Next Level Pros - #126: Race Car Driver Questions God
Episode Date: October 4, 2024Welcome to a new episode of Next Level Pros! Join us today as we dive into the electrifying world of racing with none other than Lucas Di Grassi, the godfather of Formula E. From his early days racing... go-karts to his profound insights into professional struggles and personal growth, Lucas shares his journey through the high-speed turns of his career and life. We explore not just the exhilaration of the race track but also the challenges and philosophical questions that come with being at the top of one's game. Apply to be on the show: https://forms.gle/hwDijQPFyKCEtHNs8 Highlights: "You can never be satisfied. You can always improve." "Being happy could be an enemy of performance." "Happiness is not a state. It is a moment." "Imposter syndrome is real. You always question how good you are." Timestamps: 00:00 - Introduction to Lucas and the world of Formula E 01:32 - The creation of Formula E and its impact 03:07 - Lucas's lifelong racing career and personal background 05:04 - Challenges in Lucas's personal and professional life 10:40 - The intersection of happiness and performance in sports 15:18 - Lucas's battle with imposter syndrome and aging in sports 19:03 - The clash of pragmatism and religious belief 22:34 - Debating the role of science and God in the universe 27:54 - The concept of E + R = O: Event plus Response equals Outcome 31:21 - Skepticism and self-examination in personal growth 35:07 - Leadership principles and the willingness to be wrong 37:19 - Lucas's take on social media and the importance of showing humanity Looking to scale your business? Want to learn directly from the same team that helped me sell my last business for 9 figures? Click this link below to check out how you can work with us. https://nextlevelhomepros.com/grow-home-service-vsl Join my community - Founder Acceleration https://www.founderacceleration.com Apply for our next Mastermind: https://www.thefoundermastermind.com Golf with Chris: https://www.golfwithchris.com Watch my latest Podcast Apple- https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-founder-podcast/id1687030281S Spotify- https://open.spotify.com/show/1e0cL2vI1JAtQrojSOA7D2 YouTube - @thefounderspodcast
Transcript
Discussion (0)
One of our core principles of leadership that we teach to entrepreneurs is a willingness to be wrong or essentially a skeptic of your own feelings, right?
Like that, yes, you can be very secure in what you believe, but always open and willing that, hey, maybe I don't have it all figured out.
And I'm still curious to gain more knowledge. Hey guys, I'm super excited to have Mr. Lucas.
Am I pronouncing Degrassi? Is that right? Yeah, that's good.
All right. Degrassi. So Lucas is literally the godfather. He is the champion of F1E. So you guys have probably seen Drive to Survive on Netflix, which is the Formula One circuit.
The F1E circuit is essentially the same, but on the electric side of the vehicles.
And Lucas has been a driver for many years, comes from a very successful background, very
successful family down in Brazil,
and has been able to do a lot of really cool things.
Welcome to the show, Mr. Lucas.
Thanks, Chris. Thank you very much for hosting me.
Yeah, I've raced my whole life since I was seven years old.
I raced in Formula One back in 2010, then in long endurance races,
and I helped to create Formula e which is formula one electric
for people who doesn't uh know that and yeah what year what year was that that you show with you
that you created formula one e uh i was um i was not the founder right but uh a very good friend
of mine as soon as he got the idea he called me. I was the first person to join him to do it.
And it was July 2012.
2012.
Man, a lot of people, myself included, would have never realized that this type of circuit existed 12 years ago.
In fact, I look back at electric cars like Tesla.
In 2012, they had very little market penetration.
There wasn't really even a lot of automakers in the full electric vehicles.
And so the fact that like there was a race circuit that was founded 12 years ago in the electric, that's just kind of mind bogboggling for me. Yeah, that was actually a lot of the difficulty we had at the very beginning
because nobody really believed that electric would be a big part of the future.
And I got my mind on that because I could see that Formula One back then,
actually in 2009, started with the hybrid engines. and then endurance racing in 2011 started with hybrid engines.
And when you extrapolate, when you go further with the hybrid part of the motor to make the motor more efficient, basically go towards more electrification.
