Motley Fool Money - Money Lessons from Gandhi, Dante, and Chimpanzees

Episode Date: May 15, 2022

You might not think of your money as a flock of sheep, but Dr. Martha Beck does. And it makes more sense than you’d imagine. A best-selling author and life coach, Beck joins Motley Fool contributor ...Brian Stoffel to discuss: - Why you should ask yourself “how much is enough?” - How to align your investments with a personal mission statement - And yes, financial lessons from chimpanzees Host: Brian Stoffel Guest: Martha Beck Producer: Ricky Mulvey Engineers: Dan Boyd, Spencer Daniel Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Hi everyone, I'm Charlie Cox. Join us on Disney Plus as we talk with the cast and crew of Marvel Television's Daredevil Born Again. What haven't you gotten to do as Daredevil? Being the Avengers. Charlie and Vincent came to play. I get emotional when I think about it. One of the great finale of any episode we've ever done. We are going to play Truth or Daredevil.
Starting point is 00:00:18 What? Oh, boy. Fantastic. You guys go hard. Daredevil Born Again official podcast Tuesdays and stream Season 2 of Marvel Television's Daredevil Born Again on Disney Plus. It had a study several actually where they had chimpanzees and they would give them food directly or they started giving them these tokens. I think they were poker chips or something.
Starting point is 00:00:40 And they had to trade those for food. Well, when they just fed them, the chimps behaved normally. As soon as it became a token economy, they went nuts. They started killing each other for tokens. They were hoarding them. They were obsessed with them. I'm Chris Hill and that was Dr. Martha Beck, bestselling author and life coach. Her latest book, The Way of Integrity, was recently selected for Oprah Winfrey's book club.
Starting point is 00:01:10 Think of this episode as a way to help you think about what your investments represent beyond stock tickers, and maybe create a healthier connection between you and your money. Motley Fool contributor Brian Stofel talked with Dr. Beck about why you should ask yourself, how much is enough, how to align your investments with your own personal mission statement, and financial lessons from chimpanzees. I was hoping that you could talk a little bit about because you've coached so many people and you've got so many interesting stories about coaching people who we might look at and say, well, they've got it all.
Starting point is 00:01:52 And you kind of have the inside story where you're like, well, that's not quite the case. Can you relay some of those stories, especially the one you tell a lot, I think is very apropos to this about the young man whose company went public? He made, I think, $400 million in one day. And they had this huge party because the company went public. And they all made a huge windfall. And they'd hired a famous rock band. And they were in this hotel room suite.
Starting point is 00:02:21 And the rock band was playing in the suite. It was absolutely deafening. And it was three in the morning. And this guy called me. And he was drunk. He was high. I mean, everything you could put into your body he had. And he started screaming into the phone.
Starting point is 00:02:33 it's not effing enough. When is it ever going to be enough? That's what you tend to see in the so-called highest performers. I just read a thing about Abraham Maslow's late work, where he's talking about how the need to be adored is so strong in people like Vladimir Putin that while they're killing people randomly, they insist on being called beloved leader, you know, adored one, because they think that the need for connection will be served by being able to force. So they're creating horror around them. And what they really want is a loving connection. And Maslow said they are the loneliest of all people on earth.
Starting point is 00:03:16 And I just thought, wow, I have really seen that with fame, with power, and with money. It is not enough for happiness. In the way of integrity, you take what's one of my favorite works that I had to read in high school, which is Dante's The Divine Comedy. Oh, yeah, you love it too. Oh, I do. I do. And just so you know, I also love, I read the Tao of Poo when I was in college, and that was like life-changing for me. So I know that that is a text that you, not the Tao of Poo, but the Dowd-Dai-Deging, yeah. When you talk about the way of integrity, you talk about how
Starting point is 00:03:49 we can become distracted by something that you translated as Mount Delectable and how that can be really enticing. Can you just explain what Mount Delectable is and what what warning you might have about Mount Delectable because that dovetails with what you were just talking about. Yeah. So, Dante was a brilliant psychologist and actually a spiritual guy centuries before his time. So he starts, the first few verses of the Divine Comedy, most people just skim right through him. But, I mean, it so resonates. He says, in the middle of my life, I came to myself in a dark forest for the true way had been lost. And he was miserable. It was terrifying. It's like everything's dying and foggy and murky and he's lost. And he doesn't know how he got there. He says it was like I sleepwalked away from my true life.
