On Purpose with Jay Shetty - 2 Ways to Create Healthy Boundaries & Why You're Wasting Your Time Trying to Change How Someone Thinks of You
Episode Date: April 21, 2023Today, I will be sharing an impactful conversation I had with Dr. Rangan Chatterjee about the importance of looking deeper into yourself to help figure out what you truly value, why we should start pu...rsuing what we truly want instead of going after the things people are expecting us to do, and how you can start enriching your mind to to live a more meaningful life. You can order my new book 8 RULES OF LOVE at 8rulesoflove.com or at a retail store near you. You can also get the chance to see me live on my first ever world tour. This is a 90 minute interactive show where I will take you on a journey of finding, keeping and even letting go of love. Head to jayshettytour.com and find out if I'll be in a city near you. Thank you so much for all your support - I hope to see you soon. Key Takeaways: 00:00 Intro 03:39 Is it possible to train our mind and how do we do it? 06:46 Why is it important that we learn and open up our minds to alternative thoughts? 10:11 Who in your life would you genuinely say is content, happy, and joyful? 16:30 We don’t realize how much we are not experiencing in life 20:49 Getting to the root of the issue and how we see ourselves 27:29 Three ways to stay in the path of pursuing what you truly want to do 34:32 People are genuinely well-intentioned and want to do good in the world 37:39 When you do values audit, what you are really doing is gardening your values 42:19 Learning about yourself is most enjoyable thing in the world 46:16 We all have a very limited emotional vocabulary and what does this mean 53:38 “In every relationship you have the ability to set the level of joy you expect and the level of pain you'll accept.” 56:52 When ego starts to dictate how you should express yourself and your feelings for someone 01:03:45 Planting powerful ideas in our mind that are useful to us 01:05:51 Your life can become more meaningful when you learn the ability to assign meaning where you see it 01:11:10 Instead of just feeling gratitude, it becomes more powerful when you express it daily 01:18:48 Expressing genuine and well-explained gratitude should always be shared even when you feel uncomfortable 01:21:36 The most worthless pursuits is wasting your time trying to change how someone thinks of you 01:23:07 “It’s impossible to build happiness on the unhappiness of others.” 01:28:23 It isn’t necessary to document every aspect of your life on screen 01:35:27 Are you being authentic to who you are with what you’re trying to do? 01:38:28 The three S’s that hugely impacts how we feel about ourselves Like this show? Please leave us a review here - even one sentence helps! Post a screenshot of you listening on Instagram & tag us so we can thank you personally! Want to be a Jay Shetty Certified Life Coach? Get the Digital Guide and Workbook from Jay Shetty https://jayshettypurpose.com/fb-getting-started-as-a-life-coach-podcast/ See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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We don't realise how much we're not experiencing in life.
Like if you grow up in where I grew up, North London,
it's a very specific bubble, and then if you grow up in England,
it's a very specific bubble, and then you've grown up in the United States,
in New York or LA, it's a bubble.
And the challenge with a bubble is that you never really understand
if there's something out there that could change your experience of life.
out there that could change your experience of life. Hey everyone, I'm so excited because we're going to be adding a really special offering
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So go to com.com forward slash J
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J, welcome to the podcast.
Rungard, thanks so much.
I was looking forward to being with you in person after having met you in LA.
This is great, man.
Thank you so much for doing this.
I really appreciate it.
Hey, no worries at all.
I always like to give a bit of perspective to people listening or watching.
So I'm currently in the UK, I'm in my garden in my brand new podcast studio.
Okay, we've got a California-esque day at the moment in the UK.
It's nice and sunny with the cool breeze. Maybe you could share where you're chatting from,
what's going on, how's your morning been so far? Absolutely, so I'm actually in LA, but yeah,
I mean, exactly the same place. It's a beautiful California day, LA day, and yeah, the skies are blue, the birds are tweeting away. So yeah,
it's a beautiful day. Oh, fantastic. Well, good. Bit of perspective for everyone. And, you know,
we met face to face when I came on your podcast, I don't know, about a year ago, something like that.
And I'll be wanting to talk to you for a long time because the content you put out on the internet
is really transformative and has changed the lives of so many people.
And you know, I was intrigued as to what I was going to get when your book turned up,
because I thought, well, this guy's videos are incredible and they help us sort of reframe
our perspective on life.
But I've got it here in front of me.
And I left you, I think, a WhatsApp message a couple of weeks ago because, and they help sort of reframe our perspective on life. But I've got it here in front of me.
And I left you, I think,
a WhatsApp message a couple of weeks ago
because frankly, I was so impressed.
It's such a wonderful book.
It's full of insights, it's full of practical knowledge
and wisdom that I think is gonna help
a wide variety of different people.
Now, what I'm looking at in front of me,
it's called Think Like A Monk. Train Your Mind for Peace and Purpose every day. And I think that's subtitle,
really grabbed my attention because it starts with Train Your Mind. Now, I think most people
in society are familiar with the concept that we can train our bodies, right? So we know
if we want to get stronger, we can go to the gym right? So we know if we want to get stronger,
we can go to the gym, we can lift weights, we want to get faster, build endurance, we can go running,
but I'm not sure that people commonly think that their mind can be trained. I wonder if you would
agree with that and I wonder if you could expand as to why you think
all of us have the ability to train our minds.
Rangana, I think you're right.
I think you are spot on when you say that you don't believe that we all know the fact
that we can train our minds.
And one of the reasons for that is growing up in England, obviously, I was born and raised
in London.
We had PE, everyone went to physical education class.
We were encouraged to play sports,
but there was no class for the mind.
You never went to mind class.
You never went to mind school.
And even when we grew up, there was no class for the mind.
Even when we learned about biology,
it was very much about cells and plants.
And I feel as humans, we've developed such a fascination for the outer world, but we haven't
developed so much of a focus on our inner space.
And I think there's such a need there in what you're encouraging us to do as well, and
what the book's trying to help people do is recognize that each and every single one of
us need to
and can train our mind.
So one of my favorite examples is if you wanted to learn how to play basketball, you'd probably
want to learn from Michael Jordan, someone who's dedicated their life to the craft.
If you wanted to learn how to drive a Formula One car, you'd go to Lewis Hamilton because
I mean, he's undisputed the best in the world of all time if you wanted to learn how to play tennis
You'd probably go to Federer or Nadal or Jokovic right there's so many great players and names and athletes
Or maybe you go to Serena Williams if you wanted to learn about business you'd go to the founder of Bumble
There are so many incredible entrepreneurs, athletes in the world who are
experts in what they do. But when you think about it and you say, well, I want to learn about
the mind and not just learn about the mind, but work with people who focused on mastering
the mind. The true answer is that that's monks, monks have dedicated their life to
mastering the mind to the point that studies on monks' brains show the highest
form of gamma waves, which are linked to happiness, attention, focus. When they scan monks'
brains, they find the ability to flip focus from one thing to another, like the flip of
a switch. Now, most of us can experience that we don't have that ability. And so, when
we go to learn from monks, we've realized through my journey,
through other people's journey,
who have learned these principles and practices
that this is up for anyone and everyone,
whether they live in a small village in the countryside,
or whether they live in a big city,
anyone can think like a monk.
That's an important topic, I think,
to really delve into it,
because I'm sure a lot of people listen to this watching
it right now.
What we're thinking, hey, good for you, mate, you went off to be a monk, you went to India,
and we'll explore your story there for sure.
But I'm busy.
I've got my kids to take care of.
I'm holding down two jobs.
I don't have time to think like a monk.
And so if somebody is skeptical and is thinking that at the moment, what would you say to them?
First of all, I'd say if that's how you feel, then you are completely entitled to your
opinion and I respect it.
I genuinely have no desire to want to convince anyone to try a new thing out or a new method
that they have very little time for or don't feel the space for.
But even if there's a glimpse of an opening in your mind, even if there's a tiny little
bit of curiosity where you're like, I know I don't have time, but I think there could
be something in this.
Well, then this is what I'd say to you. I'd say that
we will continue to create the life that we currently have with the current set of thoughts, wisdom, beliefs, and ideas that we have. And if we're happy on that part, if you could fast
forward your life in 10, 20, 30 years time, and you'd be satisfied with getting the life that
you have right now, then that's great.
But if like the majority of people that I know and that I speak to and that I connect with online,
the majority of us would look and go, no, I really want to change life.
I want to be with my kids, but I want to change how I am with them.
I want to be a work, but I want to be more present at work. I want to improve the quality of my life.
I want to be more present at work. I want to improve the quality of my life.
Then I'd say that it's so important
that we learn and open up our minds to alternative thoughts.
I'll give you an example.
There's this great study that MIT did
on people's minds openness and their ability
to be creative and innovative.
And they looked at two types of people.
One person was surrounded by people
who all knew the same people, right?
Kind of like our normal lives.
And the other person was surrounded by lots of people
who didn't know each other.
And they did the study around who is more creative,
more innovative and has a bigger impact
in the workplace, in their professional life,
and then a little bit into their personal
life as well. And what they found was that those people who knew people, who knew each other,
who knew them back, lived in what was known as echo chambers. They were rarely exposed
to ideas that improved their way of living or their professional performance. But people
who are exposed to ideas that had no connection with other people in their life were able to be more creative, have better ideas, have more purpose, have more meaning in life.
So often we've become closed in our little spaces around what we hear, what we know about,
and we're not exposed to this new sense of ideas. And that's what I would encourage,
is just approach it with a tiny bit of curiosity. That's all you need.
And that's what I would encourage is just approach it when a tiny bit of curiosity, that's all you need.
Yeah, so beautifully put.
And I'd absolutely wholeheartedly agree with that support
that I think the tools in your book,
frankly, will help anyone.
There's tools in there that are gonna help me.
There's tools in there that will help someone
in a different role, a different state of life.
