at all, but You haven't slept with me in a long time and I have needs and that was the whole thing She'll take you back current of that theory now. She is unfaithful. She should say It wasn't about the sex. It was disgusting. But he told me he loved me and you haven't said that in a long time and I need that.
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Starting point is 00:40:31 functionhealth.com slash modern wisdom. That's functionhealth.com slash modern wisdom. David Buss's work is very, and he didn't, by the way, this is my practical application of this. He would, he, he is very, he is going to watch this and disown it completely. He loves everything that I do. He's my number one fan. But one of the cool things that he explained talking about,
Starting point is 00:40:57 you don't get to control the cascade quite, but you can, I suppose, reframe what you tell yourself it means, if that starts. This guy reached out to him after he read the evolution of desire and in it David talks about an area of the brain that specifically gets turned on in men when men look at something that resembles anything sexual. A pair of rocks that look like, remotely like boobs. It's like, you should be looking at that. That's why after reading that,
Starting point is 00:41:26 I contested so heavily this idea of the toxic male gaze. I'm like, these are mostly accusations that are being made by particular sex of people who do not have the same circuitry that men do. All of that to be said, men shouldn't make people feel weird by staring at them on trains and in the tube and all the rest of this stuff. But I did think some pretty deep rooted fucking brain circuitry going on here that's incentivizing men to look at you in those leggings that have the thing that goes up the middle of the ass crack.
Starting point is 00:41:58 Like, come on, play the game. Anyway, this guy read the book and messaged David and said, I just wanted to thank you for saving my marriage because I found myself looking at other women and I was attracted to them. I thought that they were hot. I didn't do anything about it. I love my wife and I love our kids. But I thought there's something wrong with our marriage
Starting point is 00:42:18 because I was attracted to other women. The story that I told myself about the fact that I was attracted to other women was there's something wrong with my partner. I read your book and I realized that I'm myself about the fact that I was attracted to other women was there was something wrong with my partner. And I read your book and I realized that I'm just kind of designed to find attractive shock horror man finds attractive women attractive. Yeah. And respect the biology is what it comes down to.
Starting point is 00:42:34 That means understand yourself, understand how you're wired. Don't act on your impulses. That's respecting the biology and acting accordingly. That's managing your brain, managing your limbic system. so it doesn't manage you, is what it comes down to. There's also a real understanding in that work about the basics of what people need in opposite sex relationships, for example. I mean, it's not just David Buss's work.
Starting point is 00:42:59 There's a lot of the evolutionary biology of attraction suggests that fundamentally, I mean, you're not gonna be reductive about this because there's a lot that the evolutionary biology of attraction suggests that fundamentally, I mean, you're not going to be reductive about this because there's a lot that goes into falling in love and staying in love and having relationships. But fundamentally women require adoration. And this is often called the adoration
Starting point is 00:43:18 admiration dichotomy. Adoration means baby, you're everything. I would literally take a bullet for you. You're so wonderful. You're so beautiful because, and from the evolutionary biology would suggest you need somebody who's going to take complete, I mean, who's going to take a, who's going to be protective, completely protective way beyond what reason
Starting point is 00:43:38 would suggest you're insane for that particular person. Whereas men need admiration, which is basically, you know, that is the largest gazelle I've ever seen that you just dragged into the cave, man. I mean, that's gonna feed our family for three. You're so big and strong, right? And so it almost suggests that what guys need is like just admiration.
Starting point is 00:44:01 I need you to admire me more than anybody else admires me. Right, and we're not egomaniacs, but these are differences that actually would get back to I'm, I'm going to just take care of you and the kids forever and I'm going to protect you because I adore you so much and you're going to admire me for this. And again, we're, I need to be admired.
Starting point is 00:44:18 I mean, I do need to be adored as a husband and as a person and the whole thing. And so it's not that simple, but there's a lot to that. There's a lot to that. There's a lot to that. And so one of the things that all, you know, guys will say, what's the secret and it's number one, adore her.
Starting point is 00:44:34 And number two, be admirable. Be admirable, actually be admirable. She's not going to admire you if you're not admirable for, for God's sake. And, and, and adore her. What if I don't feel it? I don't care. I don't care. Adore her. What if I don't feel it? I don't care, I don't care, adore her. That's the secret, weirdly.
Starting point is 00:44:49 I mean, yeah, there's more to it, but maybe not that much more to it. Did you look at the over perception and under perception bias of attraction? Have you seen this? Oh, men over perceive attraction from women and women under perceive attraction from men. Very reliably.
Starting point is 00:45:07 Very reliably. It's like, ah, yeah, the waitress has smiled at me. I think she likes me. Dude, she wants a tip. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, the smoke detector principle working in both directions. And this is why, you know, for all of the girls, they're like, my boss, no, he's just friendly. He's just friendly.
Starting point is 00:45:24 He's just nice with me. It's like, you don't see him the way that he sees you. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. And you don't see him the way he thinks you see him. Correct. And that's sort of weird that perception gets into it. No, that's a funny thing. In my almost 34 years of marriage, nobody has ever, no woman has ever looked at me that way.
Starting point is 00:45:49 Nobody, there's been the slightest hint of any attraction. Now I get it. I mean, it's not, I'm not like that much to look at, but you know, there's not, not once. Get guys who over perceive. Never. Uh, what would be your advice to the insecure overachievers out there? Get some of the dopamine norepinephrine under control. The insecure overachievers.
Starting point is 00:46:15 So in, in, in relationships. Yeah. Yeah. So give me a story. Well, for instance, if you are someone that finds yourself, uh, ruminating more aggressively, aggressively, then you're really struggling to get that under control. Yeah. You are, the serotonin has dropped.
Starting point is 00:46:31 The rationality is out of the window. Yeah. You find yourself moving through this at a pace that maybe your partner can't keep up with. Right. You're scaring people off. Yep. You're behaving in a weird way.
Starting point is 00:46:40 Knowledge is power on this. Knowledge is always power on these things. One of the things that we find is that this is this whole literature on metacognition that suggests that when you move the experience of your emotions into your prefrontal cortex by journaling through, some people use therapy, through prayer, prayers of petition, through meditation, for example, meditation techniques, mindfulness meditation techniques, they move the experience of very strong aversive emotions into the prefrontal cortex where you can manage them more effectively. One of the best ways to do this, by the way, is simple journaling of strong emotions and hard experiences. So this gets back to something you asked about a little bit earlier, which is anxiety.
Starting point is 00:47:20 Right? Anxiety. So you're an anxious person. And what that means is you have an overactive adrenal system. You have an overactive adrenal system. You have an HPA axis that, you know, is kind of, and that's part of your success, by the way. I mean, it's like, would you trade it away if you could? No, I realized this a few years ago, no. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:47:36 I mean, this is, and one of the reasons is your weaknesses are your strengths and your strengths are your weaknesses. And you can try to eliminate your weaknesses, but all you'll wind up doing is eliminating your own success and satisfaction in life. That's just the way it is. You better learn how to manage your weaknesses
Starting point is 00:47:51 and embrace them and be thankful for them. That's the only, that's the way you got to live your life is the way that that works out, but it doesn't mean you don't go, they don't go unmanaged. So for something like anxiety, anxiety is unfocused fear. That's what, that's what, That's the best definition of anxiety. Fear in the ancestral environment was supposed to be episodic and intense and rare.
Starting point is 00:48:12 You didn't feel fear that often, but when you did, man, it was all on. You heard a snap of a twig behind you, you take off running and climb a tree, whatever it happened to be. In the modern environment, fear is chronic and mild. The reason is because there's nothing trying to chase us down and kill us. That's very rare. On the other hand, there's Twitter, which feels like it's stalking us in some sort or what acts. Social media, it's the modern environment. It's stressful. It's cars honking. It's whatever it is. Just the limbic system is mildly that the
Starting point is 00:48:45 amygdala is sort of on sending a weak signal to the hypothalamus and stimulating the pituitary gland in a little bit. And then asking the adrenal glands to kind of drip out cortisol. So you're on and that you're getting this epinephrine. So at two o'clock in the afternoon, that pit of the stomach feeling, and you know this feeling because
Starting point is 00:49:04 this is your life. Right. So how do you deal with that? And the answer is not to avoid it. You go to a doctor and a doctor might say, take a benzodiazepine drug, you know, take a little Xanax and you're going to feel a little bit better. And that's true because that will mute the, the
Starting point is 00:49:21 activity in the HPA axis. It'll, it'll, it'll, it'll, it'll be inhibitory. A much better way is to lean into what it was supposed to be, which is fear. And so a good exercise for somebody who's anxious like you or me, I'm a super anxious person, is to at the end of the day, say, okay, five things are freaking me out,
Starting point is 00:49:40 but they're kind of like ghosts. I'm not focusing on them. I'm actually blocking out the real source of my anxiety. I'm just anxious. Number one, what actually is the source of my anxiety? What is the fear that that's based on? Make it real. Write it down.
Starting point is 00:49:55 What's the fear? Step two, what's the worst thing that can actually happen? Literally the worst thing is actually going to happen. Someone is like, I'm going to die. But sometimes it's like the stock market goes to zero. Then what's the probability that's going to happen? We're smart people. What's the probability that worst case scenario is going to happen?