So for me, it was clear in a way that the technology will evolve to towards more electrification of the
fleet yeah that's so awesome so you've been racing cars uh or racing go-karts or whatever else since
since uh age seven how old are you now lucas i'm actually just turned 40. so big uh big uh
yeah a big celebration for for the fortress birthday and um yeah i've been racing since
well professionally since 2020 21 and then before that in go-karting since i was seven
awesome so professional for 20 years 40 years old you and me both, man. I just turned 40 in February. Oh, really?
Yeah.
A couple of 1984 babies.
I mean August, so very close.
Okay.
Very good.
Very good.
So, Lucas, you come from a very successful family down in Brazil.
Is that correct?
Generally, yes.
I am my father, my grandparents who were born, all of them were born in Italy.
And they migrated to Brazil in between the First and the Second World War.
And they came here with nothing and started building their lives.
And yeah, my father was a successful businessman.
And allowed me to start the racing world, to focus on the sport that I love.
So, you know, a lot of people would look at your life and be like, man, this guy's got to figure it out, right?
You've got, you know, a successful family.
So the financial and everything else seems to be in check.
You're racing, you're doing what you love, you're able to compete professionally and everything else seems to be in check. You're racing.
You're doing what you love.
You're able to compete professionally and everything else.
What are some things right now that are like the lids in your life that you're trying to break through?
What gives you passion and what are you working on to become a better version of yourself right now?
That's probably one of the most interesting questions that anybody has ever asked because it's not something that you hear every day. Everybody wants to know what is actually doing
well, but very few people want to know what is the struggle in your life in your life? And, well, there are many different slices of my life that I can name.
For example, my personal life, I'm a young parent.
I have two young kids, a boy, which is six, a girl, which is three.
So being a parent already is extremely difficult
because it's very hard to educate children in the right way you
have to be very hands-on it's a lot of work and i really believe that doing the right thing is
it's very important for them so i try i try to to spend a lot of time on that. On the other hand, I travel a lot for my racing,
so I'm away from them.
So I miss them a lot.
That puts a lot of stress in the family.
I live in Monaco.
All my family lives in Brazil.
My little family lives in Monaco,
but like my parents, my brothers, my cousins,
everybody lives in Brazil.
So I've been away for so many years and I missed the contact
with my my brothers with with my family and then in and then professionally I had a very very tough
year last year I was was the worst year of my career the car I made a choice to change teams two years ago that really compromised a lot of my career.
And I struggled a lot to get the cars competitive.
Didn't manage to do so.
So I changed teams again for this year. So yeah, I've been professionally
and personally struggling a lot with this transition at this stage.
You know, it's interesting. I have the theory that happiness and success aren't destinations, right? They're trajectories that we're on and that much of
what we experience joy and happiness is based on what trajectory we were going, right? You can be
at a destination of a lot of money or an incredible point in your career, like for example,
you're driving, right? And kind of the top of your career. And if your trajectory is flat or even declined, like that
is where our happiness stems from. And whenever we're, whenever we're decreasing in, in our
trajectory or maintaining our trajectory, like it feels like we're, we're missing something, right? Like there's, there's a
joy that's, that's lacking. And so, um, you know, obviously you've had a, uh, so from the sound of
it, it sounds like it's been a struggle the last year, year and a half from a professional, like
most, most people from the outside looking in like, Oh no, he's got to, he's got to figure it
out. Right. He's a professional driver.
There's no way he can be mad about anything that's going on.
Tell me more about what do you see happening with that?
How are you trying to break through?
What's the next move for you that's going to help you get back on that trajectory where you feel fulfilled again yeah i would even
go further and say that in professional sports being happy could be an enemy of performance
right it's um when you're happy means that you're satisfied or where you are and in sports you can
never be satisfied you can always you know there is always
room for improvement there is always you did i always i never did a perfect lap around the race
track i never did a perfect race so even if you win a race of course you have a period that you're
happy let's say you race at midday uh sunday uh until the mond morning. Maybe you're happy, but Monday you have to be sad again
in a way that you're trying to figure out where you can get better. And for me, it has been a lot
of struggle because first you have a lot of pressure in the races. So it's not that I do
something that I love, but before the races, there is a lot of stress a lot of pressure both from within and
both and outside and with myself to get better so every day every minute of every hour of every day
thinking about what should i eat which training should i better? And as life gets more complex, this just expands to
different realms. So like, how can I be a better father? Have I made the correct decision here or
there or financial investment? So it is definitely happiness is not a state. It is a moment. It is a period. And I think that many happy moments in a row
could lead in a way for you to be less hungry to what you want to achieve.