Because I think there's a lot of universal themes there.
I really wanna explore and talk about some practical things
throughout this conversation, Jay.
But, you know, I'm interested that many people have a crisis in their life
and time to time.
It might be a, I don't know, mid-life crisis, a quarter-life crisis.
And, you know, they may go away for a weekend.
They may go and buy a new car,
but you had a form of crisis and you went off to be a monk in India, right? So I'd love to understand
what happened there, you know, what led you to that, because I think so a lot of people,
I wouldn't say it's extreme, but it's going all in, right? And it's fantastic because I don't think until I met you, I don't think I've ever met
a monk before.
So, you know, maybe you could expand on what happened there.
Yeah, absolutely.
And I was going to say something wrong from your earlier question of, you know, the real
premise or the real foundation of this book is that you don't need to live
like a monk to think like a monk.
What I've done is I've taken the lessons and the principles and all the teachings that I
had and made them really relevant and practical for modern life.
So you don't have to go and do the journey that I did in order to learn some of these.
Now, my journey was definitely from a place of curiosity.
And it started off not with a sense of pain or stress
or pressure in my personal life
because I was fairly young at the time.
And of course, I'd been exposed to the different things
you do growing up in a family and normal challenges growing up.
But really what it was for me is I was surrounded by a lot
of friends that were older than me. And my friends were sometimes two years older, some of
them were five years older, some of them were getting married, some of them had great jobs,
some of them were making good money. And it's really interesting that they were really honest
with me. And they would open up and say to me, yeah, you know what, I've got this perfect partner,
I've got this perfect job, I've got this perfect situation,
but I'm still not happy.
And I'd be sitting there as a young teenager going,
how can you not be happy?
I mean, you know, you've got a beautiful partner,
you're making good money, you drive a nice car,
you have a nice home, how is it that you're not satisfied?
And it was so interesting to me to be exposed to a group of
people that I thought had it all, but felt like they didn't have anything. And then when I was invited
to hear a monk speak, and I was fascinated at the time by hearing CEOs, entrepreneurs, athletes,
my two first books that I ever read were David Beckham's autobiography and Dwayne the Rock Johnson
autobiography when he was still in the WWF and the WWE. And I was fascinated by rags to
riches stories and people who went from nothing to something. And then I was invited to
her a monk speak and I genuinely had this complete dismissive demeanor about what monks
could teach me and my approach was, well, what am I going to learn from a monk?
How to sit still?
What is a monk even achieved?
And so when I went to hear this monk speak,
I went there with no expectations.
But the amazing thing is that I found that someone who had nothing
actually had everything.
He had contentment.
He had satisfaction.
He exuded it. And when he spoke,
he spoke with such compassion and empathy. And I thought, I've never heard any of my friends speak
like this. I've never experienced someone have this. And now when I reflect back, I realize very
clearly that when I was 18, I'd met people who are rich, I'd met people who are beautiful and
stunning and attractive. I'd met people who are famous and successful. I'd met people who are rich, I'd met people who are beautiful and stunning and attractive, I'd met people who are famous and successful, I'd met people who are really smart and
intellectual, but I don't think I'd ever met anyone who is truly happy.
And even if you reflect in your own life, anyone who's listening or watching right now,
just think about it for a moment.
Who in your life would you genuinely say you believe is content and happy and joyful?
I'm guessing you probably count them on your hand.
And for me, that monk was the first person that I met that really exuded that and I wanted
to learn more.
So for me, it wasn't about being in a major life crisis.
It wasn't about things not working out.
It was from the perspective of learning through the challenges
of my friends who were thankfully so honest with me that helped me question what I thought
life was all about.
Yeah, thank you for sharing that, Jay, because as you sort of describe that, I think many of us, I know I have throughout my life looked at various parameters of success,
you know, when you're a kid growing up, you know, what you're surrounded by influences
so much of what you think is possible in the world.
And I've, you know, I said this before, and as a sort of fellow Indian sort of the child of an Indian immigrant family in the UK,
the certain pressures and the certain expectations
that often come with that.
And if I'm honest, I've often reflected back on this.
And I say to people, because being a doctor
is deemed by society as a successful career choice,
what I say to people, you know what, society as a successful career choice.
But I say to people, you know what, yeah, they say, well, you're so lucky,
you say this, I am lucky.
But really, I was influenced by my childhood,
I was influenced by my upbringing
because all my parents, friends were doctors.
So all the adults I knew,
pretty much growing up apart from my school teachers were doctors.
So therefore, it was in, you know, for me, it was a were doctors. So therefore it was in,
you know, for me, it was a natural progression. So then become a doctor, but I will tell you this,
as I become more in tune with what makes people happy with what makes me happy, honestly,
if I look around in the medical profession, I see a lot of unhappy people. I see a lot of people doing what they thought they should do.
What society has told them is gonna make them happy.
What their parents have told them is gonna make them happy.
And they're doing it.
And they may be making reasonable money.
And as you say, have the house and have the car,
but often underneath that,
there's a feeling of discontentment. And, you know, I've
been realizing this in my probably 30s, late 30s. But you, I guess, would you, in some
ways, to experience that, I think you're in your teens, right?
I mean, I was 18 years old when I first had that interaction, I just explained.
Yeah, because I mean, I wonder if you sort of think back
and that is clearly a significant fork in the road for you
because had you not, do you ever think back?
What would have happened had I not gone to that talk?
I have thought about that a lot.
And I think we should, I think we should reflect
on life like that, it really makes you grateful
and I always look back at that
day as a very humbling day because, you know, I went there with my ego-tistic, arrogant 18-year-old
nature of what am I going to learn from this guy. And then obviously that becomes the best
decision of my life. And so life's humbling in that way, right? Like, I don't look back at that
get angry. Oh, I made the best decision. I'm such an amazing person. I look back and go, wow, I was so, so arrogant and did not realize how much I could learn from
this individual. And it's almost like this ironic moment. But I think about it all the time.
I think if I didn't go that day or I didn't meet monks or I didn't meet people who were trying
to live on a higher frequency or a higher vibration. I believe that I would have ended up chasing
all the normal things that I was chasing
in terms of stability, security.
I probably would have had a comfortable job
and done just okay.
And life would have been fine,
but I really feel that the life I get to live today,
which is a life of service, in purpose,
and meaning is what I would have missed out on which is a life of service, in purpose, in meaning,
is what I would have missed out on. And there are so many times in my life where I wonder what life would have been like. And I'm just grateful that I met the right people at the right time.
And this is really what this book is about, that the reason why I called it think like a monk,
and the reason why I've gone into the depth around the wisdom and the practices that I have is,
The reason why I've gone into the depth around the wisdom and the practices that I have is we don't realize how much we're not experiencing in life.
Like you said, we all grow up in this bubble.
If you grow up in where I grew up, North London, it's a very specific bubble.
And then if you grow up in England, it's a very specific bubble.
And then you've grew up in the United States, in New York, LA, it's a bubble.
And we live in these bubbles.
And the challenge with a bubble is that you never really understand if there's something
out there that could change your experience of life.
And for me, it's so random to have met a monkey at 18.
Like you said, you've never, you know, experienced or met a monk before and I'm not a monk anymore,
so you still have a met a monk.
We have to find a rung in someone for you to meet.
But you know, it's that point of just,
what is it in the world that we haven't experienced
that could expand our mind and take us on a different journey?
And I think that's the goal is,
you may not need a monk in your life,
but who or what or which idea is it in your life
that you haven't yet let in.
Yeah. And I think what you speak to there is the importance
of staying curious and keeping somewhat of an open mind.
And I think that is something that we see across society now
that I think is becoming incredibly problematic
where people are stuck in their little silos
and they don't look beyond that. They're very quick to judge other people who have a different view the very quick
to sort of shut people down
Unless it fits with their narrative and I think really what I'm hearing from you is
Staying curious, staying open-minded, looking, listening to other people's ideas.
It's like you said at the start, right?
You're not trying to persuade anyone to do anything, but if you're a bit curious,
maybe there's an idea that someone's going to hear throughout this conversation
that just sparks something for them, very much like I guess you had when you were 18.
Jay, I think one of the first times I came across you was a few years back, I heard you on an
interview. So I can't remember what the interview was, but I remember being really impacted
by what you said, and I think it, who is this guy? I mean, this is pretty incredible what
I heard, and it was, it wasn't one of your videos that you were talking a lot about, I
think identity, and I think it was something about,
it really got me thinking about, what is my identity?
I guess I was on a journey then,
anyway since I lost my father about seven years ago now,
I think that was the,
one of the significant moments in my life
that got me to start questioning everything,
thinking about, well, who am I?
Am I living my life or am I living somebody else's life? I think you expressed it so beautifully,
but then when I read your book, I think you start off very early on with identity. So,
I wonder if you could expand on identity. What is it? And why do you think many of us need
to spend a bit of time thinking about it? Yeah, so I think I know exactly which interview you're talking about and what I say in it.
The monks start with identity and at the root of the issue because a lot of what we experience
in the world today, as you know, and I know how holistic you are in the way you advise
your patients when you were speaking on my podcast.
I was so impressed by you and how you're able to tie in so many psychological and natural
practices and relational exercises that can improve people's health and well-being overall.
I remember you talking about encouraging your clients to see more friends as a way of changing
the way they feel.
And I was thinking, wow, this person's got so many great ideas. And the reason is because Rungan, you also have that monk mindset, or you go to
the root of the issue, it's really easy to just say, oh, well, just take two of these a day or try
this or, you know, maybe you need to do this. But when you think about it from the root perspective,
where do our challenges arise? And our challenges arise by how we see ourselves. And what I believe
Rungids referring to is there's this quote that I begin my book with and that I've shared in
interviews for the last few years and it's from a writer named Charles Horton Kooley who wrote this
in the 1900s. And what he said is that, sorry, I think it's in the 1800s, at the end of the 1800s
towards the 1900s. And he said and bear with me and you've got to really listen closely to this
So what he said that the challenge today is I'm not what I think I am I'm not what you think I am
I am what I think you think I am now just let that blow you mind for a moment
I will explain it I promise I'm not what I I promise. I'm not what I think I am.