Starting point is 00:50:15 And then step four, what would I do if that happened? Write it down because you would do something, right? Okay. What am I really worried about that thing, that thing, that thing it's like it's cancer right what's the likelihood pretty low if it happened what would I do I'd get treatment I'd actually get treatment right and and when you do that you've turned your anxiety into fear and you'll shut it off why because you put it in its proper place you've given a direction you've managed it you. Why? Because you put it in its proper place. You've given it direction. You've managed it. You've actually managed your limbic system.
Starting point is 00:50:47 So your limbic system is not managing you. Then go through the other four things and you'll sleep better. And part of the reason is because you've actually calmed, you'll calm your HPA axis. Your, your adrenal system will actually, and again, there's all kinds of other things to do like box breathing and all sorts of physiological
Starting point is 00:51:04 things, but this is a good, good way to actually cope with this. So that you can continue to use that gift that you have, but that gift isn't manipulating you in all sorts of ways that hurt your quality of life. That's really cool. You mentioned about some of the challenges of digital dating enabling on the front end. You also said that getting to stage five, getting to kin. That's actually four. So we went through four, but there's not a stage five.
Starting point is 00:51:27 I counted wrong. Oh, okay. Yeah. Okay. Right. Yeah. Whatever. Oxytocin is the, you know, the connection phase.
Starting point is 00:51:33 Yeah. Stage four. Yeah. Uh, I was thinking about, um, relationships that have started to mature, but are enabled by being long distance, you know, which I imagine pen paling back and forth is less common than some of the, who lives in LA and someone else who lives in Wisconsin and they're dating and big text lot and
Starting point is 00:51:51 all the rest of it. But the eye to eye and skin to skin is precisely what you said takes you. You'll crave the oxytocin. Yes. So does that suggest that, um, long distance relationships need a different type of work? They need to compensate in different sorts of ways.
Starting point is 00:52:05 Yeah, it's very problematic. And a lot of my students are going to be in long distance relationships because they're, you know, they'll form the pair. Some of them will pair up in business school and then one of them will work in San Francisco and one of them in London. And, and, you know, it's eight hour time difference
Starting point is 00:52:20 and they're not going to see each other that often, but you know, it's okay because we'll see each other a couple of times a year. And I'm sorry, because you're going to be in close proximity to other people and the neurochemical cascade is going to happen and oxytocin can occur. So, you know, respect the biology. And, you know, I'm explaining this and they're like, And so that's one of the reasons that those long distance relationships usually don't work is because you actually, we're not, we're not built in our ancestral state to be living in continents
Starting point is 00:52:52 apart from each other. We're supposed to do eye contact and touch. I mean, it's so important that I can practically save a marriage just by having people understand that they need to get back on the oxytocin express. And the way to do that is two simple rules. I can practically save a marriage just by having people understand that they need to get back on the oxytocin express. And the way to do that is two simple rules in every marriage.
Starting point is 00:53:10 And this is how marriages fall apart, is they stop touching and they stop looking at each other in the eyes. And so the two rules for everybody who's married watching us and they want their marriage to be like it was, not like in the very beginning, because that's insane, but they want like what it was in year four, like year three or something, every time you're together, you're touching and every time you're talking, you're making direct eye contact. Those are the two rules.
Starting point is 00:53:37 Now there's going to be more to it. Also don't be a jerk and, you know, and take out the trash and don't, and unload the dishwasher and, and don't sleep with a coworker and, and yada, yada, yada. But if you follow those two rules, the biology will be on your side instead of being on somebody else's side in this. And that's critically important, but that's what you don't get in long distance relationships. And so when they're doing that, I'll say, okay, your number one expense is that you're going to be together two times a month.
Starting point is 00:54:06 I don't care where you're in the world. You're going to be together two times a month and, and setting up your work schedule so that you've got all of your vacation time is in long weekends and all of your discretionary income is, is plain fare. And if you're not into it, then you're not enough into your relationship. That's the price that you need to pay in order to make this work long term. Absolutely. Absolutely. And still it's dangerous.
Starting point is 00:54:27 Still tough. I mean, you should be, I mean, it's like, I, you need protocols around this. You know, I practice these protocols as well. I don't travel on weekends because I'm going to be home with my wife on weekends. I'm gone all the time during the week and 48 weeks a year on the road. Cause I went to her, I'm speaking to her and you know. Crazy. No, it's phenomenal. It's great that I'm home on weekends. Cause I want to sleep with my best friend.
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Starting point is 00:55:44 Right now you can get a free sample pack of all eight flavors with your first box by going to the link in the description below or heading to drinklmnt.com slash modern wisdom. That's drinklmnt.com slash modern wisdom. You mentioned two parts, finding the right person, falling in love, et cetera, et cetera, staying in love. Yeah. What about that? So Seth, that's really what we're talking about now person, falling in love, et cetera, et cetera, staying in love. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:56:07 What about that? So that's really what we're talking about now is the staying in love part is actually remembering that you have a pair bond and the pair bond requires that you don't make mistakes and you continue to cultivate. You continue to cultivate the oxytocin mediated relationship. And so it's not making mistakes and doing things that will, I mean, stupid mistakes like getting into a different pair bond, obviously, but also not doing things that will pull you apart from that person, not making decisions that get in the way of the relationship.
Starting point is 00:56:33 And so that is your predominant relationship is the most important thing, is the person on whom you will be gazing as you take your dying breath. And that's actually what you want. And that's really, really important. Now, religious couples have a real advantage on this. And that's because almost every major religion has a concept of marriage, which is that marriage is your antenna to the divine. And so most married couples were religious.
Starting point is 00:56:57 And one of the things that they believe is that when, when I love her, it's God's love for her coming through me and vice versa. And her love for me is God's love for me coming through her. And that's when, and so, you know, when I'm counseling couples that are, that are, that are getting ready to get married in the church, for example, I'll say the most intimate thing that you're going to do. And they think I'm going to talk about sex, praying together. That's literally the most intimate thing that a couple will ever do. And I know couples who are, you know, churchgoers, they'll go 50 years and never pray in front of each other because it's too embarrassing. They'll have like six kids, but they won't pray in front
Starting point is 00:57:34 of each other because that feels more intimate. So that's one of the basic maintenance things for, or if you're not religious, then meditating together, using some sort of an antenna to the metaphysical forces that you are feeling. And some people would say who are atheistic, they'll say it's a simulacrum, that something is actually happening in the brain because of the neurochemistry. I happen to believe that there is a metaphysics to it, that there is a divine element to these types of things, but using those things. Cause it's that important. Best friend, best friending.
Starting point is 00:58:08 Yeah. Turning a partner into your best friend. Right. Not your only friend. Very important. How can you tell if you're a compatible romantic partner, but not a compatible best friend? Because you don't get to the best friend stage. I guess you test, you test by finding out that it fails.
Starting point is 00:58:24 And that's the reason that people will fall in love and two years later, hate each other, they'll fall in love, but they won't get to the best friend stage. They'll never get to companion at love. And that's because all they had was attraction. They had the passion that came from the obsession and that came from the bonding and that came, but they actually never got to friendship. And the reason was because they're not cut out to be friends. They don't have enough compatibility or, and,
Starting point is 00:58:49 or complimentary to actually be good friends to each other. Or they're not cut out. They're probably not good friends to anybody. Is there any way then given that we're in this psychedelic hormonal fugue state for between six and 24 months. That's really nice. It's true. Uh, you're kind of insane for half a year to two years.
Starting point is 00:59:11 Correct. Yeah. Yep. Uh, you can't be trusted. Do not run with shot up sharp objects. Do not drive heavy machinery. It's a firehouse. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:59:19 Um, but you are what you're basically doing. And I've been thinking a well, I had tied to Shiro on recently, he was fucking fantastic. And we were talking about this passionate companion at Arc we go through and how clever human biology is in sort of tricking us into doing this thing, getting attached to this person who we've got nothing in common with.
Starting point is 00:59:41 Like, yeah, they've got a nicely shaped nose and they smell kind of cute or whatever. I fell in love with a girl who didn't speak a word of English. Okay. Not a word of English. I think, didn't you, didn't you say, did you drop something and go to Spain? Yeah, I moved to Spain. Did you have a scholarship?
Starting point is 00:59:54 No, no, I didn't scholarship. No, no, I just quit my job. You quit your job. And, and, and I went to Spain and I found a job in the Barcelona City Orchestra. I was a French horn player in those days. And so for, because I was in, I was, because I wanted to be able to communicate with her. Psychedelic, calm, and a fugue state. I was insane.
Starting point is 01:00:12 She didn't speak any English. I didn't speak any Spanish or Catalan. It was in Barcelona. Yep. And, and we learned each other's languages, little by little, but little. And two years later, I closed the deal. We've been married almost 34 years. And she's the mother of my children and grandmother of my grandchildren.
Starting point is 01:00:28 So there is this unique period of insanity that everybody, that everybody goes through and some people more quickly than others, some people out of sync with their partner, but what you're really trying to do is not, you cannot use the front of the funnel, the shop window, even experientially, even if that shop window lasts for six to 24 months, as something that is necessarily predictive of what you're actually trying to get to, which is month 25 through month 500. You don't know.
Starting point is 01:01:00 So what are the ways, you know, if the goal is best friendship through romance, but all you get to experience is romance, but what you're supposed to be assessing based on is best friendship, what can be done? Try, learn, fail, try. The average person goes through it five times. The average person goes through this thing five times. That means if they end up in a permanent relationship, either that or they end up in a convent, right, or a monastery. If the fifth one is the one, that means the first four are failure. You failed, but you learned, right? This is the same thing, by the way. I mean, you're an entrepreneur.