For sure. I don't want to sound pessimistic, but it is in a way like this. I agree with the happiness.
I guess more along the lines of success, right?
Like success is a trajectory of constantly improving, right?
Like you may not be happy along the way all the time, right?
Because you got to be hungry as you're talking about.
So, you know, you bring up a good point like
i guess it'd be interesting to know if you could never race again right like if professional
driving was taken from you where are you finding passion in life tomorrow if that's if that were the case? I wouldn't have a problem not racing tomorrow. I think
I am in any way in a later stage of my career. It's very rare to find professional racing drivers
in single-seaters, which is the pinnacle of racing. It's like IndyCar, Formula 1, Formula E.
It's very rare to find drivers over 40 years old.
I think there is like a handful of drivers that are 40.
I am the oldest in Formula E.
The oldest in Formula 1, I think, is Alonso at 42.
In IndyCar, maybe Scott Dixon, which is 40-something as well.
So it's very hard to be there.
So I'm in the later stage of my career,
and I'm preparing my transition already in a way
to understand, do I become a team principal in a team? Do I shift completely and go to Brazilian
politics? I don't know yet. And I'm not in a hurry to figure it out. I have my plan A and my only
plan is to do the best I can on my racing because it has to be like this with the mentality.
And then at one point that I decide to stop,
then I will figure it out.
But in the meantime, of course,
you are, I mean, doing Harvard Business School with you
and trying to figure out what would be my best next move.
Yeah, you know, you bring up a solid point.
So you're investing time to be at Harvard Business School,
which is clearly an indication of you're still trying to learn,
you're still trying to improve.
Why are you attending Harvard Business School?
What's your reasoning for being there when you
already have this successful career? I'm trying to be a better person, trying to improve myself.
I left university. I joined my bachelor in economics when I was 17, 18, I did one year and I had to drop out to follow professional motorsport.
It was impossible to do both.
So I've been doing a lot of different business in parallel to racing.
You're always, you are a business, right?
You have to promote your own brand.
You have to promote your own brand. You have to promote your own products.
You have to, there is a business around the sportsman all the time.
So I've been doing this business, but I felt that I could learn different businesses,
different methodologies, different ways to lead and to understand a team,
apply some of this into racing itself and prepare myself better to when I'm not, let's say,
an individual racing a car, but I'm, let's say, coordinating a team in the future, that I would
be much, I would already have acquired part of the knowledge necessary from, for example, Harvard
Business School that would accelerate my process or accelerate my transition
to this next stage of my life. So what are, you know, once again, from the outside looking in,
you've got life figured out, right? You've got the great family, you're going to Harvard,
you're doing these different things. Like what are the mental weaknesses or the thoughts that go through your mind that you struggle with?
And how do you work through those?
And like, yeah, I mean, just ask you to open up a little there and kind of maybe share.
Because some people it's like, hey, man, I'm just not good enough.
I'm not good enough to be in this room.
I'm still trying to find my purpose in life, whatever. What are some of the mental struggles that you battle with and how do you get through them?
Definitely the imposter syndrome.
It's real.
You always think how good you are and am I the same
person as I was ten years ago driving cars is it am I not having good results
because I'm aging is because I'm not good enough or it's just because the car
is not good enough or how do or how do I go around that?
The aging is a big factor.
When you turn 40, it's just a mark,
but still you realize, again, another benchmark has reached.
So how do you keep as healthy as possible
at optimum cognition and physical performance that you can have?
What about with your family?
Also, yeah, I was going to say I have a brother which has some form of autism in a way.
So that lives in Brazil, a younger brother
that definitely
I need to help more, I've been away
for 20 years in Europe
I
became very distanced
from him
that's something that is always in the back of my mind
that I need to go back and
help
more on this side
and bring him closer to me.
But it's impossible just living abroad.
And it is impossible to race or to fulfill my duties as a race driver
living in Brazil because the team, everything is based in Europe.