Starting point is 00:04:43 And then he sees this mountain, deletosemente. Deletosemente, I don't speak Italian, but that's what he calls it. And every English translator that I got is called it Mount Delectable. And it's caught in the rising sun so that it looks golden. And he sees all these people trying to climb out of the dark wood of error into the light. And he thinks, that's what I need to do. So he starts trying to climb. And he gets more and more exhausted as he goes. And then ferocious wild animals start attacking him. And Dante identifies them with mood words. So there's a wolf that is incredibly depressing. Everybody who sees her starts to cry. There's a lion that is so frightening, even the is afraid. And there's a leopard that is insatiable. So these emotional states of desperation and fear
Starting point is 00:05:36 and depression, they all get stronger and stronger. The higher he goes up the golden mountain. And finally, he's so exhausted, he just slides back down. And I really think he was making an analogy to the ways humans get power, wealth, and status, thinking that they'll be happy at the top of that mountain and getting all the signals from their moods, from their bodies, that this is not good. I don't like this. And sometimes it takes exhaustion to make people give up. And that's when they hire me. So I've seen a lot of people do that. Well, I appreciate that you say they're getting all the signals from the body because that's a key part of your work is the body is so important. If someone is brand new to this, they've never read any of your books. Can you just talk about how
Starting point is 00:06:24 you learned how to use your body and then how you learned how to use the signals that your body might be sending you. And the weird places that it might have sent you. Yeah. So I developed, I was hit by a car when I was 18 when I was out running. I was a marathon runner. It hit me in the side and it messed up my hip and the doctor said just lie down until the pain goes away. And 12 years later, the pain still had not gone away. So I was in chronic pain for about 12 years. my, you know, my 20s, basically I spent in chronic pain. And you get to be very economical about your choices when you're in pain. You can choose, you know, because you know if you do thing X, you will not be able to keep going through thing Y. So I started being really selective about my
Starting point is 00:07:11 behaviors because I had to be. Then I noticed that certain behaviors made the pain feel worse. And certain behaviors made the pain relax. Now, I was suffering from, several, actually, autoimmune diseases. Some of them were diagnosed surgically. My body was basically trying to kill me because it knew I was the single greatest threat to my own happiness. So I started paying really close attention and doing the things that made my body relax. Now, the cognitive mind is processing, they think, about 40 bits of information per second. The entire neurological structure of the body is processing about 11 million bits of information per second. It is infinitely more intelligent than the cognitive mind. So what I realized, as I kept
Starting point is 00:07:58 following my freedom from pain, is that it was sending me into a life that was much more enjoyable. And it got to the point later when I was giving a lot of public speeches, I would stop in the middle of a speech and say, is everybody comfortable? And people would go, yes, we're fine. And I'd say, no, no, no, are you really genuinely comfortable? I really want to know. And they'd be like, yes, we're comfortable. Leave us alone. And then I would say, if you were sitting at home alone, how many of you would be sitting in the position you're in right now? And out of 300 people, maybe one would raise a hand. And then I would say, what about the rest of you? Why not? And they would sit and think for like a minute and a half before they would realize,
Starting point is 00:08:44 these were very intelligent people, they weren't very comfortable. which wasn't a big issue because they were tolerating it just fine. The issue is that they had looked me in the eyes in clear daylight and repeatedly said they were comfortable while they knew they weren't comfortable. The body has a deeper truth than the mind is allowed by culture. So when you get by yourself and you take your mind off cultural pressures, the first thing I do with people, and it doesn't matter how brilliant they are, the first thing I do is teach them, think of the worst thing you ever had to go through. Think of the best thing you had to go through.