Starting point is 01:01:40 This is startup. This is how it works. The average entrepreneur, this is according to stuff coming out of the Kellogg school, Northwestern university, the average successful entrepreneur, um, successful in terms of a going concern, a business that actually makes money has 3.8 failures. And that's pretty close to the number of failures that you're going to have in relationships.
Starting point is 01:02:01 If you're an average person, that's because it's the most entrepreneurial thing you're going to do. It's a startup. This is the startup of your life. And if you're not willing to take risk because you're actually trying to use an app to solve the problem, or you're trying to wire around to have a simulacrum of the experience through God forbid pornography, which is horrible for you. Because all that does is that simulates the whole experience, you know, step one,
Starting point is 01:02:24 one, one, one, one over and over again. And then you're actually never going to have this unbelievably fulfilling experience of the most entrepreneurial endeavor of your life, which is your marriage. That's the startup. And that's actually one of the reasons, by the way, that the most successful marriages typically start as startups, where as opposed to mergers, for the magic zone is 28, 29, 30. That's when you're both getting into a startup together, your co-founders of a startup.
Starting point is 01:02:51 By the time you're way into your thirties, sorry, that it's a, it's more of a merger. Louise Perry talks about this. She uses this example of a lamp and she says, uh, if you haven't yet moved into a house, buying a lamp that you like is pretty easy. But if you've built the perfect house that you want and you've got the color schemes and the decoration, trying to find the perfect lamp for this very well established house becomes more difficult.
Starting point is 01:03:13 It is more difficult. And that's one of the problems with actually waiting, waiting, waiting, waiting, waiting. But startups that work are mature startups. So getting married at 16, the first time through, or you meet somebody for the first time and say, I've never felt this way before, let's go to the little marriage chapel in Vegas. Um, that usually doesn't work. High risk dice roll.
Starting point is 01:03:33 Yeah. Yeah. You need, and you need more experience on that. And that means you need more failure and you need more learning typically. James, my business partner in Newtonic, he used to work for Enpower Gas Company and he'd go door to door trying to convert people from British gas or whatever, Northern grid and put them onto his. And his boss one day said, how many more sales do you need this month?
Starting point is 01:03:58 He's like two. And he's like, how many sales do you do per door? And he's like about a hundred doors, one sale. He's like, how many sales do you do per door? And he was like, a hundred doors, one sale. He's like, okay, 200 doors. And that reframing is exactly the same, which is, okay, you have a failure rate. This is the failure rate, but what you're looking to get toward is to beat the failure rate and get to the success, the big one that matters. And the more experience that you have, the lower your failure rate is in this particular case, so people do learn.
Starting point is 01:04:23 There is a learning process for entrepreneurs and for couples. And so your first relationship, you're like, I mean, what did I learn from that? Oh yeah. Here's the classic one. The big thing that people learn often is that they'll get into a relationship with a so-called dark triad and they'll know what to avoid, what personality characteristics to avoid. And so, you know, men who are most compelling to young women, for example, they tend to be narcissistic, Machiavellian, and somewhat psychopathic. That's the dark triad constellation. I know you've talked about this before and I've done a lot of work on the dark triad. Have you had Scott Barry Kaufman? Of course.
Starting point is 01:04:56 Yeah. He's got his new book out soon. Yeah. And he's the master of that, you know, that he's that he knows more about the dark triad than anybody else. And so the big mistake that women will make is they'll get into a relationship with the dark triad, especially if they're emophilic. And so they fall in love quickly. Dark triads feed on that because they will simulate the neurochemical cascade that they're
Starting point is 01:05:14 actually not experiencing. And then women, when they go through it the first time and have their hearts broken and their bank accounts drained, they will, um, and all their friends have been slept with. They'll not make that mistake. They'll look for that. Lesson that hopefully you won't need it once.
Starting point is 01:05:28 And so heartbreak two heartbreak three, they usually learning different lessons unless there's a particular pathology. And the pathologies are, um, number one, mate choice, copying. This is a very standard thing where people who are already partnered are more attractive than people who are not partnered.
Starting point is 01:05:44 And the reason is because in nature, you want to look for somebody who somebody else has done the work of finding them a good enough partner. Like pre-selection. Yeah. That's one of the reasons that men in the eyes of women go up threefold in attractiveness when they're partnered already. Wow. Women find men who are partnered more attractive than people who are not partnered. Question. Why is it that guys find pregnant women so attractive? Same reason?
Starting point is 01:06:09 It's a good question. Probably not mate choice copying. It's probably has, these are probably fertility cues is, you know, the kind of thing that you talk about. Carry it. Now, typically, typically, um, in the male brain, dopamine is stimulated because of a hips to waist ratio. Um, which talks as, and,, and length and shininess of hair,
Starting point is 01:06:28 symmetry of facial features, the whiteness of the irises, no, of the whites of the eyes, not the irises, the whites of the eyes, because that shows liver function and good health. And those are cues for fertility as well. And men or women look at men and it's the, it's the, the neurochemistry is affected by the shoulders to waist ratio because this has to do with virility and fertility of men and ability to drag in the gazelle is all the things.
Starting point is 01:06:58 Have you looked at the environmental security hypothesis? Do you know this one? No, tell me. This is fucking awesome. security hypothesis. Do you know this one? No, tell me. This is fucking awesome. So, women's preferred, or males preferred body size for women has fluctuated across time. Right. The waist to hip ratio, I think remains at about 0.68. Yes. Typically it's... It's quite constant. Got follow, got theer figures, smaller figures, but the waist to hip has always remained the same. The human behavioral ecology stuff that's going on at the moment,
Starting point is 01:07:32 which is really fascinating how humans interact with their local environment. This study looked at when particular body sizes, not shapes because the shape remains the same, when particular body sizes, not shapes, because the shape remains the same, when particular body sizes are preferred. And it seemed like during periods of an economic recession, bigger women were preferred. And during periods of economic prosperity, smaller women were preferred. So there was a study done on students,
Starting point is 01:07:57 because that's the only people you've got to do it to. And they did it in their canteen. And they would show images of bigger and thinner women to guys before they ate and after they ate. And before they ate, when they were hungrier, they preferred the bigger women. And after they ate, when they were fuller, they preferred the thinner women. And the argument being, if you were in time of resource uncertainty and you see a bigger woman, you think, oh, she'd survive a tough winter. And this seems to be borne out economically across time.
Starting point is 01:08:28 If you go back and you look at the track, you can track it. Economy's good, ten of women. Economy's bad, take a woman. Yeah. That's the same phenomenon, by the way. And you want to, you're attracted by people who have resource abundance that have more than they need. That they can actually afford something that's scarce and a lot of something that's scarce.
Starting point is 01:08:48 So that's the reason that guys will go to Miami beach on spring break and rent a Ferrari. And just like, the street in the front, because you want women to think that that's your Ferrari because you're rich enough to have a car you don't actually need showing that you have abundant. My conspicuous consumption.
Starting point is 01:09:06 Yeah, that's the reason, you know, the fifth watch, you know, that's kind of what it comes down to. I got, baby, I need more. I have more than I need. It's a bottle of vodka so big that you couldn't drink it in two lifetimes in a nightclub that you have to leave in three hours. Yeah, exactly right. That's, and so that's, and again, I mean, psychology is biology. It's so true.
Starting point is 01:09:24 And we have these weird tendencies to do these things and we don't know why. It's like, why are you peacocking? Why are you trying to actually peacock? Why do men put on way, way, way more muscle than they need? I mean, we can tell ourselves all day long that it's like, oh man, it's like really good. The muscle protein synthesis has this little joe to it.
Starting point is 01:09:42 Vroom, vroom, vroom. Helps to manage my insulin and all the rest of it's like, kind of just attracts chicks. It's it's what it is. Does it suggest that you have more muscle than you actually need because you have resource abundance, long nails on women. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:09:57 Long hair on women. It's all the collagen and you know, they, what it suggests is a really, a very, very healthy metabolism and, and, you know, uh, good nutrition. And so therefore high fertility. You said this sort of a startup or founder mindset when it comes to building relationships. Uh, how should people think about project managing the task of finding their future
Starting point is 01:10:23 husband or wife, especially given that we are living in a world where people are more risk averse than ever before, slow life strategy, less risk taking behavior, less risky behavior, endemic everywhere among young people. Yeah. So number one is finding people in real life. Number one is finding people in real life because there's really interesting new data out there that show that the instigation of the relationship,
Starting point is 01:10:45 if it's mediated through technology, makes it less stable to begin with. So there's a new paper out that, we can put it in the show notes when I find it. I just wrote about it in this new book that I'm writing on meaning. Oh, and it shows that marriages that actually start online, and by the way, 62% of relationships
Starting point is 01:11:01 are starting online right now because it's crowded out. I mean, it's the VHS tapes of relationships that's crowding out Betamax. It's an inferior technology for actually finding people. That's what's available. So you approach somebody in a bar and they think you're a creep at this point. Anyway, the problem with that is that it leads to when relationships, even marriages, are less stable and there's less attraction when it's actually mediated by that. The better relationships actually come when somebody
Starting point is 01:11:29 sets you up. When you meet somebody through a mutual interest or through mutual people that you know and love, that's really what it comes down to. So people ask me, it's like, so where do I meet somebody? And you go someplace where you might meet the kind of person that you might conceivably find attractive.