So, yeah, on this side of the family also you know that i spent a
lot of time away from my parents from my friends from everybody that i love in brazil that's always
in the back of my mind and it's always something that every time i have a bad race i'm like is this
worth it is this, is it enough?
Have I raced enough?
Should I go back?
Should I continue?
Should I push through?
All these conflicts are always going back and forth.
So, I mean, obviously those are like some of the doubts or the worries.
Like how do you handle that?
Like where does your mind go to that like oh i can do this or i can do
that to to improve that to to better take care of my my brother or maybe one day i'm going to be
able to have more time like what where does your mind go to help like just deal with with those
type of doubts that you experience i i am a very pragmatic and logic person i'm not
uh i am very little religious at all my family on the contrary my family it is
they are very religious from their catholic and italian background and my mom and so on. So I can tell you that I wish I could have more of this exchange on the religion side, which I don't.
So my mind goes through, yeah, how can I help? How can I do that? How can I
incentivize the people around him to be, or how can I bring him closer? But I haven't figured it
out yet. It's something that I need to be close. I need to be physically there to be able to
be in touch more.
You bring up an interesting subject.
You bring up religion. Your family is religious and you're more pragmatic
and you kind of
expressed a little like, man, I wish
I was like...
Why
have you gone that way or
what keeps you from
taking that step or maybe going back to
the faith of your parents i was raised in a catholic house and uh i was married in church
i know i did all the i was baptized and everything but for me the more i study and the more I see life and the more I see how hard life is to so many suffering. Right.
That I never saw the evidence that I look for or the logical reasoning to be more religious.
I'm not saying that I don't believe in anything.
I don't.
The question is that I don't depend on what you define what god is first of
all you believe in a higher power let's say on the catholic yeah yeah if you say to me look
let's say that what created the big bang is a god and he put the laws of physics and he's not
he's just said look here it is universe go would believe it. If you ask me if I believe there is a
superior being looking at children with cancer, looking at children in Africa that are having a
horrible time and not doing anything, I don't believe an omnipresent, omniscient being could live so much suffering in the world.
So that's where I come from.
So first defining what God is
and then
for the traditional sense,
for the, let's say, the Catholic
way that
I don't believe,
but I believe there is a
you can call it the laws of physics or you can
call god or you can call the simulation universe or the guy who created the simulation but there
is some force that allow our universe to create life and to create consciousness uh which is a
deep mystery to me that i i it's something that i i try to understand more and to create consciousness, which is a deep mystery to me that is something that I try to understand more and more
as life goes by.
It sounds like you struggle with a belief in a higher being
because of the terrible things that go on in the world.
Is that correct?
Yeah, because of the lack of evidence, in a way.
Lack of evidence that in any way our lives are influenced
by something which could break the laws of physics, essentially.
This, for me, I haven't seen that evidence.
I looked everywhere.
So, only a powerful God that could break the laws of physics.
I haven't seen any evidence of that.
So for me, at the moment, the question, the answer is that I don't know.
Right.
I hope it is.
I hope it exists.
You bring up an interesting point.
The interesting thing about science is that although there are physical laws
and everything else, they've been proven wrong over the history of man.
The way we understand science today is not the same way we understood science 100 years ago or 500 years ago or 1,000 years ago or a thousand years ago. And so, you know, I, so I'm a, I'm a believer. I, I, I believe, I believe in God, but I do believe in,
I believe that science is the power of God.
And, but, but also I, but I also believe that man has not come to a total
understanding of how science works or how the power of God works.
Like, for example, miracles. I don't believe that there's miracles in the traditional sense. I
believe that there's miracles in misunderstanding the way science works. And like, example,
if we were alive 200 years ago, me and you, lucas and we looked up in the sky and we saw
an airplane flying 200 years ago we would both look at each other and be like wow that's a miracle
right that's a that's a or that's aliens or whatever whatever but it but but we would but
we would look at it as a, that's not scientific, right?