Starting point is 00:09:22 Sit in those memories for a minute and tell me how your body feels in each instance. And when they were chasing their wild dream that wasn't really theirs, they all felt like Dante trying to get up Mount Delectable. And when they were relaxed and happy and doing something wonderful, that same guy who made $400 million in one day, we had so many sessions. And the happiest he'd ever been was when he was on a long backpacking trip with everything he owned in a backpack out in the middle of nowhere. That's when he'd been happy. And the rest of his life was going exactly the opposite way. And his body was trying to tell him that. So then here's the question. So we've got people listening and, you know, in their professional lives, they might be feeling some of what
Starting point is 00:10:03 you're describing this young man was feeling. Or they might be investing. And all of a sudden, there was a lot of investors, myself included, who as an individual, as a person, as a father and husband, I was scared when 2020 rolled around just from everything that's going on in the world around me. And at the same time, there was this weird thing that happened where a lot of the companies that we were invested in, their stocks started taking off. And there was this weird disconnect where... Interesting. because a lot of them help the transition to digital, you know, being able to do things when you're not in person.
Starting point is 00:10:44 But my point is, is a lot of people experience much larger gains, much sooner than they were expecting. So what do you do if you're that individual or if you are experiencing a certain level professional success or you're doing really well in the stock market? and then you look and you're like, but my body is telling me that this isn't exactly, because I don't think that your answer would be sell everything and give it all away, maybe, but what are the steps that you take then? Well, the first thing I would say is change in one degree turns. So back to the airplane analogy, if you're flying 10,000 miles and you turn one degree north every half hour, you won't notice the change at all, but you'll end up.
Starting point is 00:11:33 in a completely different location, right? And a lot of research on change has shown that the slower the change, the longer it lasts, the more effective it is. So don't try to leap to the top of Mount Everest. Keep climbing. But change your direction if you notice that you're serving something that isn't deeply harmonious with all the aspects of yourself. So a really powerful thing that someone did with me, one of my own coaches sort of turned
Starting point is 00:11:58 on me and coached me when I was starting my own company about 25 years ago. and she said me and made me define my life's mission. The way I addressed this in the way of integrity is find, I stole this from a psychologist named Stephen Hayes. He's amazing. He asks you to define your own personal values by choosing a verb and an adverb that describe what you want your life to be. So for Bray Brown, it's daring greatly, right?
Starting point is 00:12:27 So you've got a verb and then an adverb. And for mine, it was kind of not just two words, but it's homecoming continuously. And by that I also mean that I want to bring people home to themselves. I love that. It's fun. It's hard to get it. It's so hard. Did you try it?
Starting point is 00:12:47 Have you done it? I don't have a verb and an advert, but it is to nurture meaningful relationships and to try it. And I will say the biggest wrinkle that's come in there since then. is that I've learned is and the most important one is the one I have with myself. Because there's so many times where I chose to do something for someone else who's important to me and ended up being terrible because I didn't listen to what I wanted to do. Right. But yes, it is so difficult to write your own statement.
Starting point is 00:13:22 But you did beautifully. And for other people out there who are service oriented, like you are one of the things I like to remind people is follow the golden rule. which is do unto others as you would have them do unto you. But also follow, I call it the Eller Ned log, which is golden rule spelled backwards. And it is this, never ever do to yourself anything you would not do to another person. You know, rob yourself of sleep, work yourself too hard, all of that. So that's just for the givers out there.
Starting point is 00:13:50 But I love the point you're making that the mission statement or the values statement drives all the action. So when I invest, is this company helping bring people home continually? And is it bringing, like part of it for me is bringing the world back into balance in terms of the ecosystems? Like, is it creating integrity of ecosystem? Is it creating a harmonious integrity of people? And it's really clear. Like, I just asked my financial advisory, is this company doing that?