Starting point is 01:11:45 So for example, were you raised in a religion? Yeah, but I don't practice it. I don't care. Go to church, right? Go to the church for all the young people go to, but I don't believe it. I don't care. That's not the point.
Starting point is 01:11:56 The point is you could, you could believe it. The point is you don't hate it. The point is you want to, you want somebody that has those values, for example, and somebody who has that in common with you potentially that you actually might find attractive and somebody who might talk to you despite the fact that you're bald or whatever thing that might not get you past the swipe left, right on the dating site. So number one is human mediated meeting. That's number one. Number two, no more simulating, no more simulated, no more porn, no more pornography. And pornography is just absolute
Starting point is 01:12:34 cancer for attraction and for expectation and relationships, especially for men, because men get deeply deeply addicted to it. It just, it grabs you and there's a lot of research on this. I mean, there's some research that suggests it's not addictive. That's not... I had a, do you know who Dr. David Lay is? University of New Mexico? Yeah, I've heard of him. Yeah. And as a matter of fact, I've seen some of his stuff on psychology, psychology today. Yeah. Yeah. He's in the circuit.
Starting point is 01:12:57 Yeah. Diana Fleischman-esque, Jeffrey Millery type person. And I had him on show. And I've really been kind of conflicted. So I'm super interested to hear what your sort of position is and what the data suggests to you on porn. So I don't do this work. I don't do this work, but I find the preponderance of data compelling that it is highly addictive. And it does actually torque the expectations
Starting point is 01:13:19 that men have about the relationships with women. And it tends to objectify women in ways that will harm your ability to go through the neurochemical cascade and it tends to objectify women in ways that will harm your ability to go through the neurochemical cascade and get doxytocin. Oh, that's interesting. Yeah. In other words, it tends to interrupt the cycle. You got to go through the stages and if you're interrupting the stages because of something you're doing to your brain to get the satisfaction that comes from just stage one, it's a problem. That's not what we're actually made for. And again, I mean, I know there are some scholars that disagree with this,
Starting point is 01:13:51 but I just don't find it compelling. So the suggestion is that if you're training yourself or if you're practicing stage one over and over and then the time comes in the real world for you to go from stage one to stage two, that's. It's going to be two. That's. It's going to be harder and it's maybe not even possible. We may have a generation of young men in particular that can't get past stage one. Can I give you, so this is just the Chris Williamson bro science hour here. You're pretty good.
Starting point is 01:14:19 You're pretty, you're pretty serious consumer of this stuff. Yeah. So this is, don't sell yourself short. This is not bro science. Bro science in many ways is actually superior to real science. That's the- Well, part of it is just because it's broader. Correct.
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Starting point is 01:15:34 So David and William, number one researcher of incels and Dr. Bus himself, they wrote a paper based on something, a conversation that we'd had, which is where is all of the incel violence? So you'll be familiar with young male syndrome in societies where there is a high number of young, unmarried and unpartnered men. They tend to become disgruntled. They push over cars and they set things on fire and they abuse granny and it's not good. And in certain societies in our past,
Starting point is 01:16:06 I think Portugal had the first male was allowed to marry and the rest of them were put on ships to go discover the new world, which is not fuck up the homeland was really what they were talking about. But in an era where we have this sort of silent epidemic of needs not in education, employment or training, men who are largely living lives, many of them living lives mediated through virtual worlds.
Starting point is 01:16:30 There is a question of if young male syndrome has been this very present dynamic throughout all of human history. And we're in an unprecedented time of sexlessness specifically among young men, especially if women are tending to date up socioeconomically, they're outperforming men, especially up to the age of sort of 30 or so. So one of the ways that they can compensate from that is just sort of skew that dating age up a little bit brighter, a bit higher, and they can actually bring a man in line socioeconomically. One of the biggest predictors of wealth is age. So that's pretty easy to do. You think, well, That's pretty easy to do. You think, well, where is the violence in kind?
Starting point is 01:17:05 Where is the subsequent concern? And it was mine and the guys, I think, belief that men are largely being sedated out of status seeking and reproduction through porn, video games, screens, social media. And yeah, this male sedation hypothesis, I think is something that they're going to- I think it's very compelling.
Starting point is 01:17:27 I think a very compelling hypothesis. Now, there are places in the world where you are seeing these effects. So interior cities in China, where the ratio of men to women who were born over the past 30 years is 124 to 100. And had to do a sex selective abortion and all of the you know the
Starting point is 01:17:45 Abandonment one of my kids was one of my kids is a Chinese girl who was abandoned at 12 hours old in the park in China I mean it was and there was just millions and millions and millions and in the early 2000s a lot of them came to the United States because there was a big adoption movement that we were part of as a matter of fact, but the the the upshot of that is in that period matter of fact. But the upshot of that is in that period, those people grew up and there aren't as many women as there are men. And there's a lot of trouble with- Sex ratio hypothesis is a- It's a big problem. And this is one of the reasons for the social instability in Chinese cities, as a matter of fact. And that's why they're importing girls from Vietnam and it's like, guys- Unofficially inflating the sex ratio.
Starting point is 01:18:25 Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, exactly. So this is no joke. And if there's some way to, to, to sedate guys that, that are, here's the really ruthless implication of it, which is, you know, a group of men who are useless and sedated, maybe, maybe on balance is better than a group
Starting point is 01:18:44 of men that are dangerous and anarchistic, but not by much. And those two choices aren't particularly good. That's not what, it's not the kind of choice you want to be making in a society. And that, and, and, and that's really not a choice you want to be making personally. What a young man should not be having to choose
Starting point is 01:18:58 between, you know, violent, antisocial behavior and seven hours a day of pornography. That's a bad choice. And the whole point is you get your life together, turn off the porn, start paying attention to, um, becoming more successful, get serious about your education in your business and get into the gym. And all of that stuff that these guys like Goggins and Jocko and Jordan Peterson are talking about, that's why they're talking about these things.
Starting point is 01:19:26 And so men don't have to make these weird bargains. It's like, okay, to stay out of prison and look at porn. It's like dystopian. It's science fiction. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I saw a stat last week talking about, I guess, some of the challenges of remaining best friends. If a male grows up in a non-intact household of any kind, any kind at all.
Starting point is 01:19:51 There is a high likelihood of them going to prison and completing college. Yeah. The number one predictor of a man being successful is seeing his father loving his mother. Well, how's that defined? That's defined as dad stays home and is, and, and is faithful to mom. Right. That's defined as dad stays home and is faithful to mom. Right. That's what you want.
Starting point is 01:20:06 It's like, as a dad, you got one job. Love her. If you want to raise successful kids, especially boys, you have one job, love his mom. That's so sick. It's crazy, but it's great in its way. It's beautiful in its way. And look, here's the funny thing.
Starting point is 01:20:24 People often ask, what do I do? What should I teach my kids? It doesn't matter what you tell them. You could talk to them in a foreign language. Show them. All that matters is what you do. So the number one predictor, for example, of kids growing up and practicing a religion is whether their father practices a religion.
Starting point is 01:20:38 There's like a 40 percentage point difference in the father and the mother practicing on the predictive ability, on the predictive capacity on how capacity on how the kids are going to grow up and behave. And it's almost certainly the case. It's because, I mean, when I was a little kid, I thought my dad was, I thought he could lift the corner of the house. My dad was a math professor. He could not. Now I realize he was a nerd.
Starting point is 01:21:01 At the time, I thought he was cool. Nerd. Now that I'm a nerd. At the time I thought he was cool. Nerd. Now that I'm a nerd, I recognize that. But, and my dad was a very proud guy. I mean, he never would have bent the knee to any other man, but he was on his knees on Sunday. And that had a big impact on a little dude. There's something bigger than my dad. And I saw it and it like, it's in there, right?
Starting point is 01:21:21 That's really important in every part of life. If you want to teach virtue, practice virtue, be the person you want your kids to actually turn into and they will become that, generally speaking, will become that person. Yeah. I, I was thinking about, um, you know, we're this generation, both millennials and Gen Z, uh, the progeny of parents who didn't have the tools to sort of relate or navigate in the same way as an infinite number of evidence-based relationship coaches and the podcast world
Starting point is 01:21:50 and the self-help and all the rest of it. I think I wonder how they should go about thinking, well, I didn't necessarily have the best example in front of me because there was challenges here and we did have changing dynamics and motivations around the acceptance of divorce. Maybe I did grow up in a non-intact home and such, but that sets expectations for a good relationship is supposed to be now. There's this interesting, not a burden, I suppose,
Starting point is 01:22:25 but a responsibility, opportunity to be a circuit breaker. Right. And to think, Goggins talks about this. So he explains about how his dad hit him a lot as a kid. Right. And he had a brother and sometimes Goggins took the beatings in place of his brother. But he also found out that his granddad
Starting point is 01:22:47 would make his father stand in front of an open stove. And if he moved, he would hit him with a belt as a kid. So you have this lineage, this like ancestral, literal ancestral trauma, but physically being passed down, plus also probably epigenetically being fucking passed down as well. And I asked David,
Starting point is 01:23:08 I didn't even know that this was the case. It was really kind of beautiful of him to say on the podcast. I said, if you had a child, how would you hope to raise them? So I do have a child. I've got a 22 year old daughter. He'd never mentioned it previously. And he brought it up on the episode. And he said, he basically sees himself as kind of like a dam, sort of a breakwater, this circuit breaker thing in between the series of
Starting point is 01:23:31 mistreatments of people like no more. I kind of think, I often think about that example when it comes to stuff like your parents didn't necessarily have the tools, you do, you didn't have an example, but you have the opportunity. And you have the metacognitive ability to manage your emotions so they don't manage you. This is the most important thing to keep in mind. I mean, we're talking about the psychology being biology, but we also have will. We also have a prefrontal cortex for a reason. That's the most important part of the neurobiology of all is the C suite of
Starting point is 01:24:02 your brain where you're actually making decisions, not withstanding your proclivities. I mean, you've got these urges, we all have these urges, you know, you look at a woman who's not your wife and you go, oh man, she's really, really attractive and all that. And then your prefrontal cortex, which is the, is that the behavioral activation system, the
Starting point is 01:24:18 behavioral inhibition system that's in the prefrontal cortex, BIS and BAS, behavioral inhibition and behavioral activation, right? And behavioral inhibition is more important because you know, I want to hit my son and my, my prefrontal cortex says, uh-uh, no, because my father hit me and I'm not my trauma. That's a perfect example of metacognition.