Like that, that this, because there's never in the history been able to have an airplane flying through the air, yet airplanes follow the science of God, the science of physics, the science, right? And so, you know, I think God is the one that actually
has created the laws of physics, created the way that science works. And I think man
has a misunderstanding around that. And to your point around, you know, cancer and starving kids in Africa and all the terrible
things that go on in the world, I'm a believer that we learn the most through the difficult
things that we experience. And although nobody likes to see suffering, nobody likes to see cancer or struggle or anything else,
those that make it through it, or even those that don't make it through it, those that
have to watch and have the opportunity to learn and grow from it. And I'm know, I'm, I'm a believer that, that God put us on the earth to experience difficulty,
to go through the terrible things that the world has to offer. So that, um, have you,
have you ever read the book, um, by Urban Meyer? Uh, he's a, do you know who Urban Meyer is the
football coach from Ohio state? No. So you love sports. I think you would love this book.
This, this guy, he, he has a book called above the line and he teaches his, he teaches his teams
like how to deal with adversity and like to, uh, to handle life in essential. And he's got an equation that I absolutely love.
And it's called E plus R equals O.
And it stands for event plus response equals outcome.
And essentially the whole thing with the equation
is that we can control the outcome. We can't always control
the event. So there's two things in that equation that we control. And it's essentially the response
and the outcome. Events happen. People are diagnosed with cancer. We lose races, right?
We get in an argument, whatever it is. Like there's things that are external that we don't have power over
that happens in the event. And I think a lot of people, they look at events
similar to what you're saying and they say, there can't be a God if this event takes place.
And the thing that I've always believed is that God is not found in the event, but God is found in the response.
And with the way that we respond to terrible events or terrible things that we have no control over and that are scientific, right? Like that the laws of gravity will stick to,
like events will take place
because of the laws of gravity, right?
Like a plane will fall out of the air
or like when the engine no longer works
or whatever it may be.
Like those are all events.
And the way that we respond or handle those events,
I do believe that there is a higher being
that gives us strength,
that gives us power to overcome. And which eventually, if we respond, produces the outcome
that we desire. I understand this explanation is more of an inner explanation of how you see
yourself responding to external phenomena and how do you deal with, let's say, internal spirituality.
And I fully understand.
The reason why I got away from the church, for example,
is that if there was, let's say,
if really there was a text, an ancient text or an ancient knowledge that was way far ahead of its time, right, that you could explain stuff that was, let's say, that many thousands of years later, we would look back and say, how could they know that?
It must be somebody else that put that knowledge there.
But that's not the case.
When you look at the past, it was very precarious.
When you look at trying to burn Galileo because he said that the sun does not rotate around the earth.
Actually, the church tried to burn him.
The church burned alive tens of thousands of widows, of women, because they were witches.
Because they didn't understand that the Black Plague was actually transmitted by rats.
And actually widows, they had cats as a company.
So the rate of them getting contaminated by the plague was actually much lower than the average population.
They said that the earth was created in six days
but if in ancient text there was something written 5 000 years ago or 2 000 years ago the earth was
created in 4.5 billion years ago and then science 2 000 years later looking, looking at the carbon isotope and look and said, oh, it's actually 4.5.
I will be okay.
Wait, there is something there that the church knew that we don't know.
But apart from this, which don't take me wrong, I think this inner spirituality, and this is what I'm talking about, that actually gives you the strength to go through stuff and gives you the strength to do good and gives you the strength to go through difficulty in life.
And I think this is very valuable.
And this has a lot of value, not only for the individual, but for society. but the external knowledge is where it gets me the more i dig the more i read books the more i try to
learn and the more i try to search for the truth the more it gets me away not the other way around
right and i fully understand and i fully agree with you about the scientific method
and science does not know science is really the question of saying, I don't know. So, which is the question I raise? I don't know about God. Let's try to figure it out. If somebody, if by one time I see
something floating, let's say a guy floating or opening the Red Sea or whatever, which sea it
opened. And there was evidence that actually that happened, that some laws of physics, either
thermodynamics or gravity or whatever,
actually were broken and was proven.
And you say, look,
that guy has like some superpower.
Then I would completely change my mind.
I'm open to change.
I'm not certain of anything.
So, you know, I'm not...
And I think that's the...
I'm definitely not trying to convince you one way or another,
but just to, you know, it's interesting just to understand, because I get it. You were raised
Catholic and which is a very like, this is like one way, one way to believe and whatever else.