I'm not what you think I am.
I am what I think you think I am.
Which means we live in a perception of a perception of ourselves.
So I'll break it down.
If I think, Rungan thinks I'm smart, I'll say I feel smart.
But if I think, Rungan thinks I'm not smart, then I'll say I'm smart, I'll say I feel smart. But if I think, rung and thinks, I'm not smart,
then I'll say I'm not smart.
And so the challenge is that we're basing
how we feel about ourselves
on what we think someone thinks of us.
And the greatest challenge with that is,
how do you have any idea if what you think,
someone thinks about you is even true,
and whether
that's even the best place to start?
So that's where our identity struggles.
We start pursuing things in life because we think other people value them.
It's almost like, let's think of the most playground version of this.
If I remember wearing high-tech shoes from BHS to the playground, right?
I remember my mom, because my parents didn't buy me
Nike trainers or Adidas trainers, which always wanted,
you know, we didn't come from that background.
I couldn't afford them and my parents didn't want me
to have them.
So I'd walk in with my high tech trainers from BHS
to about 10 quid or whatever they were.
And, and, you know, to me, it didn't make a difference.
I didn't really know at that time
whether high tech was good or bad.
They were just trainers that my parents bought me.
Now, everyone, the cool kid at school
had the latest night trainers.
All of a sudden, I start thinking
that he's now surrounded by everyone.
Everyone's talking about his trainers.
Everyone's giving him adoration.
Everyone's giving him respect.
Everyone's talking about his trainers.
So now I think that if I want to have that same experience and love from people, that I
need to get that, not realizing that I may be able to get deeper love from people, but
I've been kind and compassionate, that I may actually be able to build a real relationship
with people if I'm loving and considerate and empathetic.
And it's so crazy how your life can become about pursuing something.
And that's why Jim Carrey puts it best and I'm paraphrasing.
He says, you know, everyone in the world should achieve everything they've ever wanted
and accomplish everything they've ever pursued just to realize that it's not the point.
Now that doesn't mean the monk mindset is not about not pursuing your goals.
It's actually about pursuing your truest goals, your truest self, and your most authentic aligned goals.
So it's not about not having goals. It's about making sure that your goals are actually yours.
The therapy for Black Girls podcast is the destination for all things mental health,
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Here, we have the conversations that help Black women dig a little deeper into the most
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Take good care.
Not too long ago, in the heart of the Amazon Rainforest, this explorer stumbled upon something that
would change his life.
I saw it and I saw, oh wow, this is a very unusual situation.
It was cacao, the tree that gives us chocolate, but this cacao was unlike anything experts
had seen, or tasted.
I've never wanted us to have a gun fight.
I mean, you saw this tax of cash in our office.
Chocolate sort of forms this vortex.
It sucks you in.
It's like I can be the queen of wild chocolate.
We're all lost. It was madness.
It was a game changer. People quit their jobs.
They left their lives behind, so they could search for more of this stuff.
I wanted to tell their stories, so I followed them deep into the jungle,
and it wasn't always pretty.
Basically, this like disgruntled guy and his family surrounded the building armed with machetes and we've heard all sorts of things
That you know somebody got shot over this sometimes. I think all all these for a damn bar of chocolate
Listen to obsessions wild chocolate on the iHeart radio app Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcast
I am Mi'amla and on my podcast, the R-Spot, we're having inspirational, educational, and sometimes
difficult and challenging conversations about relationships.
They may not have the capacity to give you what you need and insisting means that you
are abusing yourself now. You human!
That means that you're crazy as hell, just like the rest of us.
When a relationship breaks down, I take copious notes and I want to share them with you.
Anybody with two eyes and a brain knows that too much Alfredo sauce is just
no good for you. But if you're going to eat it, they're not going to stop you. So he's
going to continue to give you the Alfredo sauce and put it even on your grits if you don't
stop him. Listen to the art spot on the iHeart Radio app Apple Podcast or wherever you listen
to podcasts.
Yeah, and you know, I get shivers when you say that kooly quotes. Oh, me too, man.
And I think I've had a flashback. I think...
I can't say for sure where I was when I heard that interview, but I think I was on a train
from Manchester to London, or London, back to Manchester.
And I think I pressed pause, and I think I wrote it in my notes.
I think, I'm pretty sure I wrote it, and I rewound it.
I played it, and I thought, hold on.
I've got the first part, second part.
What else that third part?
And I really had to sit with it for a while,
and I would urge people if they need to press pause right now,
listen to it, and really think about it.
And I think, you know, it's really interesting,
you know, hearing that, and I reflect on my children
who I know you had a very brief, lovely conversation
with just before we started.
I might put that in at the end of the podcast, maybe.
Please do, it is beautiful.
But I think about this as they go through school and they start to see what other people
have got.
My wife and I were very keen to try and not put value on those things because I know I also
had experiences like that.
I'd say, oh God, man, they're wearing those.
I want to wear those because if I wear them, I'm gonna be happy.
I saw maybe a year ago,
I saw Gary Vaynechuk video online
when he was telling someone
at what if his conference is,
he was talking about a BMW,
and he basically said to the guy in his,
in his immitsable way, which is wonderful,
that I think you own a BMW because of what other people
will think of you when you drive that BMW.
And the guy literally, in that clip,
he just sort of sat with it and he said, yeah, I do.
I mean, it's what it symbolized is to people around him.
And again, I'm not having to go at anyone who might be doing that.
You know, we all do things at times to get that validation or what we think is the validation
from people around them.
But I think what you're trying to get at is how do we find our own identity?
How do we live our own lives?
So, so Jay, how do we do that? If we've spent a lifetime living someone else's life, how do we find our own identity? How do we live our own lives? So, such a, how do we do that?
If we've spent a lifetime living someone else's life, how do we in our 30s or our 20s or
our 40s or our 50s?
How do we just decide, oh, I'm going to start finding out what my life is?
Yes, absolutely.
And I love the tone you're sharing this in Rungan because my tone's the same. Like, you know, I'm not coming at this
from a point of view of, you know,
we're wasting our lives or I've got it figured out.
Like I don't want to make this about you not getting your goals
or not having pursuits or not wanting to become something
because I want to do all those things too,
but it's about why you're doing it.
And it's also about making sure they're truly motivated by your inner desire, right?
Like, that's the point.
It's like, if you want to drive a BMW, drive a BMW because that's the car you love.
Don't drive it because you think, if you want to be a doctor, become a doctor because
you think that's how you're going to serve humanity, not because you think people will
be impressed.
If you want to go to Harvard or Princeton or Oxford or Cambridge, go there because you
really want to study how to solve the world's problems, not because you think it looks good
on your resume.
That's the point that we're going after.
So thank you, Rungan, for like re-centering that tonal piece.
I appreciate it.
So where do we start?
One of my favorite ways to start is looking at what we value.
And values are a very intangible word.
And so there's a very easy way
to figure out what you value.
There's two things you have to look at.
You look at how you spend your money.
The most painful thing you can possibly do,
go through your bank statement,
and look at where your money is
being spent.
That is what you value.
The other thing that we spend, just like we spend money, is how we spend our time.
Those are the two most perfect ways to see what you currently value.
Your value isn't what's in your head, isn't what's in your heart, isn't what's in your
mind, it's how you spend your money and how you spend your time. And so, just to give you an overview and I share this in the book that research
was done and how we spend our time. And the research showed that we spent 33 years in bed, right? 33
years of our life in bed. And seven years of that is spent trying to sleep, not even sleeping, right?
We spend one year and four months exercising
across our whole lives these other way.
We spend more than three years on vacation
and we spend a bunch of days trying to get ready
and we spend a bunch of time,
standing in lines and cues,
and so much of our time just gets spent.
So the question we have to ask ourselves
is where am I currently spending my time?
And where do I want to spend it?
Now studies also show that everyone has to go to work,
so this isn't about what you do for work.
People who had more meaningful purposeful lives
and were healthier, wealthier, and wise,
invested their time in education over
entertainment. And Rung and your audience is lucky because they get education and entertainment
in one place. But that's the goal, right? Like that's the goal that you're creating an
opportunity for people to find education. The smartest, the wealthiest, the most healthiest,
the wisest people in the world, reading books, watching documentaries, taking courses, listening to podcasts,
learning to better themselves. And so that's the first place to start.
The second place, when we look at that value audit, is I want you to write down
three things that you're currently pursuing in life. It might be a promotion,
it might be a new home, whatever it is, whatever it is that you
are currently pursuing. And then I want you to ask this question, is that your desire and your dream
or is it coming from something outside of you? Is it coming from a pressure of a family member?
Is it coming from an expectation because your friend just bought something, where is that desire truly coming from?
And the third and final question you want to ask yourself is,
do I still want to pursue that, or do I want to change how I pursue it,
or do I not want to pursue it at all?
And if you go through that three-step questioning process,
you'll get to the truth of what you truly want to pursue
and stop yourselves from building a sand castle
which the waves of time will eventually wash away.
And so that's what we get lost doing.
We get lost building castles
that we don't even want to live in.
Yeah.
It's so profound and you know,
I really think that there's something unique
about the times in which we live now.
There really is this dissatisfaction, this lack of contentment.
You put it so beautifully at the start of this conversation.
I don't know if you've seen the documentary minimalism or not, which I think you'd absolutely
love it.
I really, really enjoy it.
I've seen it a couple of times.