Starting point is 00:14:22 And if they're not, they're out. And if they are, they're in. And then if you make a lot of money, I've had a lot of people come to me for help with philanthropy. And the same thing helps there. It's got like Oprah, she chose a mission after like everybody in the universe trying to grab at her for decades. She finally said, look, I am going to educate young black girls because I think that's the greatest potential I have for improving a lot of the entire human race and is my passion. And it addresses her own path, you know, what happened to her as a young black girl in the American South. It was horrific. So having
Starting point is 00:14:58 that really, really specific mission statement makes everything work. So then we might have answered this question, but it's just something that I have to ask because it's something I'm curious about is with all the experience you've had with so many different people and your own life experience, what is the relationship between money and you could say happiness, contentment, satisfaction? because I don't think there's anyone out there arguing that they're completely unrelated. And I don't think that I think we're at the point where we can't say that they're totally the same. So it's so great. How do you think about that with your experience?
Starting point is 00:15:41 If you've seen the movie, I am. Someone in that movie says that our whole culture is based on a truth and a lie. And the truth is that you're wandering around in a cold forest and you're starving to death and you've got no warm clothes. If you go into, a warm room and you get a warm meal and you get warm clothes, it really will make your life incredibly easier and more fulfilling. The lie is that, okay, now you're going to have 10 meals on that same table, 10 times as many clothes on your body, and the room is going to be 10 times as warm. That's not more happiness. We believe that it will compound our satisfaction, but actually it becomes a torment. And even thinking of money as this, this thing that you have to, it's Dante's version of
Starting point is 00:16:28 the leopard where it can never get enough. Money works that way, even with chimpanzees. I don't know if you're familiar with this research, but they had a study several actually where they had chimpanzees and they would give them food directly or they started giving them these tokens. I think they were poker chips or something. And they had to trade those for food. Well, when they just fed them, the chimps behave normally. As soon as it became a token economy, they went nuts. They started killing each other for tokens. They were hoarding them. They were obsessed with them. They would sit on them and not eat because they wanted more tokens. And you can really see we have monkey minds, right? So what really shifted for me, I don't believe that money is the root of all evil,
Starting point is 00:17:11 or even that the love of money is the root of all evil. I believe that attachment to money, psychological attachment causes suffering if you think of it as a savior. But what it actually is is it's a symbolic representation of human energy. So if I am eating a strawberry, I think about the farmer who grew the berry. I think about the worker who picked it and what that life was like. And like I think of all of those when I eat the strawberry or when I hold a dollar bill in my hand. I am going to give you for this strawberry, I will give you a piece of money that is a token of my appreciation and gratitude for the work you've done to bring me this strawberry. And suddenly,
Starting point is 00:17:51 it becomes a loving interaction between multiple people. That's integrity of multiple people. And that's all money is. It's a codified form of human energy. So I treat my money as a flock of sheep. I do a thing where I say, if money were a person, a place, or a thing, what would it look like to you and what will your relationship with it be like? And for me, it's a flock of sheep. And I take care of them and I love them. And they reproduce for me. If I think of money, if I think, if you were to think of money, what would it be? Mine is evolving. I don't have, I think, a healthy relationship with money. I would say that, well, first of all, thank you for asking. Now you're turning it around on me, but that's okay. I love this stuff. Where I grew up, I grew up,
Starting point is 00:18:40 I went to high school that was very diverse. ethnically, racially, and socioeconomically, fun side fact, Oprah actually went to my high school. What I experienced was I reached a certain point, and it wasn't being part of the community that was important anymore. Once I got to high school, it was having the good enough job and having this and that. And it ruined the social fabric that held kind of our community together once that happened. And so I had a very negative relationship with money. And then I think what happened later on was you know you become an adult and you realize if you want a certain level of freedom there is a certain level of money that's necessary for that like there's just no
Starting point is 00:19:22 getting around that and so it's just been a continual evolution of that thought and I I will say to kind of to kind of wrap it up I want to get to the question that I love this on your most one of your most recent podcasts you talked about how much is enough and that is the one question that I have focused on the most in my work at the Motley Fool. And we have another author who I highly suggest that you read if you get a chance. His name is Morgan Houssel, who wrote a book called The Psychology of Money. And he talks about that as well. And he brings up the same story you did, where Joseph Heller is at a party. And someone asked him, how do you feel about the fact that this hedge fund manager is going to make more in a day than you made from
Starting point is 00:20:08 all of the sales of your books? And he says, well, I've got something that you'll never have and that's enough. Yeah. How do you think about that? I actually have my own thoughts, but I'm really curious because you've got way more experience with this, is how do you approach the question of, is this enough? It's interesting because I had a slightly different experience than you did because I am a cis female and you're a cis male.