And it's interesting because I, you know, my belief is, although I believe in Christ and I'm very much Christian,
my beliefs are non-traditional from the standpoint is I believe that, you know,
like I actually have like a lot of answers for the things that you brought up,
which we'll have to leave to, we'll have to have a fun discussion at Harvard about that. But you're right, right? Like there's a lot of, I think
there's a lot of power in ourselves individually. I believe that a lot of that comes from God.
But that there's a lot of terrible things that have taken place in the name of religion, right, that you brought up.
And, you know, when we talk about like one ancient script, frankly, I believe that there's many ancient scripts and that scripts are simply inspired journals of interactions and experiences with God. And I think that they exist very much
so outside of the Bible. Do I believe that the Bible has a lot of it? Yeah, it's great. But
I believe that truth can be found in anything and that each one of us have a whole lot more divinity inside of us than we give
ourselves credit for all right like a lot a lot of it's like divinity is only in the bible or
divinity is only in god but no divinity is in each of us individually and i i think it's uh yes
these are these these are and i understand and yeah and, and I see and I think there's a lot of value.
The other thing which for me is very important as I search for progress as a human being is try to, it's very hard to try to not, how can I say, not trust yourself, not follow your bias. There is a very strong mechanism
for you to try to justify your own choices. And this is something that I try to understand and
try to avoid. So how I have to be as much as I can a skeptic of myself,
of my preferences, of my bias, of my reasoning.
So how can I create mechanisms that allow me to be always verifying
if I'm not going in a direction that I want to go without any rationale behind.
And this is very common from education of kids to try to improve in my sport, try to, I don't know, gain some advantage on driving for some reason or trying to eat better or exercise better or have a better lifestyle,
or even investing money or so on.
So how do you create these mechanisms and how you live your life
to make sure that you don't do that?
How to be skeptical of your own feelings,
which sometimes are in a good way give you the right intuition,
and on the other hand could create a lot of irrational
decisions. You know, that's so important. In fact, it's one of our core principles of leadership
that we teach entrepreneurs is a willingness to be wrong or essentially a skeptic of your own feelings, right? That yes,
you can be very secure in what you believe, but always open and willing that, hey, maybe I don't
have it all figured out. And I'm still curious to gain more knowledge. And I think that, like you
said, it applies to everything. This applies to being a parent.
This applies to being an athlete, a professional, our spirituality side.
And really is the premise of everything that we believe in that in order to get to the next level, we have to always be open because when, if we're unwilling to be open around new ideas or
improvements to be made, we will either maintain or decline wherever we're at in any area of life.
And so I think, you know, with that, Lucas, man, I appreciate just the open conversation.
This is awesome.
And just talking, being real with people of like, hey, man, I may look like I have things
figured out, but I still struggle with how do I spend more time with my family?
How do I be a better father?
How can I impact my brother with my family? How do I be a better father? How, how can I, you know, impact
my, my brother who has autism? Like, dude, those are, those are such good gems, like for, for us to
know that, that you are a real human and, and, you know, you put on your underwear one leg at a time,
just like the rest of us. And, and, you know, you're, you're, you're still, you're still
figuring it out just like we are.
And so I just wanted to say thank you.
Thank you for being open and sharing those things.
Are you active on social media?
What's the best way for our listeners to get a hold of you or follow you?
Well, first of all, Chris, thank you very much.
This hour of our talk will get me thinking a lot for the next days to come.
So, yeah, thank you for occupying a piece of real estate in my mind,
a large piece that I'll be thinking about that for a long time.
I think it's great what you're doing with this podcast
because it shows the humanity in everybody.
And this is, I think, what is lacking nowadays.
I think a lot of people in social media, they see just the surface.
They don't see the inside.
They don't see the struggles.
They just want to see the good part.
And that creates a lot of anxiety because everybody is human.
Everybody is struggling.
So congratulations on what you're doing.
That's really amazing.
And, yeah, I post mostly about racing and different topics both on LinkedIn Twitter our ex now and uh and
Instagram it's at Lucas de grassy and yeah hopefully people that watched us will follow
Formula E as well and uh they're all welcome in one race, including you.
Let's see which one you have to come.
All right, man.
Super excited.
Dana, just as a reminder to all the listeners,
success is a trajectory.
It is never a destination.
We are all looking to level up,
get it to the next level,
whether it's physically,
economic in our associations
or our spirituality.
Until next time.