I've watched it with my kids again recently, but again, it's these two guys in their 30s who, you know, they've got success by
society's definition. They've got the job. They're earning good money, you know, but there's a
hold inside. There's a feeling of, is this all there is to life? And so I really think you're
tapping on something that is something that is really out there
at the moment and really, if people can get their heads around this, I think it can transform
their own lives, but also transform the lives of the people around them, which I think is really,
really exciting. Now you call it a value audit. Now I thought that word was really interesting because
I had sort of nearly three weeks off social media until two
days ago, like I didn't post, I went off, I made a thing of it, and I found that I found
it a lot easier to go inward in my life. It was just one thing to switch off a bit of noise
for me. That I'm not saying everyone has to do this. It's just something I personally
find useful and I also like to, I think it's a nice example to set to people that you can do it
if you want to. But what was really interesting is I've been doing a values exercise with myself.
I've been trying to write down five core values that I want to live my life by and it really struck me that a lot of people and it probably
include myself in this have got an idea of what we think our values are.
But unless we actually go and audit the process of what are we spending our time and money
doing, we have no idea if we really are living those values.
I really like the term audit because it's not your perception
of how you think you're actually spending your money, spending your time. It's the reality
of it. And I think it's something that I haven't done it. And I think I'm going to do it.
I think I'm going to actually see, is it aligned with what you say you stand for? Are you actually
spending time like that? So is this a common thing to you think for people
that they have a, there's a gap between their desired values
and their actual values?
I genuinely believe, first of all,
Runga, thank you for sharing that too.
And I genuinely believe that people are well intentioned
and want to do good in the world.
I believe that.
I believe that people have a good heart. They're smarter than we think they are. They want to do good in the world. I believe that. I believe that people have a good heart.
They're smarter than we think they are.
They want to do good in the world
and they want to put out good energy.
But you're exactly right that that intention
needs to be converted and transferred
into real behavior.
And this is where you'll find,
you know, you'll hear a friend or someone you know say,
or you know, I really value loyalty and I really don't like gossip.
And then you find out that that person was gossiping about you.
And how does that feel?
It completely feels like someone's broken your trust.
And so often the way we see ourselves or want to see ourselves is amplified compared
to how we actually behave.
So we'll spot something. And there's a beautiful story that I share in the book
and there's lots of these across the book.
But there's these old ancient Indian and Zen stories
and there's a story of the evil king that goes to meet a good king.
So the evil king goes to the castle, the quarters of the good king
and the good king being a good king invites the evil king inside for some dinner. They sit down, the servers bring out the
plates, the plates are placed in front of the evil king and the good king, and they're
just about to eat. And as just about as they're about to eat, the evil king switches the
plates. And the good king goes, what's going on?
Like, is that some ceremony in your time? Like, look, why are we doing this? And the evil king goes,
well, I don't know, you might have poisoned my food. You might be trying to kill me. You might
poison it. And the good king just buys our laughing. It's just like really, like, come on. This, like,
I've had a idea of for dinner, like, this is my team, like, you know, whatever it is.
Like, let's start eating right now.
And just about, he's about to eat,
the evil king swaps it back again.
And the good king goes, well, now what then?
And he goes, well, I don't know,
you might be double bluffing me.
And that night, the evil king doesn't eat.
The good king, happily eats his plate.
The point is that so often we think
we don't have some of the mistakes that we make, but we see them in everyone else. We see those
mistakes in other people. So we'll say, are this person's not doing this right or I don't like the
way he or she talked to that person. But if we really do an audit in ourselves, we'll realize that
we have a lot of those same challenges and feelings that we may think others have. And so for me, it's sometimes
a really scary and daunting task to do that values audit, but it truly, truly is a beautiful
process that we all need to go through to really realign our map and get our compass right
and start moving in the right direction.
I mean, is it the sort of thing that people do once or is it the sort of thing that people should revisit? And I guess, you know, if I was to ask you, when was the last time you did
that exercise on yourself? Yeah, great question. So I'd say that you have to revisit like gardening.
If you look at your garden outside,
and I can see a bit, I can see a like,
little glimpse of Rungans garden.
But if you have a garden, how often do you have to garden?
Maybe you mode the lawn, I don't know, once a week,
once a month, I don't know, you know, whatever you,
yeah, I'd say once a week, probably.
Once a week, I like it nice, you know,
sure fish lawn, I don't like it what it gets too long, so. There So there you go once a week and so I'd say that you have to treat this exercise like gardening
because when you do a values audit what you're really doing is gardening your values and what that
means is you're pulling out the weeds and you're planting new seeds. That's really the activity
that's happening here. You're planting seeds in your mind, values that are good values, that are going to grow
into fruits and trees and give shade to others and help other people.
Or, if you don't garden once a month, let's say Rungan leaves his, he doesn't bother for
the last six months during COVID, he just lets it be there.
What's going to happen?
That garden's going to be full of weeds.
It's going to be full of stuff that he doesn't want there, right?
In my attract bugs or other things that are there that he doesn't want.
And that's what happens with our values.
After a while our values start to attract dust.
They start to attract being covered over by so many other desires.
So it's a regular habit.
I'd say that I do a refining values and intention exercise
on myself about three times a week. I used to do it every day, but probably about three
times a week. And I'm not saying anyone has to do it that often. I do it that often because
I feel I live a life that is constantly moving, constantly challenging. And I'm presented
with a lot of options and opportunities that I never imagined I'd have.
And so I have to really train my mind
to focus on these value audits.
But I also know that every year,
I spend two or three weeks,
and I go back to the monastery in India
and I spend time in the ashram with monks.
And so I feel this is both an activity
that happens weekly or monthly.
I'd say once a month,
I'd say the best way is to treat it like your accounts
in your taxes.
Look at it every month, look at your bank statement every month,
and then once a year when you have to do your taxes
and you're going through that tax return
and getting it all right, you kind of do a deep dive on it.
So I'd say if everyone could spend three days a year,
five days a year going really deep,
and then one hour a month, a couple of hours a month,
that would be a great way to build it into a practice.
Yeah, now I just wanna contrast it with taxes and accounts,
which can often be quite tedious and,
you know, tell your hair out type exercises for people
for the pressure, I would sort of say that the kind of practices
that your book is jam-packed for the practical tools for people.
I want you to get into this way of thinking.
Once you start thinking like a monk, these practices become fun.
Right?
Yes, for sure.
You know, like a lot of, when there was a doctor, one of the things that frustrates me is that
everything around health, let's say working out, for example, tends to be around, you
know, punishing yourself and pushing yourself and suffering.
And so we start to associate things that are good for us as being difficult and as being punishing. But actually all the tools
in your book are going to be good for everyone. They're really going to help people. But I would
actually say that they're fun and if I just speak to my own experience over the last seven years of
really against it's my dad I'd die the interpersonal growth not because it was like oh dad's not here now
I'm going to do some personal growth no it was just in the
trauma of dad's death in the sort of emptiness I felt afterwards
that's where I went I would I sort of needed that pain on one level to then get me to start asking
questions but I loved the process of getting to know myself better.
I love doing these audits.
I love trying to figure out my values.
I like potentially almost getting addicted to it.
Like it feels good.
And then you start to, I feel you start to switch off from the noise around you.
You really start to become tuned in to who you are and what makes you
what makes you tick. Learning about ourselves is actually the most fun thing in the world.
It's the most enjoyable thing in the world. When you find out about a new way that your
mind works and how this value is going to unlock this opportunity in your life, rung and
spot on, it's such an exciting thing to do. And I would encourage you to make it fun.
So I'll tell you an example of some
of the fun activities that I love in the book. So one of my favorite ones is I sometimes set my
set self the challenge of not comparing, not complaining and not criticizing. And the way I like
to do this test is I keep a jar of post it notes of every time I compare,
complain or criticize, I'll put it in there.
And then I have another jar of every time
I'm collaborative, supportive to others and grateful.
And what I love doing is always doing a competition
with myself because I love being competitive too.
I love engaging that in a competition with myself
of how can often can I make sure?
So what you'll find is the first day you really,
oh no, I complained 10 times today.
The second day you're like,
oh, I only did seven times today and the third day you're like,
I only did four and the fourth day you're like,
oh, only once and then on the weekend
you binge complain again and it all goes up again.
But the point is that you make it fun and enjoyable
because what you understand is that you are not
your criticism, you are not these negative thoughts,
you are not these negative beliefs,
they've just become conditioned and habits,
just as your garden is not weeds.
And what happens is we start thinking that we are our pain,
we start thinking that we are stress, right?
We say things like, I am just a stressful person, right?
I am just a negative person. And the truth is you're not. You're just going through a negative space and time.
You're just adopted a negative habit or a negative thought, but you are not a negative person.
It's just in the same way as you are not unhealthy, you've just adopted unhealthy habits.
And I think when you start making that disconnect
between you and the habits you have,
you start to realize, oh, if I change the habits,
I naturally change, but you are separate from that.
So never get into that rhetoric with yourself
of I am a negative person or I am a failure or I am a
loser or whatever it may be. Yeah, I think it's so important that Jay that our thoughts are
important, our words are important. And I think many people, what should become tuned into it?
When you start to identify where you're using negative self-talk,
it becomes so easy to identify
and everyone around you.
It's something that I spent a lot of time
thinking about both for myself personally,
for bringing up my children,
it's something we talk about a lot of the dentable
about how we're saying things
because words are powerful,
words become the thoughts, right?
And they sort of can, you know,
you mentioned those things,
people often do think that they are their pain,
they are their feelings,
without realizing that these things are transient,
they come and go and you are actually separate from that,
but if you define yourself by that,
it becomes very hard to change.
You know, you mentioned, you know, I guess a lot of words that people
who have a victim mindset may say. Right? And I want to explore this because I want to
be super clear. I think one thing I love about your approach and certainly the approach that
I sort of try and take is one of compassion. It's not one of judgment of other people.