Starting point is 01:24:38 That's a perfect example of being, of being the master of yourself. And we actually can do that, but you've got to have knowledge. You have to be strong,, but you've got to have knowledge. You have to be strong, but you also actually have to have knowledge. And that's why all this stuff matters. That's how I teach happiness is happiness is really a process of understanding the science, practicing habits that go along with the science and then teaching it to
Starting point is 01:24:59 other people. So you ingrain it in yourself and that's anything that you want to do, anything you want to get better at. If you want to become a better you want to get better at. If you want to become a better golfer, learn about golf and golf and teach golf. You know, doctors, when they're becoming surgeons, they always say, watch one, do one, teach one. That's how you become a surgeon.
Starting point is 01:25:16 Anything in life actually follows that basic pattern, but you must have the knowledge such that the habits that you practice are not the habits that are just kind of lurking in your limbic system and being epigenetically expressed from the misbehavior of people six generations ago or some crazy thing like that. We should not be prisoners of that. Yeah. This is gorgeous idea from Robert Wright's, Why Buddhism is True.
Starting point is 01:25:38 That's a nice book. Fuck dude. Blending evolutionary psychology with Buddhism. Uh, cause the book that got me into EP was The Moral Animal, which is from 1991 or 1992 or something. And it's still, it's some of the stuff, little replication crisis, but most of it's shit art and I loved it.
Starting point is 01:26:00 The replication crisis is a big problem in my field. Yeah. A lot of people make their careers on. If it's too good to be true, and grandma would have said, I mean, I can find you a study that shows that conjugal infidelity will bring happiness. I mean, I'm sure I could, right? Some motivated reasoning by a researcher that,
Starting point is 01:26:18 for sure. Darling, darling, honestly, I only did it, not only did I not love her, but I did this for us. I know, exactly. And besides studies show. I know exactly. And besides study show. And I had to. So, and anyway, so, but the whole problem, if a study, and this is like, you're talking about evolutionary psychology all the time and biology all the time. And this is my stock and trade as a behavioral scientist. For everybody watching, if your grandma would hear this result and say that that's wrong. She's probably right. Okay. Okay.
Starting point is 01:26:45 Anyway, why do Buddhism is true by Robert Wright. And it, there's this quote from some Buddhist teacher that says, ultimately in life, happiness comes down to choosing between the discomfort of becoming aware of our mental afflictions or the discomfort of becoming ruled by them. Nice. And I just love that idea of the,
Starting point is 01:27:02 because it's the first step, the knowledge is power. Right. That's right. And I just love that idea of the, because it's the first step. The knowledge is power, right? Right. And I think in many ways that is why this burgeoning industry, whatever we want to call it, wisdom porn of- Wisdom porn. Wisdom porn. Yeah. There's some Reddit threads.
Starting point is 01:27:19 I think that that is the gateway drug at the top. I think that that's what people are looking for. Yeah. I think that that is the gateway drug at the top. I think that that's what people are looking for. Yeah. The question that I have, the potential problem I can see is for the ruminative, cerebral, insecure overachiever type people who enjoy content like yours and mine
Starting point is 01:27:39 to get stuck in just the first step. Knowledge, knowledge, knowledge, just sucking it in. How do you advise, and I imagine that many of your students are like this too, you know, the academic-y, the intellectually people, praying at the cognitive horsepower altar. How do you move them beyond that? Yeah. So that's actually what academics are really bad at. That's why I have this column in the Atlantic every Thursday and I'm the retailer of academic stuff in this.
Starting point is 01:28:10 And so I'm not actually running the regressions or doing the experiments myself. I'm at the point in my career, what I'm looking, I usually, I will, I'll survey a particular topic every week. It's a different topic, a different scientific topic in the happiness literature, the, you know, the broader living better literature and the neuroscience, living better literature, and the neuroscience
Starting point is 01:28:26 and behavioral science. And then the first part is here's what the science says. The second part is here's how you can use it. Here's it, but you got to practice it. And I'm usually 10 weeks ahead of my column and I'm practicing those things to see if it works. So I'm a lab and this is the important thing. This is the important ethos. You're not going to design experiments perfectly like a drug test, um, in your own life because N equals one and, and, you know, it's statistically it's, and there's no control group, but you are a lab start living like you're a lab. So learn something about this and set up an experiment in your life. And just so you keep, yeah, I read an article and it says that, you know,
Starting point is 01:29:04 that the part of the limbic system dedicated to resentment is much, much larger than the part of the limbic system dedicated to gratitude. And that's why we have a negativity bias. And that's how we revolve because resentment and suspicion and anger keeps us alive. And gratitude is nice to have.
Starting point is 01:29:18 And I get it. Oh, that's very, very interesting. Okay. What that means is you need to practice gratitude consciously to override your negativity bias. And how do you do that? Well, I'm going to set up an experiment where I'm actually going to practice gratitude in a very particular way every day for a week and I'm going to write, I'm going to keep the data.
Starting point is 01:29:36 I'm actually going to keep my own data. Is it publishable in the, in, you know, the, in psychological sciences or, you know, the journal of personality research? No, that's not the point. The point is you living better, but you're not gonna do it unless you actually change your habits and experiment on yourself and treat your life like a lab. Should you limit the bits of input,
Starting point is 01:29:58 the sort of FOMO, next thing type idea, the intellectual pawning of, this is new, I must try this new, because this is a different type of, maybe it's breathing, maybe it's breath work that I need to be doing, maybe it's some other, maybe it's prayer, what about the prayer thing? So is it commit in advantage? Do you have any rubrics that you get people to follow when
Starting point is 01:30:18 it comes to this? Yeah, well people are substituting stage one for stage two. In other words, get some information, set up an experiment, commit yourself to it. That's the most important thing is the doing as opposed to learning. Learn, do, learn, do, learn, do, and then by the way, teach. Because then what will happen is by the time you've done five or six of these experiments, there's one that's actually working for you and then you're teaching. Then you start your podcast. Well, I love the thing that I really love about the teaching element is it wraps more
Starting point is 01:30:48 of your identity up in this thing because you become an advocate for it. That's you. Which deepens your practice of it. This is a teaching podcast. Modern Wisdom is a teaching podcast. It's not an entertainment podcast. It's an actual teaching podcast.
Starting point is 01:30:59 It is entertaining. Professor Williamson. Yeah, thank you, thank you. But you're retailing serious ideas all the time, again and again and again and again. And people who stop with consuming the retailed ideas are missing out because what they, we've talked about a whole bunch of really practical things that people can do. Actually write these things down, you know, look at the show notes, put together a couple of experiments in your own life,
Starting point is 01:31:25 and if you like them, share them. Like find some way to actually share them with other people. That's what social media is for. That's what God created YouTube and social media is for sharing ideas. You mentioned resentment there. You said we've talked about all of the ways that dating and then making a long-term relationship can go right. Resentment, contempt, some of
Starting point is 01:31:47 these sort of real trap doors in relationships. How can people better overcome contempt, resentment? You've had John Gottman on your podcast, right? Not yet. I'm going to get an intro. Gotman, Julie and John Gottman, I've actually talked to them before. They're phenomenal. They're visionary.
Starting point is 01:32:01 They're actually heroes because anybody in any good societies, any strong societies based on strong families, obviously, and strong families require this one element, which is mom and dad loving each other. You know, that's what families have in common is that two parents who love each other and they've saved thousands of marriages. Thousands of, it's unbelievable. And the number one thing that really jumps out of their research is that they find the marriage killers. So in other words, not what to do right, what to stop doing wrong. That's, that's how you start anything. If you go to the doctor and say, ah, man,
Starting point is 01:32:34 I think I drink too much. He's not going to put you on something to treat the trouble with your drinking. He's going to tell you to drink, stop drinking very beginning. So that's what they talk about things to stop doing. And the number one thing is to the crux of your question, which is to stop treating each other with
Starting point is 01:32:47 contempt. Now there's a whole concept in the, it's actually in the political science literature, but it's, it's a psychological concept called motive attribution asymmetry. You know about this? Is this why Nazis called Jews vermin? Yes.