Starting point is 00:20:34 And you're in what I call the man cage. And this was my whole dissertation topic as a doctoral candidate at a little school, called Harvard drink. So what happens with women is we know we need money, but we also are groomed to be caretakers and to put relationship very high on the list of values and to give ourselves a break if we're running out of steam. Actually not. But at least there's the whole self-care thing.
Starting point is 00:21:02 But with men, it's Max Weber, the first great sociologist called it the iron cage of rationalism. If wealth becomes the only priority, men become a form of cannon fodder. You might as well be sent to war because you're sent into the machine that manufactures more and more and more wealth. And it doesn't take care of the different aspects of human psychology. So what's happened to you is that you got caught in the man cage and you're only allowed to do things that make money. And you're responsible for other people. Like even love becomes you have, it's held a ransom. You have to make enough money. You're the guy, right? And some women feel this way, too. I was a
Starting point is 00:21:43 winner for years. But men don't have a cultural option for saying, eh, I'm going to quit for 10 years and raise my kids. Or I'm going to go hiking for that guy who made all that money and it wasn't enough. Never went hiking again. And what I believe in what I've told so many guys and women over the years is love sells better than hate. You basically are able to draw from this world the value you bring to it. And if you're in a place you hate doing something you hate with people you hate, you're basically trying to sell hate. And you can do it, but it's a really hard marketing project. If you're in a place you love with people you love doing something you love, everything loves that and wants a piece of it. So I worked with someone once who worked with Gandhi.
Starting point is 00:22:33 And she used to say, you have no idea how much money it took to keep Gandhi poor. He was going to be poor. He was going to serve the world. He was going to, he literally wove his own robe, whatever that was called. And so he started bringing this enormous value to the world. And money wanted to get at him. People donated. People sent things.
Starting point is 00:22:54 People were contributing. And he actually had to have this huge machine of people around him to deflect money. Because he didn't, he was there purely for the love. purely for the service. And when you really go all in that way, and fortunately, thanks to my autoimmune illnesses, I had a chance to say I can only do a few things.
Starting point is 00:23:13 I'm going to go all in with the things that make me happy. And I didn't know there was such a thing as coaching, but my business school students started paying me to talk to them about their lives. And I was like, hmm, it's working. And here we are 30 years later.
Starting point is 00:23:29 That's amazing. There you go. I want to say, that for those watching, go read this book, The Way of Integrity by Dr. Martha Beck. Is there anything else you want to leave us with? Anyone who's watching who might find themselves in a situation where they've accomplished those things on the outside, they don't have great feelings on the inside and maybe one next right thing, one, one degree move they can make.
Starting point is 00:23:55 I want to hit that idea of, are you comfortable again? Like go to a room where nobody's looking, sit down. down, get yourself physically comfortable, and then go through your whole life and say, am I really comfortable? Am I really enjoying this? And if not, you can start taking those one-degree turns and it will change everything. Dr. Martha Beck, we are so lucky to have you here. I hope it's not the last time. Thank you for joining us. As always, people on the program may have interest in the stocks they talk about and the Motley Fool may have formal recommendations for or against. So don't buy ourselves stocks based solely on what you hear. I'm Chris Hill. Thanks for listening.
Starting point is 00:24:37 See you tomorrow.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.