It's understanding of someone behaves in a certain way.
There's probably conditioning or reasons that is led to that.
So what I say, victim mindset, I really don't mean that in a demeaning way.
I mean that in a lot of people say, oh, this always happens to me.
Oh God, you know, I never get that promotion, right?
And so the way we think and the way we talk,
how influential is our childhood? And what can we do about it if we've spent a lifetime practicing that?
Yeah, what a great way of guiding this conversation into, because I think you're spot
under the words we use create all of our reality, right? We all experience that, we know that.
And there's a few things that I want to touch on here, actually. One is the understanding,
there's a Harvard study that I refer to in my book and it's called the emotional list or
list of emotions, but I call it emotional vocabulary. And what I realize is
that we all have a very limited emotional vocabulary. For example, if you
ask someone how things are going, there's literally five words that we use more
often than anything else. Okay, good, bad, fine.
So someone goes, how's your day going?
Okay, how's your week been?
Good, is everything going well?
Mm, right?
It's like literally like those are our responses.
And what this Harvard emotional vocabulary list does
is that it shows you that inside every word that you say there are so many more meaning.
So let's take the word sad, for example. And what it does is it shows you other feelings
of sadness that help you better pinpoint how you actually feel. So the question then
is, do you feel sad or do you feel offended? Do you feel upset? Do you feel offended, you feel upset, you feel disappointed, you feel irritated, do you feel like you've been let down?
The challenge is that we don't diagnose how we feel effectively.
Therefore, we can't articulate and communicate to the people we love effectively
about how we feel and therefore we don't get what we expect from others.
And so we almost create and Rungan, you probably see this all the time, imagine someone
tries to diagnose their health condition without seeing a doctor.
It becomes really, really challenging.
And the challenging with the mind is sometimes you have to diagnose your own feelings because
you can't just walk in to a doctor's office and expect them to do it because it's a little
more intangible.
So we have to get much better at understanding and
articulating ourselves and
diagnosing our challenges in what we experience. But when you spoke about childhood then, I thought that was a really important point
because literally there are so many studies that show that our
belief in ourselves, our
desire for love, our understanding of ourselves is formed in our childhood.
So recently I recorded an episode about the psychological concept of the three attachment styles.
Well, there are four, but the three prominent attachment styles that people experience in relationships.
And they are avoidant, secure and anxious. So all of us either have an avoidant
relationship attachment style, we have a secure attachment style or we have an anxious attachment
style and I like to explain what they are. If your parents were avoidant of you, if they didn't give you attention, if they didn't give you
presence and intimacy, then you often will crave that from your partner.
So what you want from your partner is exactly what you did or didn't receive
from your parents. So sometimes you receive something from your parents and now
you demand it from your partner and sometimes you didn't receive something from your parents and you demand that from your partner.
The secure attachment style is when your parents or one of your parents or a father or mother figure in your life gave you substantial amounts of love so you feel secure.
So you trust your partner naturally. And the third and final is anxious. That's when your parents were kind of there, kind of not there, kind of let you down,
sometimes with their, you were confused about their love approach to you.
And therefore now you have this anxiousness around your partner and you are not sure whether
they love you or not.
Now notice how all of that comes from our conditioning at childhood.
And so the first step we have to do
is we have to be aware of this.
Right, no one's ever been told about this in school.
I saw so many negative patterns
that I had adopted from my childhood
that I was projecting into my relationship.
And by the way, I don't blame my parents
or anyone's parents for any of this.
I think the point is, no one ever knows
how to be a parent and what they're doing and everyone makes mistakes.
So this isn't about questioning your parents
or being bitter towards them.
It's about developing the emotional skills
your parents didn't have.
And that first of all requires awareness.
Are you even aware of what patterns you've adopted
from your parents that you like or don't like.
Do you behave in certain irrational ways? And when you think about it, you're like,
that's exactly how my dad used to talk to me. Well, that's exactly how my mom used to talk to me.
I often talk about a positive thing. So I love surprises. I love surprises, like from,
for gifts and birthdays and events. And the reason reason is my mom always surprised me with the toy
I most wanted on my birthday every year growing up
So when I met my wife without explaining this to her I
Expected her to know that and she would never surprise me because it wasn't in her parental background
So I used to feel on my birthdays when we first met that she didn't love me.
And I know this sounds crazy, but it's literally true.
It's like I literally felt like she didn't care about me.
But that's because I never understood why I like surprises,
where that came from, and I never communicated that to her.
Does that make sense, Ron?
Hey, more sense than you, you would know for sure.
I mean, you know, I can think back to my own relationship
and think to all kinds of ways that actually,
and I resuspect to S there, Perrell on the show
and really sort of opened up about a lot of those things.
And I think the thing, I'm sort of,
I'm hearing from you
telling that story and when I think about my own relationship,
it's that we often have expectations because we're used
to things a certain way.
So we think that's the norm, but of course,
someone else has got their own idea of what is normal.
And, you know, we, we've explored this ourselves. And I think,
um, as your communication gets better, as you learn, as you said, to have a vocabulary
around these things, as you learn to be able to articulate them, suddenly there's understanding
on both sides. And a lot of that friction no longer arises because you can communicate.
And I guess now your wife will go, oh, Jay likes gifts.
Even though that's not my thing, for example,
it's kind of like, oh, maybe I'll get him a gift
because that's how he experiences love.
My wife always has two surprise parties from in the last two years.
And she got me both times.
She organized these two incredible,
and that's what it is wrong.
And that's what it is, is we're just you know in every relationship
you have the ability to set the level of joy you expect and the level of pain you'll accept
but the problem is that we never tell the other person what that expectation and what that acceptance
level is and we never communicate that and we expect them to be mind readers and expect them to know.
And that's really where all of relationships go wrong with our parents, our children, our spouses, our partners,
that there is no communication on what we expect and what we're willing to accept.
And that creates so many issues that you then think
you broke up over something big,
when actually you broke up over words and definitions.
One of the ones I like to talk about
is the definition of love.
When, think about the first time you said,
I love you to someone wrong.
And like, think about the first time you said it to someone
and everyone is listening and watching.
Think about the first time you told someone you loved them. What did you mean? Did you mean I really like you?
Did you mean I hope we can spend the night together? Did you mean I want to spend the rest
of my life with you? I'm guessing that you meant different things at different times.
And now think about when someone says I love you back to you. Have you ever asked them what they
meant by that? Because chances are you projected your belief onto the word love even when someone
said, I love you back. So if you said, I love you and you were thinking, I want to spend the
rest of my life with you. And that person said, I love you, you projected that they were saying,
they want to spend the rest of their lives with you as well. But actually what they were saying
was they just want to spend the night with
you.
Now all of a sudden, you're in this complete misalignment of values.
We end up in those scenarios because families define words differently.
People define words differently.
Different words mean different things to different people at different times.
You really have to understand how that person described even being clean and tidy and organized.
Everyone has a different definition.
Like, this, you know, my room may seem clean to some people.
And my room may seem chaotic to some people because everyone has a different definition
of what clean and chaotic is.
In the 1680s, a feisty opera singer burned down a nunnery and stole away with her secret
lover.
In 1810, a pirate queen negotiated her cruiseway to total freedom, with all their loot.
During World War II, a flirtatious gambling double agent helped keep D-Day a secret from
the Germans.
What are these stories have in common?
They're all about real women who were left out of your history books.
If you're tired of missing out, check out the Womanica podcast, a daily women's history
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Big love.
Namaste.
Yeah, very powerful.
And, you know, certainly the contentment that my wife and I feel
in our relationship has improved dramatically
since communication got better.
And it was really interesting.
You know, one of the most amazing things
since getting married has been getting to know my wife's family
who are just amazing and credible.
And the more time you spend with them,
the more you understand how
Vade, my wife has got her characteristics, you're like, oh, of course, that's how
you've been brought up. I wasn't brought up like that. Right. I had a completely
different upbringing. So my idea of what is normal is completely different from
yours. And if we both go through life in our own heads thinking this is normal,
well, of course, there's going to be blowups and friction because they are, they both are
normal, but they're different normals to different people. You know, you
know, as you, you sort of talk about relationship, you are reminding me of a
moment in your book where you spoke about your relationship with your now wife when you first started
dating her and I think you took her out to I think you saved up. Well, you can share that
actually. What what happens? And I'll tell you the reason why it made me stop and laugh
is because it reminded me although there were different scenarios, I remember when I first
met my now wife, when I went out,
when I was just dating her for a few months. I remember, so I played in bands for a few years,
and at the time one of my other way, EPs was being sold in HMV in Manchester and had a couple of
shows, and then when we first started dating, she came along, and then I can't remember when,
but a few weeks or a few months, and so I said, hey babe, I've got the show tonight, do you want
to, you know, to fancy come along and start, no, I'm good, thanks. I was like, oh no,
you sure? You sure you don't want to come? She's like, yeah, I'm alright, actually, there's
something on Telly, I want to watch tonight. It was something, which was, you know, for
my ego at that time, back in the day, I was like,
oh, why does she want to come? You know, does she not like me? You know, what, what, you know,
it was really interesting, but I think that drew me more towards her because I thought I'd
never had that before. Like, that was, I think that made me more attracted to her. It's like, oh,
she's not bothered about that stuff. And I actually genuinely do, I would say now that's one of the best things about her,
that kind of stuff, she does not give to who,
she likes me, and loves me for who I am,
underneath, and not for the kind of,
not because I'm on tele, or whatever,
with these books, or whatever,
she's not bothered about that stuff at all,
and it's the best thing ever.