Starting point is 01:33:02 So the good, nice, boy, you're good. You really know a lot about this stuff. So motive attribution asymmetry says I love, but they hate. Right. And so therefore it's related to the idea that you will, with contempt, you'll call, you know, the, the Hutu is called the Tootsies cockroaches and, and the, you know, the, the, the German Nazis called the Jews rats, for example. That's because you can other them in that particular way.
Starting point is 01:33:27 But it's based on this idea that I love Germany and they hate Germany. They're the other and they don't love us. They hate and I love. In an implacable conflict, not just the genocidal situation, but an implacable conflict like a civil war, both sides believe that they love and the other side hates. That's the Middle East.
Starting point is 01:33:44 No, no, no, I love, it's like I you know, it's like, I love my people and I love this place. And they just hate us. And both sides think that, and that's based on an error because both sides can't simultaneously love and hate. And so, so the central idea behind that is if you have an implacable conflict that's leading to schism, that you're going to find that error behind it, mode of attribution asymmetry. And I'm not trying to sort out world, you know,
Starting point is 01:34:08 conflict, but I can sort out a lot of couples going to, yeah. And almost all marital disillusion comes from, from mode of attribution asymmetry. So you take a couple that's on their way to divorce court and he'll be like, no, I still love her, but she hates me. And she'll be like, no, I still love her, but she hates me.
Starting point is 01:34:25 And she'll be like, no, I'm the one who loves, he's the one who acts like he hates. And the reason is because they're behaving in a contemptuous way that says you're worthless and I do hate you, even though you don't feel that way. It's like John and Julie Gottman, one of their central insights is that we communicate so poorly because we're transmitting hatred when we don't feel it.
Starting point is 01:34:49 Why? Why would that be adaptive? It's not clear why it's adaptive, but it certainly is a habit. And so what the habit is basically, so he'll look at a couple that he's met just now, talk to them for an hour and watch them in the laboratory discussing something of great contention. And he'll want to see if they're rolling their eyes because eye rolling is a, is a real physical
Starting point is 01:35:14 manifestation of contempt. Now contempt is two negative emotions blended together, anger and disgust. Anger is a hot emotion that's not correlated with divorce. Thank God with my marriage to a Spaniard. Disgust is a response to a pathogen in the insular cortex of the brain, the insula of the brain.
Starting point is 01:35:33 Retreat. And what it says is that's a pathogen that might poison you. That's what all we had before antibiotics and vaccines was the insular cortex that gave us a sense of disgust. So that piece of chicken in the back of the fridge that you forgot about, you're like, yeah. Never, never, never, never treat another person like a pathogen.
Starting point is 01:35:49 This gets us back to the Nazi thing that you talked about before. When you treat somebody like a pathogen, the way that you stimulate the insular cortex in an entire population is by talking about them in terms of disgust to stimulate that part of the brain as such, making them utterly anathema that part of the brain as such making them utterly anathema and worthy of the greatest barbarity. Justifies mistreatment. That's exactly right
Starting point is 01:36:10 because it's the same way that you'd throw away you'd hose off your shoes after stepping in something awful or you'd throw away something that's rotted in your fridge or you'd kill somebody who's an actual pathogen in your society by talking about them in this pathogenic way, stimulating this very very volatile part of the brain. Okay, take those two things and put them together. That's contempt. When you express contempt for somebody, that's interpreted as hatred. And that's what people do when they get into these suboptimal routines in their marriage.
Starting point is 01:36:37 And they'll be like, you always say that, really? Really again, sweetie, really? And she interprets that as he thinks what I said is worthless, he thinks I'm worthless. And that's what leads to this communication breakdown of I love what she hates, no, I love what he hates. And then you get divorced. People can literally get divorced because they don't know that their eye rolling is expressing hatred for their partner, which is almost in a way that
Starting point is 01:37:08 when you get hatred from another person that you're supposed to love, that is as painful in the limbic system of the brain as physical abuse. That's the same part of the brain. That's the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex in the, in the limbic system that's affected when you're being rejected.
Starting point is 01:37:24 That's what, that's what motivates social rejection and sadness. That's the, that's the, the affective part of all pain, as a matter of fact, that comes from that. And it's super acute when you're getting, and you don't say, Holly did it for all my eyes. No, no, no. You spoke volumes that you didn't think that
Starting point is 01:37:42 you were, you didn't even mean it. And so what he does is what they do in the Gottman marriage lab is they treat, they teach people, here's the beautiful thing about it. Most couples just need to say what they really think, which is actually, I love you. I really, really love you. Really? Well, I really, really love you too. So let's not accidentally be telling each other that we hate each other.
Starting point is 01:38:04 That's where, how the contempt comes in. And that's one of the examples of suboptimal habits that can ruin a relationship. And if you can turn that around and how you do that, knowledge and practice. The knowledge is don't do it. The practice is touch and eye contact. And then life gets better. What else is some of the suboptimal habits? Of couples. Um, number one is, well, I mean, anything that actually, uh, pulls people
Starting point is 01:38:31 apart so they have insufficient contact, neurophysiologically insufficient contact with each other is going to create a real problem. And so for example, um, what you'll find is the habit of doing what you're really, really good at, as opposed to what you're getting worse at. People will be getting, they'll be losing their relationship chops while they're getting better in their careers. And so they're spending a lot more time.
Starting point is 01:38:52 The one of the reasons they spend a lot more time at work is because that's what they're better at. And that's where they're getting their satisfaction. I, I had this, I got to interject. I had this insight a couple of weeks ago about why people commit themselves to their careers more than they commit themselves to their partnerships. The reason being that only you can leave your career, but not only you can leave your partnership.
Starting point is 01:39:15 And there is this sense of safety. If I just keep grinding away on this, I'll probably get better. I'll probably grow. But the same isn't true because my career isn't going to leave me, but my partner might. And that's one of the things that you find is that your career will never keep you warm, but your spouse will. You're saying that people who make a trade where they get a job that is an additional hour commute there and back five days a week, because it's a better job title or they think that it's going to give them fulfillment or validation or whatever.
Starting point is 01:39:46 It'll make them special. And that's the special versus happy. A lot of people will choose specialness over happiness. Why the world wants you to, wants you to be special, wants you to stand out. The world, mother nature wants you to be special. Mother nature does not care if you're happy, Chris. She does not care. She wants you to survive and pass on your genes.
Starting point is 01:40:04 And when you're really, Chris. She does not care. She wants you to survive and pass on your genes. And when you're really excellent and outstanding and getting more resources and getting better at your job, you're gonna be more special, but you will be less happy. And that's why people will become, will walk into mediocrity in their marriage while they're walking toward excellence in their work.
Starting point is 01:40:22 And the result is they're going to be less happy. They're just gonna be less happy. They're just going to be less happy. Yeah. And by the way, guilty, man, guilty, guilty. I'm a, I'm a completely success addict. 16 books, Steve. 15. Anyway, it's, it's I'm addicted to success.
Starting point is 01:40:39 And, and, and there's all this interesting neuroscience on success addiction. You know, when people are told, you know, usually good students who are also good athletes as kids, and they get all their validation from parents, and that gives them this neurochemical reward from, you're such a hard worker, and that's another good report card. And they're looking for the next gold star
Starting point is 01:40:58 for their whole lives. These are the people, when they get past the flush of a relationship and it starts to become a little bit boring, then they'll just like lean into the specialness. They'll lean into the adulation that actually comes from excellence in their work and let their marriage become utterly mediocre. Right.
Starting point is 01:41:17 They've kind of become adrenaline junkies or whatever the particular hormone of neurochemical of choice is, junkies. And the relationship is no longer able to compete. And now that you're out of passion and into companion, it's not giving you quite the same rush. The progress isn't there. You know, you've kind of, you've retired, you've retired from the growth, the rushy growth, but the career can continue to give you that. And you might be very admirable. You might be really, really admirable. The problem is that you're not adoring that you're, you've stopped adoring
Starting point is 01:41:49 because all you've again, there's two things you need to do guys. You need to be, you need to be adoring and admirable. And if you do a hundred percent admirable and zero percent adoring, you're going to lose your relationship. Talk to me about this balance. It's attention that has come up an awful lot. I did these live shows last year. I'm about to... You went on tour.
Starting point is 01:42:12 I did. Did you like it? It's fucking awesome, dude. It's sick. Did you sell tickets? I sold out the event to Apollo in London, three and a half thousand people, which was pretty cool. Phenomenal. How long was your tour?
Starting point is 01:42:23 So I did four dates around Australia. Uh, no, sorry. Three dates, three dates around Australia, Brisbane, Melbourne, Sydney. Uh, we did one big show in London and we were about to announce, uh, Canada in the U S this is Boston, New York, LA with a plus one. So we could double up on that. Like matinee across the weekend, Nashville, Utah, Toronto, Vancouver, Austin, uh, Chicago.
Starting point is 01:42:52 Uh, so we've got a, we've got a good run and we're going to try and do a world tour next year. So that would be like Jakarta, Delhi. Um, it's sick. I really, I love that's the best. It's the best. The touring is the best. It's so fun. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:43:05 It's so fun. I mean, some people hate it, right? I love it. I's the best. It's the best. The touring is the best. It's so fun. Yeah. It's so fun. I mean, some people hate it, right? I love it. I've been on tour since I was 19. You know, I was a French horn player. I had the French horn in about. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:43:13 Yeah. Oh, it's the best. It's the best talking in front of real people and getting up. But you're also very, are you an extrovert? I would say introvert. Are you? But I can swing both ways. The real question about that is not whether you can perform.