Yeah, and that's such a blessing to have that in your life, Runga,
because, you know, you meet people at different times and people meet the love of their life
at different times and it can get really challenging. You reminded me of an interview that,
I think I referred to even in the book of Robert Downey, Jr. and I think he's at Cambridge University
and they're doing a Q&A with him and they're like, you know, what does it feel like to be Ironman
and, you know, be this incredible movie star on the Avengers? And he's like Cambridge University and they're doing a Q&A with him and they're like, you know, what does it feel like to be Iron Man and, you know, be this incredible movie
star on the Avengers?
And he's like, yeah, you know, when I come home and I open the door back from work, it's
not like my fifth kids in my family are like, oh my god, it's Iron Man.
What's going to, you know, he's just like my wife's like, can you take the trash out?
And, you know, do my, yeah.
And it's almost like that reality check.
And yeah, for my wife in similar what you were saying,
for us, it was this understanding that I had believed
that the romance that I saw in the movies
was what romance and love was about.
Because again, how many of us are beliefs
are set by movies, media and music.
So many of our beliefs and what we expect in a relationship
are based on a false show.
And if you think about it, movies always end
with happily ever after where the wedding just happened.
So it's almost like you see nothing after the wedding.
And the funny thing is that after the wedding
is exactly what life is about.
Like that's where life actually starts.
Like this life didn't start when you started dating,
but movies end with happily ever after.
And they don't tell the story.
And so we all have this honeymoon happily ever after version of love.
And I had that too.
So my first date with my wife, I thought,
oh, you know, she'll want to go to a fancy restaurant.
You know, she'll probably want to dress up.
She'll want to do this because that's what I thought
from nowhere, like she'd give me no indication of that.
And so again, no checking of expectation,
no checking of communication, just complete me on autopilot.
And so I booked, I got this reservation at this fancy restaurant,
I'll never forget the name, it's called La Candelocatelli.
And it's like this really posh restaurant in London,
it's like David Beckham goes there
and that kind of thing.
And so I'd saved up to take my wife to this restaurant.
And she, it was the worst date we've ever been on.
And it was our first date.
And she was just like, you could have walked me down Tesco's,
like the food I let Tesco's.
And I would have been happier.
She loves, she loves going shopping with her food.
So any sort of Tesco's or whole foods or weight troze or whatever that, she loves going shopping with her food. So any sort of Tesco's or Whole Foods or Waitro's or whatever that.
She loves it.
And so, and it was so interesting to me to think, I was like, well, I put all this effort
in and that's what happened.
You start thinking your ego goes, well, you put all this effort in.
She doesn't appreciate it.
And I actually realized, no, it's just me speaking to her in a language.
She doesn't understand.
And this part's the biggest part about her media
And I've got to share this story so
Rungan do you remember how much do you remember any guidance on how much you spent on your engagement ring because this is really like profound for me
But do you remember anything when you propose to your wife? Yeah, yeah
I you know what I can't remember an exact amount but I I remember thinking oh how much are you meant to do that? I thought really that much that's you like I can't remember what happened in exact amount, but I remember thinking, oh, how much are you meant to do?
And I thought, really that much?
That's the, I can't remember what happened in the end,
but I know that's out there, isn't it?
There's a rule by society on what you should do.
Yeah, so that was the thing.
So I remember wanting to propose to my now wife
and I remember speaking to a bunch of my guy mates
who were proposed or were married.
And they all said you spend two months salary on your engagement ring.
I was like, that sounds like a lot.
I had the same reaction as you.
And I was like, okay, that's what you have to spend.
So I remember spending two months salary on my engagement ring for my wife.
I didn't make a ton at the time and I worked in a corporate job.
And so I did that.
And then when I started sharing more ideas and stuff,
I really started looking into that.
And this is the craziest thing.
I found a debares commercial from 1991.
And in that commercial, it's a black and white commercial.
I don't know why, but it was chosen to be black and white.
And in that commercial, a man proposes to a woman with a diamond engagement ring. It's a debaer's commercial.
And at the end of it, it says this, catch this, this is what it says, it says the diamond
engagement ring. How else could two-month salary last forever? And I was sitting there going, are you kidding me? That was literally
the tagline in a commercial and so many men took it seriously. That by the time I proposed,
that was 1991, I proposed in 2014. And so it's like from 1991 to 2014, it became a rule when actually it was just a tagline in an adverb,
just showing you the power of media's ability to implant and really that's inception at
its best.
If you've never seen the movie Inception, check it out.
That is literally inception at its best.
That idea was planted in our mind in 1991 and in 2014, I'm still operating by that idea
and I don't even know where it's come from.
That's the power of an idea
and that's why it's so important
that we plant powerful ideas into our mind
that are useful to us.
And that's the value and how powerful stories are,
and narrative, even stories that we tell ourselves.
So that then starts over as maybe
the idea of one advertising executive in a company somewhere who gets, it's getting
paid to do this commercial, does it? And then it becomes a reality for millions of people
around the world who are then stressed out trying to think, oh, if I'm going to be a real
man, I have to spend two months salary on this ring. Yeah. And it goes back to everything you're talking about,
it's about identity, it's about stories,
it's about how can we start creating the stories
that are going to start to help us,
you know, get a nourish us and feed us
rather than the ones that are going to keep us trapped
and in prison.
And I think there's two things I think your book really like what I think about it big picture
What it offers? I mean there's so many things but the two themes I really think about are
one awareness I
think
Every single chapter people are gonna start thinking and there's just start gonna because you shared so many lovely stories as well in it
Which I think really brings it to life people People are going to start to see their own life in them
and I think you're going to help bring awareness to people.
And of course, without awareness,
there can be no change.
Awareness is that first step.
And often awareness is all you need.
I find sometimes, and of course,
there are lots of practices you can do to help,
but sometimes just being aware means,
oh, I can change that now,
because I know where that's coming from.
But the other thing I think your book offers people
is freedom, because you get true in a piece
and mental freedom to live the life that you want to,
not the life that other people have set out for you
or an advertising exec has sort of implanted as an idea.
And then, you know, if we sort of start to go
in some of these practical tools,
you mentioned some exercises already.
You mentioned gratitude and gratitude has come up
on the show before, but what I loved about your take on it
was if I remember the chapter, right,
that you said gratitude is a daily practice.
That's the easy part. I want you to be grateful in every aspects of your life. And I love that.
And I've been sitting with the idea for the last week or so. What if you could expand on it, Jay?
Yeah, beautiful. I'm really glad. You're asking me about gratitude.
Before we do that, though, you sparked another thought. Do you mind if I kind of go back?
If you're okay with me?
Don't go where you want to go, my mind.
You sparked so many great thoughts in my mind.
I can't ignore them.
This is such a great interview.
It's so much fun.
I really feel like you've just,
we've gone in so many directions that I didn't even plan.
So thank you so much.
But when you were talking about the stories we tell ourselves,
I think that's so important because there's a great study
that I talk about in the book by Amy Briznowski from the Yale University. And what they found is that
they tried to find a career that they felt people may find not sharing a positive story around.
And they found that hospital cleaners or hospital workers, potentially, I've one of the toughest jobs in Rungan,
you're a doctor and, you know,
I'm sure you've seen people were having to do that work
and it's a tough job.
And so they asked hospital workers
how they define their jobs.
And the majority of them defined it as low skilled,
defined it as, you know, insignificant,
defined it as just a way to pay the bills and that their job
wasn't useful or their job wasn't important and their role was basically described like
the personnel manual.
But then they asked another set of hospital workers, the same people who did the same jobs,
different people who did the same jobs, and they said, how do you feel about your jobs?
And these people had completely different views. They felt they were healers. They felt they were caretakers. They felt that they were able to
transform the energy of the actual hospital. They felt that they were carers for the people there.
And what they found is that the same people, sorry, different people who did the same job
were telling themselves a different story and therefore they saw their role as integral
to the healing of the patient.
And because they saw their role as integral to the healing of the patient, they found
the work that they did to be extremely meaningful.
And that's crazy to think about it that different people doing the same job could say different things about the same work
They're doing the same exact thing daily, but someone thinks it's meaningless and the other things
It's so meaningful and this was a term by Yale that was called the quote was called job crafting
The ability to assign meaning where you see it and all of a sudden your life becomes meaningful.
So if you're sitting in a job right now that you hate or if you've got a boss that you
really don't like or if you're in a relationship that you don't want to be in, if you can't
leave for whatever reason right now because of COVID or lockdown or whatever it is financial
difficulties, if you can't leave and you really want to, one of the things I recommend you
do is called job crafting from the Yale School of Management. You start asking yourself,
where can I find meaning in this? What can I learn? What can I adopt? What is this trying
to teach me? And that's actually a gratitude can be applied to every place because you
start going, there is some value in this. I remember when I wanted to leave my corporate
job and I wanted to
live my passion and do what I do today, but I'm so grateful I was at my corporate job because I
learned so much there that is so useful to me now. And we find it very easy to be grateful when
things are going our way, but we find it very difficult to be grateful when things are not going our way.
But what we have to learn to realize, which is a really hard lesson to realize, is that things are always
going your way if you're moving in the right direction. Things are not going to always
look like they're going your way and they could still be going your way. We've all seen
curses turn into gifts and gifts turn into curses, but the problem is, the wrong and this
is the challenge, we have a projector up here
of what we want life to look like.
And then we have the reality of what life actually looks like.
So there's this big discrepancy.
And so sometimes you're actually going in the right direction,
but because it doesn't look like your picture
and your image of what it should look like,
you work less, you become lazier, you become complacent,
you try less harder, but you're like, this doesn't look like the right direction.
But you'll get to where you want in life, just not in the way you imagined it, if you keep
going, if you keep pushing, if you keep learning, and that's what it means to be grateful
in all areas of your life, is trying to even in the toughest moment, even in a challenging situation,
not gratitude like, I'm so thankful to you for causing me the pain.
That's not what I'm talking about.
What I'm talking about is saying to yourself, where is their meaning in this?
Where is the lesson in this so I don't repeat this again?
If I can be grateful in this challenging situation and I can experience gratitude at all times, then I'm always going to be coming at
things from a positive space and positive energy.
Yeah, so powerful, Jay. Would you recommend people start off
with a particular daily practice as a way of getting good
and developing the skill before they can start applying it,
let's say, to, you know,
aspects of their life that maybe aren't going as well
as they want to, where they have to reframe things.
I mean, what has been your experience
in trying to teach people about gratitude
and how they should start that process?
Yeah, so you always develop your muscles
in the training center and in the gym.
You don't go out and develop your muscles on game day, right?
Like, no one gets thrown out onto the pitch and says, oh, yeah, go and play a World Cup final and you'll
figure out how strong you are. You would never do that. You train in the gym, you prepare,
you get ready and then you go, you don't go, I want to learn how to run. Maybe I should
run in the marathon next year, right? You don't, that's not how it work. And so, Rungin's
absolutely right that it starts in small bouts. So I want to get more practical because
me and Rungin have spoken about a lot of concepts today.
When we talk about practicing thankfulness or gratitude and I talk about four habits in the book. One of them, the one of the key daily habits or daily practices is thankfulness.
Now thankfulness isn't just about feeling.
Thangfulness isn't just about thinking. It's actually about expressing.
So when Rungan messaged me a few weeks back and he told me that he'd been reading
my book, I sent him an early copy because he was going to interview him on the podcast and he sent
me that message, I was so grateful to him like genuinely because he was expressing gratitude to
me and that's the amazing thing. Instead of just feeling gratitude, let's say Rungan felt it but
he didn't say it to me. If he didn't say it to me, he would have not had the experience, A, of sharing it, B, of receiving my gratitude back to him,
and our relationship deepening based on that simple message he sent me. And so gratitude
becomes more powerful when you express it daily. So every day ask yourself, who's a person that
you want to express gratitude and go and tell them? Secondly, what's a person that you wanna express gratitude to and go and tell them?
Secondly, what's a place that you're grateful for
and spend more time in that place?
And what's a project that you're grateful for in your life?
And if you write these down every single day
before you go to bed, who's a person I'm grateful for
and why what's a place that I'm grateful for and why?
And right now, it may not be a place you can go to,
maybe a place that you've visited and you're so grateful you've got to go there before COVID.
And the third thing is a project in your life.
And so when you express gratitude, make sure that it's specific.
So I'll give you an example.
Let's say Rungan throws a party with his wife this weekend at their home and their friends
come over and one of his friends, Rungan, give me two friends names in your life
and we'll pick on them for a bit.
Okay, I'll say Jeremy.
Jeremy?
I don't know, he'll be listening.
Yeah.
You know what?
I'll get Gary.
Okay, Gary and Jeremy.
So let's say,
Gary and Jeremy,
and again, I'm just going to add a disclaimer,
none of this reflects
Gary and Jeremy in real life.
But let's say Gareth and Jamie come to this party
that Rungan and his wife throw,
and it's just a gathering to get people together.
The next morning, Rungan wakes up,
he doesn't look at his first thing in the morning, his phone.
That's not what Rungan does.
Rungan looks at his phone about three hours later
after he's exercised, meditated, spent time with his kids.
And then he looks at his phone, and he sees these two messages from Gareth and Jeremy.
Gareth, sorry about this, but here we go.
So Gareth has messages him saying, thanks mate, it was great, right?
That was Gareth's message.
And Jeremy's message was, rungan.
Thank you so much.
Like you and your wife just threw an amazing party and I loved all the games we played your kids are adorable and oh by the way, you know, you know that food?
How did you how did you both make that a food was amazing? Thank you so much. Thank you for letting us have this moment together
So those are two messages
A or B which one do you think causes Rungan more joy?
Now rungan the grateful person so, Rungan is a grateful person, so
he'll be grateful to both of them, but he's more likely, and honestly all of us are,
going to be more grateful to Jeremy in that scenario, because he's gone into more depth
than being specific about what he actually liked and learned. And because of that, he's
now going to attract more love and gratitude back from Rungan as well. So that's why expressing
gratitude is actually the key. And if we can express gratitude to people, places and projects,
we start to develop more gratitude in our life. And that's something we can do daily. And it can
be an email, it can be a voice note, it can be a text, it could be a video call, but it can be
as simple as just a text message, but specific gratitude is scientifically shown
to be better for you and better for the other person.
Yeah, I mean, Jay, thanks so much for sharing that
because gratitude gets spoken about a lot these days,
but I think that's specificity piece.
I think that example beautifully demonstrates,
just I can feel it, the difference,
you can feel it viscerally as you hear it, it does something different.
And I remember so clearly, I think I left you a voice,
a WhatsApp voice message because I was literally,
I was thinking, he's probably asleep now,
but he went over his phone on at night.
You know, there's that bit of insecurity at first,
and I thought, no, just express the damn gratitude, you know. You know, I think that the of insecurity at first. And I thought, no, just express the damn gratitude. You know, you, you know, I think the wrong
of a few years ago possibly wouldn't have done it
out of insecurity or will this be taken the right way
or the wrong way or whatever.
But the, I would say the person I am today
having done a lot of the work
and having practiced a lot of these tools, you know,
there is, if not only did I,
as you're sharing, does it feel good for you to get it?
But it feels nice to share it.
I'm doing a lot of voice notes these days.
I'm finding I'm going to WhatsApp,
pressing the mic.
If that someone told me during lockdown
that you can actually press it and flip it up.
Which is my friend, Jodie, thanks Jodie.
I didn't know you could do that
because then you can talk without actually holding it. I didn't know that either I hold it. Thank you Jodie.
Thank you so much. That's such a Jeremy's wife. So it's all coming, it's bringing it back
together for those guys. But, you know, I find it's really some of a vocal kind of person
I like talking and sometimes I find it hard to express what I want to want to text message
or I'll just do a WhatsApp voice message.
And yeah, I think grassroots is super powerful.
One thing I'm going to add, well, I'll ask you actually, do you do your grassroots
practice by yourself or do you also do it with your wife?
So I do my gratitude practice by myself, but then the expression may lead to me expressing
it to my wife if she's
the person that day that I'm being grateful for.
And now I'm probably grateful to my wife every day.
And so I express gratitude to her every day.
But I really find spending some time by myself to figure out my mind first.
It's almost like if you're both trying to solve a problem together, you can help each
other.
But one person can sometimes take shortcuts because the other person kind of carries the weight. And it's really important to really
be clear about who you're grateful for. You can do it with your partner, of course, but make
sure one of you are not kind of relying on the other person to come up with all the answers
and do all the hard work when it really needs to be a personal feeling. So, you know, yeah,
for me, it's, for me, I feel gratitude is the easiest
gift you can give someone and the easiest gift for someone to receive, especially when
it's genuine and specific. And Rungan, I would encourage you, not just with me, but with
anyone, you know, it was so genuine and specific that, you know, I recommend you continue to
do that sharing of gratitude. As you saw, and you said, it's visceral. It is. It boosts
your mood when you're grateful to someone
in a specific way, and then you feel they love that.
Do you feel, or do you think, as I do,
that many people have got hangups and insecurities,
and therefore, to do what I did
to actually express gratitude to someone,
they're fearful about doing it.
Because insecurity is, I think we all face insecurities, right?
And how would you help someone who says,
Hey, Jay, look, I wanna do that.
Like, I'd love to tell my work colleague
that she was so helpful to me yesterday,
and she got me out of this jam and helped me do something.
But, you know, what will it come across wrong? I don't really know. What will they think? What would
you say to someone like that? Yeah, I think you are right. I think some of our insecurity comes from
sometimes our insecurity can come from our ego, which is blocking our gratitude. So the ego says,
well, I don't want to recognize that someone else is doing something good because it makes me
feel inferior. That's one of the ways that our ego can block us from gratitude.
And I believe in some traditions and in some circles, I've heard ego being translated to eliminate
gratitude out, right? It's like a limiter EGO. So, you know, you can, you can kind of lose gratitude
through ego, but you think, oh, if I tell them that they're good, then that means I'm not good, which is not true at all. The other way the insecurity comes in gratitude is like,
well, what if they think I'm just trying to, I'm just trying to like get close to them, or I'm just
trying to say something nice for the sake of it, or I'm just lying or pretending like, what if they
think I'm just trying to suck up to them, right? Like, is that the reason? And so sometimes we hold back how we feel.
What I'd say to you is, I'd say that expressing gratitude,
if genuine, if from the heart, and if well explained,
and thought out, should always be shared even when you feel uncomfortable.
Because when it's shared from that place,
you've already got the benefits of feeling grateful. And then if that person does or doesn't react in the way
you expect them to, and by the way, they shouldn't be a need for them to react because you're just
thanking them for what they've already done. You're not thanking them for what they're about to do.
You're thanking them for what they've already done. So now, if they respond in an ungrateful way, you haven't lost your gratitude because you're grateful for what they did in
the past, not what they did in the future. So don't then go, oh, well, they didn't even deserve
me to be grateful because they did for that moment of what they did for you. So share it because
it's good for you. Don't worry about how they respond. Yeah. And I guess also if they do respond in that way, or if they do think that,
that's their own issue, right? Yeah. Yeah. Come back. That's not your issue that you express it
from your hearts. How they react is kind of out of your control, right? And that's another key
learning, I think, on this path to thinking like a monk, I would guess is, you know, you're
not a control of other people's thoughts, right?
Not a twirl, and that's, you know, that's the biggest lesson is that you're not in charge
of the results, how people respond, or what they think.
You never are.