Starting point is 01:43:25 The question is whether or not you've got more or less energy after a performance in front of people. After a performance in front of people more. What I do find a little trying, this is an interesting question. I'm aware of the sort of where do you get your energy from? Do you get it from being in your own or being around people? Anna, I've been thinking about this a lot.
Starting point is 01:43:42 Maybe you're the person to speak to about this. Only child, spent a lot of Maybe you're the person to speak to about this. Only child. Spent a lot of time in solitude as a kid. Spent a lot of time in solitude working throughout all of my 20s. Parents together? Yep. Parents.
Starting point is 01:43:51 Okay. Yep. Good parent, parents still together? Yes. Okay. Uh, and I really enjoyed my time alone. Really, really enjoyed it. Put me in a room with a laptop and some
Starting point is 01:44:07 slow moving deep house and I'll just grind until until the caffeine wears off and I just keep going. Get up. I said before, one of my skill sets is maybe dealing with discomfort and like being able to sort of keep going, delaying gratification. Very, very good at that. Uh, but recently, especially the last, I'd say five years in training, lifting things and probably three years or so, uh, psychologically with the way that I work, I found myself wanting to spend less time alone.
Starting point is 01:44:35 And I got a trainer about two years ago here in Austin, because when I, I used to be able to just happily AirPods in listening to a podcast, prepping for a guest, listening to an audio book, listening to some music, go in, just crack out a session at a nine out of 10 effort, and then go home and not think about it. I just found that I really, I just didn't wanna do that. But if you put me in front of a trainer or you get me training with a friend flying,
Starting point is 01:45:01 and kind of the same things happened a little bit with work where I just take less pleasure from working on my own now You know when it comes to doing the live tour, I could happily go on without an opener I don't need an opener, right? I'm gonna take an opener, right? So I want to have one of my boys there with me I don't want to be experiencing this on my own despite the fact that I Kind of get the sense that Chris of 10 years ago would have been like no the Lone Ranger this like this is cool Like it's a solo adventure. And I don't want that.
Starting point is 01:45:27 And that's been a transition that I've noticed in myself. That's a normal transition. That's a normal transition. That's a, that's believe it or not, that's a neurobiological transition. Um, that gets back to the work of Raymond Cattell, the British social psychologist in
Starting point is 01:45:41 the sixties and seventies. He was really 50s and sixties and seventies. Actually, he was the world's greatest researcher in his time on intelligence. So I wrote a book on this called From Strength to Strength about how people, they go through the course of their careers and they find that their interests change and what they
Starting point is 01:45:56 used to be good at, they're not as good at, and they're good at something different. And it is very disconcerting. So super high performers in their twenties and in particularly the early part of their thirties, they find that they're less they burn out. They're less interested in doing something, especially with individual
Starting point is 01:46:12 indefatigable focus. That's because that's called fluid intelligence, according to Cattell. That's working memory, individual work, incredible focus on something, innovation, individual innovation, right? And that's highest as you're going through your thirties, right? It has to peak in your late thirties and then start to fall. Your results may vary, but they probably won't very much. The second curve of intelligence called crystallized intelligence and comes in behind it. You've heard about this. This is wisdom, right?
Starting point is 01:46:45 This is what all the things that you know, that's pattern recognition, teaching ability, mentoring and coaching, sharing ideas. That's what you get better and better and better. So what you're, you're 38. I mean, you're at the top of your fluid intelligence. 37. 30 years from now, you're gonna be in the zone, man.
Starting point is 01:47:02 You're gonna be much better even than you are now, which is going to make you super potent, but you're going to get way, way more interested in and get much more satisfaction from sharing ideas. I mean, the fact that you've become a teacher now, that's going to go to the max as you get older because you're going to be on this crystallized intelligence curve, but you're, you're, you're a little ahead of schedule, but not that much. How would you manage that transition?
Starting point is 01:47:23 That is making sure that you're walking from one curve to another. So it's hard for some people. If you're a star litigator in your early thirties, you're the star lawyer. You can crack any case. You can solve problems by yourself. You should become, you should work toward going into management as you get older. As opposed to holding on to past glories. If you're a startup entrepreneur, you come up with your brilliant whizbang idea
Starting point is 01:47:46 as a coder when you're 30, you should be actually a VC when you're 60 because you're, you become a talent scout is what it comes down to. I was writing academic journal articles, you know, during using early AI algorithms in my early thirties using something called genetic algorithms that were learning algorithms. And I was imposing them across economic processes to see how they predicted. It was very mathematical. I was writing papers I can't understand today. No way. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:48:12 And that was almost 30 years ago. And now, but I had like- It's like you're a different person. Yeah. And I had like 14 readers because it was so esoteric. Now I have 500,000 readers a week for my column because I'm retailing ideas, because I've become a teacher. Now, you know, I'll meet brand new professors
Starting point is 01:48:33 coming right out of their PhDs and I'll look at their papers and I'll say, do you realize what you're saying here? They're like, I don't know. They don't know, they just doing the math. And I'm like, do you realize the implications of this thing? People will come and say, what's the secret to getting great teaching evaluations?
Starting point is 01:48:50 I'm like, get old. And that's because the crystallized intelligence increases and that's the future, but you gotta make sure that you're walking onto that curve and everybody in their profession, some people have to change careers. And I'm all about that. I'm going to write a book at some point
Starting point is 01:49:08 called how to reboot your life. Cause I've done it. I've had four completely different careers. They usually go about a decade each and then I take the whole thing down to the studs and start again and it's super fun. It's super exciting. You know, and I've done it a bunch of times.
Starting point is 01:49:21 I ran a company for, I ran a big think tank for a long time, the French horn player for a whole decade and you know, that is great. But to do that, you actually have to know which curve you're on. So you don't actually try to create a career in the, and a lot of guys who are very successful as entrepreneurs and fluid intelligence, they want that feeling. They want to get that feeling back. They want to let go of this sense that I'm the rock star.
Starting point is 01:49:45 And they can't get it back. They can't get it back because their brain has changed and they'll get way more satisfaction from doing something on the correct curve. And so I spent a lot of time coaching successful people to say, no, no, no, no, there's nothing wrong with you. You're just trying to get out. You're trying to stay on the old curve, walk onto the new curve. To let go of this previous version of you.
Starting point is 01:50:06 Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Become the, go from the innovator to the instructor. Go from the talent to the talent scout. Well, I mean, given how long people would have lived ancestrally, it makes sense. You know, if you're 40, you're probably a grandfather by that point. So you need to be bestowing some wisdom.
Starting point is 01:50:21 It's not really about you wanting to take down that gazelle on your own. Granddad, get back here, teach us about how you make that hot thing that has flames. How do I create the spear? I don't know. It's like, how do I sharpen that flint? But it's also one of the reasons in the ancestral environment where people didn't live very long that until relatively recently, we didn't have enough, we didn't have a stock of wisdom that would allow us to do these amazing things.
Starting point is 01:50:42 No, there was no corpus. Yeah. So for example, it's like, of. There was no culpus. Yeah. So for example, it's like, of course there was no electricity in biblical times. There weren't enough old smart people to say, we already tried that thing and it didn't work, let's try this new thing so that you could make substantial advances that go through history. That's why you need old people.
Starting point is 01:50:59 That's why you need lots and lots of old people and you need to exploit what they've got. This is actually what it is. Exploit old people that says Arthur Brooks. Yeah. Sorry, that's the thumbnail for the whole episode. Exploit old people. But there is not a C-suite of any substantial company in America that should
Starting point is 01:51:16 not have at least one person over 70 in it. You need more old people who have vigor and health and ideas, but crystallize intelligence. That's one of the reasons that you look at Silicon Valley that are, there's just too many young people. I mean, it's like, I say this as an old guy, but, you know, I was given a talk at one of these tech firms because they have a lecture series always. And somebody asked me about a diversity thing about,
Starting point is 01:51:38 you know, women and minorities and coding and engineering, and that's a perfectly legitimate topic. But I said, on the topic of diversity, how many people, how many old people work here? And the guy's like, you mean over 30? And that's why there's so many mistakes that you see in these youth dominated cultures. Because there's no wisdom being applied.
Starting point is 01:52:03 There's not enough. There's not enough. There's not enough. So is there, have you looked at any mapping of introversion, extraversion over time? Is that a dynamic that does shift or is this just other stuff showing out as introversion or extraversion? Yeah, so extraversion has a couple of different dimensions to it.
Starting point is 01:52:18 One is gregariousness and the other is assertiveness. Those are the two dimensions of extraversion. Extraversion is one of the big five, of course, as you know, and the big five, almost all change as you get older, your personality changes. You're going to be a different person. I am, and we all are. And your neuroticism is going to fall.
Starting point is 01:52:35 Your agreeableness is going to rise. Your conscientiousness is going to rise. Your openness to change is going to rise and then fall and your extroversion is going to change where your gregariousness is going to fall, but your assert change is going to rise and then fall. And your extraversion is going to change where your gregariousness is going to fall, but your assertiveness is going to rise. That's what you, that's what you find. That's what typically, canonically is what we find in literature.
Starting point is 01:52:53 And generally speaking, your personality is going to get better. Generally speaking. Better, better, more optimal. You're going to be happier and you're going to be more fun to be around and you're going to be easier to be married to. It's a good thing. I mean, it's like one of the things that you find, especially in neuroticism, people tend to be less
Starting point is 01:53:10 depressed and less anxious when they get older. You're going to be a less anxious guy when you're my age. I mean, I was a basket case when I was your age. And especially when I was in my 20s, I was a chain smoker. And I mean, I was just like, I was self-medicating to the hill. Right? Well, I did build a unpronounceable nootropics company. So maybe we're on, I'm on track there.
Starting point is 01:53:31 I'm just avoiding, it's the 2025 equivalent of chain smoking. Maybe although yeah, yeah, yeah. I mean, it's self-administering nicotine. I don't know, but a lot of literature on that. It's, I wonder how many people struggle to let go of that previous version of them. A lot of people do. And the more special versus happy you are, the harder it is.
Starting point is 01:53:53 The more that you're a success addicted workaholic, the harder it is because that's your death threat. Is the threat to actually see how you see your own success as a human being. The thing you're most afraid of that attacks your identity, that's your death threat. And everybody has a death threat, has a death fear. Only 20% of people have phenotophobia, which is the pronounced and pathological fear of actual death. 80% of us don't. Do I want to die today? No, but it's okay if I do. It's okay.
Starting point is 01:54:25 But do I have a death fear? Oh yeah, I'm afraid of failure because I want to be special because that's who I am as a person. I'm a successful person. Isn't it fascinating? I'm using the wrong terminology here, but I would use this sort of EP equivalent
Starting point is 01:54:44 which would be approximate reasons for behavior and ultimate reasons for behavior, but there would use this sort of EP equivalent, which would be proximate reasons for behavior and ultimate reasons for behavior, but there's a behavioral science equivalent conditional conditioned stimuli. And what's the other one? I don't know. Anyway, the point being that when you spoke about it earlier on with regards to turn the anxiety into fear, right? I can make it more concrete, see it for what it is, right?
Starting point is 01:55:04 Get to the end. What, and, and what will happen and what will happen if that happens and how likely is it that it's going to happen as opposed to the sort of what the proximate, which is I feel this thing, right? I am worried. I am scared. I am whatever. Right.
Starting point is 01:55:17 And it's kind of the same with the specialness, which is, uh, if I don't continue to release three podcasts a week, then the world's going to forget about me and people are not going to think I'm interesting and I'm going to be homeless under a bridge and you have a gluten intolerance and I'm going to lose my foot. You go, right, okay. Well, let's just dig a little bit deeper. So why do you think the world needs to see? What is it that you want from them?
Starting point is 01:55:40 I want to be liked by people. It's like, okay, do the people that like you, do they get that contingent on the amount of work that you put out each year? Is that contingent on the amount of shows that you do or them or I want to be liked by people. It's like, okay, do the people that like you, do they, is that contingent on the amount of work that you put out each year, is that contingent on the amount of shows that you do or the amount of, like, does your wife care about whether it's about 16 or about 17 or whatever, it's like that, or is it something else?
Starting point is 01:55:55 And you are, huh, yeah, actually, no, you're right. And it's just so, when you bring it into the light. When the prefrontal cortex is managing the problem, the problem becomes manageable, which is really critical. You know, and we all actually need to do that. But, but you're touching on one of the greatest fears of people who are in your space, which is the fear of irrelevance and the fear of irrelevance. And part of the reason is because you're in an industry that has to feed a beast.
Starting point is 01:56:22 And that men, the monsters hungry, feed me more podcasts, more and more sub-stack articles, more and more content, but also more demand and more supply. That's how the beast gets fed. I mean, it's when you got your millionth subscriber, hit that subscribe and like button folks. I mean, it's like feed the beast, feed the
Starting point is 01:56:43 beast. And so that leads to this pathological fear of irrelevance. And irrelevance is a death fear for a lot of people. Now, the old version of the irrelevance was the CEO who was in Who's Who in, you know, 1928 or something like that. And then was kind of forgotten. And the old joke is from Who's Who to Who's He in six months. You know, that famous Jack Nicholson film about Schmidt, where he's like Mr.
Starting point is 01:57:07 Big in an insurance company. He's an actuary in an insurance company and, and he has his, you know, his going away party and he retires and he goes back to help out the young guys, just to give him a hand. And he sees some guy throwing away all his files in the dumpster out back, like a week after he retires. It's incredibly disheartening. And he's trying to find himself as the whole thing,
Starting point is 01:57:26 because his death fear really is his own irrelevance. And that's what a lot of people have too. But the whole point is we need to actually figure out what our death fear is. And then the way that you confront that, I have a whole meditation I take my students through. My students are mostly afraid of failure because they've never failed. They're superstrivers. They're Harvard Business School MBA students. I mean, they're like kings and queens of the Mambo, right?
Starting point is 01:57:48 And they've never gotten a B. And so their death fear is somehow failing. So I take them through, there's a Theravada Buddhist meditation that I take them through called the Maranassati. Are you aware of this? No. You know how this works?
Starting point is 01:57:59 No. The Maranassati is an actual death meditation that Theravada Buddhist monks in the Southern tier of Buddhism. That's what Robert Wright practices, meditation that Theravada Buddhist monks in the southern tier of Buddhism. That's what Robert Wright practices is that Theravada Buddhism. And if you go into a Buddhist temple in Thailand or Vietnam or Sri Lanka, that you'll see, they'll often see pictures of bodies in states of decay, dead bodies, cadavers.
Starting point is 01:58:22 I have seen that. And imagine what it, it keeps going. And you stand in front. The Maranisati meditation is for a couple of minutes in front of each one, dead bodies, cadavers. I have seen that. And imagine what it, it keeps going. And you stand in front. The Maranassati meditation is for a couple of minutes in front of each one, you say, that is me. And that is me. Why? Because you are going to die. It is completely inevitable.
Starting point is 01:58:33 And only when you make it the most familiar thing, your death, will you actually be alive. So the Maranassati meditation requires that you look straight into your death fear to make it completely ordinary. See, the truth of the matter is I'm going to fail. I'm going to be forgotten. You're going to become irrelevant. You're not going to have content. And so only staring into the beast by looking at the pictures of the cadavers of your own content creation. And so I actually ask my students to write
Starting point is 01:59:05 Amarana Sati meditation where each part is the nine part meditation, canonically in Theravada Buddhism, where each part is. So for example, it'll be, I'm going to think for two minutes. So I don't imagine I'm not getting the grades at the Harvard Business School that I thought I was going to get.
Starting point is 01:59:21 I'm getting lower grades than my companions and friends. Next is I'm starting to get. I'm getting lower grades than my companions and friends. Next is I'm starting to get alerts from the administration that I'm not measuring up. The next is I think I'm gonna have to take a leave of absence. The next is I'm not getting job offers. You know, step six is usually I think my parents feel sorry for me. That's when people start to cry.
Starting point is 01:59:47 Right. Cause that's what the death fear around the fear of failure feels like to people. And so everybody watching us, what is your death fear? That is the threat to the intrinsic you. And if you don't get your mind around it, you're going to spend your time and your effort and your energy trying to earn other people's love. So if you're, for example, if you're a success addict, when you get married, you're going to try to earn your wife's love and you're going to ruin your marriage, earning your
Starting point is 02:00:14 wife's love. Why? Because you'll never be enough. And then you'll go to work and try to earn her love and you'll try to earn more money to earn her love. And that's what you'll do to try to feel alive and to actually not die. And you won't understand that you're, you're, you're starving her of what she really needs, which is you. This is how death fears can torque our entire lives. And so the practice of that is go die. How do people, if they're not at Harvard Business School with a particularly one track mind of where most of the fear probably comes from, How do people, if they're not at Harvard Business School with a particularly one track mind
Starting point is 02:00:46 of where most of the fear probably comes from, how do people more easily investigate what theirs is? Think about what actually keeps you up at night. Think about what it is that actually bothers you the most. When you think about what is your paranoid fantasy, what is the thing that feels to you most catastrophic? What is the thing that actually feels most catastrophic? Is it losing a particular person that you love?
Starting point is 02:01:08 Is it being ridiculed and humiliated? Is it not ever being able to make a living? You know, what is the concept that would destroy, that would utterly eviscerate your own self-concept of who you are as a person? That's where you need to write your Maranassati and then stare straight at it every day and you'll be free You will be free. It's hard, but it's beautiful
Starting point is 02:01:29 And this is one just another example that your bliss lies through misery lies through the tunnel of misery Bring it on Let's finish it there Arthur Brooks. You are so great, dude. I already come what I've got so much shit I want to speak to you about I can't wait to see you again. We'll do it next time. And you're in Austin, Texas. Austin, Texas, baby.
Starting point is 02:01:49 Home of the podcast. That's where all the cool kids live. That's a good one. It is as long as you're here. Where should people go? They wanna check out all the stuff you've got going on. ArthurBrooks.com. I have my Atlantic column every Thursday morning
Starting point is 02:02:00 called How to Build a Life. Putting out a lot of videos and ideas on socials like everybody does these days because you've got to feed the beast. I have a book every two or three years that comes out, a new one that's coming out in a year called The Meaning of Your Life, How to Find Deep Purpose in an Age of Emptiness. That's coming out. But everything is at orthorworks.com. Damn right, Arthur, I appreciate you. Thank you. I've ever found.
Starting point is 02:02:48 Fiction and non-fiction, real life stories, and there's a description about why I like it, and there's links to go and buy it, and it's completely free. You can get it right now by going to chriswillx.com slash books. That's chriswillx.com slash books.

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