So wasting your time trying to change how someone thinks of you is, can it actually be one
of the most worthless pursuits in life, but changing how you think about yourself is probably
one of the most worthwhile pursuits in life, but the one we spend less time on, we're constantly
trying to change how people think about us, and we think if they think highly of us,
then we'll feel better about ourselves. But that's not the case. The case is we can change how we feel about ourselves by changing our behavior and being more in aligned with the person we want to be with our values, as Rungan said, going back full circle.
So don't get lost in trying to change other people's perceptions of you because that could be a never ending journey and a journey that you never reach the destination of, because you never will truly be able to control it.
Yeah. Comes full circle back to that coolie quote, right?
I mean, that is, it is such a powerful quote,
because everything we talk about, you can turn just back it up straight into that.
And it, and again, it brings out the meaning of that quote so much more.
But J. William, you were, when were you were just talking there about the insecurity that some people may feel when
trying to express gratitude? I was really, I was struck by something I wrote down
from your book and I can't remember which chapter it's in. But you say it's
impossible to build one's own happiness on the unhappiness of others.
Yeah, so I'm quoting Daisaku Ikeda,
who's a Buddhist philosopher,
who says that statements,
I can't remember what's chap,
I think I start the negativity chapter with that quote.
So it's Daisaku Ikeda, Buddhist philosopher,
and he says exactly that,
that you can't build your own happiness
on the unhappiness of others.
And I think what that truly means is
we often believe that we can only be superior if someone else is inferior. So we feel better
when we say, oh, you know that person, did you know that couple's getting a divorce?
Did you know the marriage only lasted like two years? And what you're really saying is, well,
we've somehow managed to stay together for eight years.
We done pretty all right, right?
And you're kind of gossiping about them
or another way it goes is like,
what did you hear about him?
He's totally messed it up.
Like he's getting fired next week.
And all you're doing is you're making someone feel inferior
to make yourself feel superior.
That doesn't create happiness.
It creates more uncertain ground because now
you're constantly looking for someone else to feel inferior for you to feel superior.
And guess what? God forbid, someone's now outperforming you. You're now feeling inferior
and you're feeling all the insecurity of what you felt about someone else. So it's never
a stable ground, right?
I believe it's in the Bible, but you can't,
I think it's that you can't build your home
on shifting sands, but in the same way,
you can't build a stable identity of yourself
on the gossip or the mistakes of others.
And so you've got to be really careful
about not building a ground for yourself.
Imagine the ground you're standing on is built on blocks of superiority, bricks of gossip
and mud and cement of criticism. That's not going to hold. And so you don't want to create
your joy because other people are struggling or suffering. You want to create your joy because other people are struggling or suffering.
You want to create your joy because you know how to deal with struggling suffering.
I'm Mungesh Chatekhar and to be honest, I don't believe in astrology,
but from the moment I was born, it's been a part of my life.
In India, it's like smoking. You might not smoke, but you're going to get secondhand astrology.
And lately, I've been wondering if the universe has been trying to tell me to stop running
and pay attention. Because maybe there is magic in the stars if you're willing to look for it.
So I rounded up some friends and we dove in and let me tell you, it got weird fast.
Tantric curses, major league baseball teams, cancelled marriages, K-pop!
But just when I thought I had a handle on this sweet and curious show about astrology,
my whole world can crash down.
Situation doesn't look good, there is risk too far.
And my whole view on astrology?
It changed.
Whether you're a skeptic or a believer, I think your ideas are going to change too.
Listen to Skyline Drive and the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts.
I'm Jay Shetty and on my podcast on purpose, I've had the honor to sit down with some of
the most incredible hearts and minds on the planet.
Oprog. incredible hearts and minds on the planet. Oprah, everything that has happened to you
can also be a strength builder for you if you allow it.
Kobe Bryant.
The results don't really matter.
It's the figuring out that matters.
Kevin Haw.
It's not about us as a generation at this point.
It's about us trying our best to create change.
Luminous Hamilton.
That's for me being taken that moment for yourself each day, being
kind to yourself because I think for a long time I wasn't kind to myself.
And many, many more.
If you're attached to knowing, you don't have a capacity to learn.
On this podcast, you get to hear the raw real-life stories behind their journeys and the tools
they used, the books they read and the people that made a difference in their lives so
that they can make a difference in hours.
Listen to on-purpose with Jay Shetty on the I Heart Radio app Apple Podcasts or wherever
you get your podcasts.
Join the journey soon. and yet we're constantly discovering new secrets. The depths of them, the variety of them,
continues to be astonishing.
I can't wait to share 10 incredible stories with you,
stories of tenacity, resilience,
and the profoundly necessary excavation
of long-held family secrets.
When I realized this is not just happening to me,
this is who and what I am.
I needed her to help me.
Something was gnawing at me that I couldn't put my finger on,
that I just felt somehow that there was a piece missing.
Why not restart? Look at all the things that were going wrong.
I hope you'll join me and my extraordinary guests
for this new season of Family Secrets.
Listen to season 8 of Family Secrets on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever
you get your podcasts.
Yeah, so beautifully explained and I think we often write the quotes down that really
mean a lot to us and I certainly feel for, that was something I spent a lot of my adult life really trying to come to terms with and
realizing, you know, I used to be so competitive, you know, if I want to game a snooker or table tennis
or, you know, it would literally elevate me and if I lost, man, I would be down in the dumps,
like it would, and I've really explored this and, you know, given the time we've got left,
I sort of probably can't go down this rabbit hole, but, you know, I know one component
is that as a kid, you know, how I did at school, you know, and again, I don't know if this
was the same in your household.
I know a lot of immigrant families have this sort of mentality.
If you, you know, if you got 98%, it's like, well, why was it not 100%?
Yeah, for sure.
You know, you were like, oh, what? You came second in that test. Why, what happened? Who was first? Why didn't you come first?
Yes.
And, you know, I actually think, whilst I, and my mom will say, because I've spoken to her about this recently,
she said, well, I knew you were capable. so I wanted you to be the best you could.
And okay, and I think she was doing the best she could.
I would say for me, the way I interpreted it was that I can only be loved, I can only
be feel good about myself, what a number one.
And really, I'd say, the last sort of five years, that's pretty much almost gone from me
now. I'm pretty, I'm pretty okay with it now, like I don't feel and I think that that is,
I think it's such an important quote that you've shared because I sort of think now,
and we should probably talk about social media a bit because you know, you're pretty much the
king of social media in so many ways. And I think I'd love to know some of your thoughts
on social media.
But with respect to that quote, I think one of the negatives,
and there've no doubt been a lot of positives
of social media, you know, you have shared such amazing wisdom
in your videos to millions of people around the world,
which potentially may not
have happened without social media, right? So it's not about saying it's either good
or bad. But I do think for some people, it can magnify those insecurities. So if you feel
that you can build your happiness on the unhappiness of others, people can get very focused on follow accounts and likes.
And I certainly know in the UK medic world,
there's a lot of medics feel a pressure
to be building up their profiles.
And if contacting me saying,
you know, I'm not sure what to do.
And you think, wow, it's causing such discontentment.
And it's just a metric that in so many levels,
I'm not gonna say it's meaningless, of course it's just a metric that in so many levels, I'm not gonna say it's meaningless,
of course it's not meaningless,
but if you're trying to do it
because how you'll be perceived by others,
going back to what we've been talking about
throughout this conversation,
what are you posting for,
what are you hoping to achieve by posting,
is it in service, Is it to help people?
Or is it to elevate yourself? I don't know, maybe you can untangle that as some for us because I'm sure some people are listening, we'll be thinking that.
Yeah, there's very few creators of content on social media that started out
content on social media that started out with a follow-up account in mind.
So me included a lot of my peers in this space,
a lot of people that I know that are extremely successful
on different platforms.
None of them started, at least the ones that I know,
none of them started to get followers.
They all started because they had something to share.
Whatever that was, whether it was comedy,
whether it's wisdom, whether it was a workout plan, a fitness plan, whatever it was,
like they had something that they did, that they were passionate about their wanted to share.
And I can only speak to myself fully, but when I started, I thought I was going to have
a full-time corporate job, and I was going to make videos on the evenings and weekends
to share a message. That's genuinely all I believe. And I, it, after my first month, I had about a thousand
subscribers on YouTube, about four videos I'd made on YouTube, about about a thousand people that
had subscribed to my channel. And most of my friends were like, great, Jay, that's where it's going
to end. Like congrats, well done. Like you got a thousand subscribers, you kind of just crept in
there in 30 days. Like, well done, that's cool. Like, how far is this going to go? And that's really the reality of what it felt like. And the interesting thing is the question was never, how do I get more
followers? The question was always, how do I make more content that impacts people? Because,
and that's the question with everything. It's like, if you make more content that genuinely impacts
people, you'll get more followers. If you build a business that serves more people,
you'll make more money. If you help a lot of people through your talents and gifts,
you will be famous and known for it. It's a byproduct of doing something properly, and that's
why I love the definition that Peter Diamandis gives, that we should redefine the word billionaire
to be someone who impacts the lives of a billion people.
Why is Jeff Bezos the richest man in the world? Because he's created a product
that we all say we want and that it solves a problem that we really need.
And so if you want to get followers, don't look at the number, ask yourself, are you really
creating the value that's going to help people
and they're going to naturally want to follow you?
And they're going to want to love your work and share it because to me, that's the worthwhile
pursuit in life because when you do that work, that work is humbling.
When you do that creativity, that's the part that makes you grateful for the success that
you get because you go, wow, like people actually care about what I have to say.
But if you're just obsessed about numbers and metrics without being obsessed by the content
the creation and the service, then you'll never be satisfied because they'll always be
someone better than you.
So for me, when I said, I'd write this book so many people are like, oh, so do you want this book
to be a best seller?
And I said, I want this book to be a best seller.
Of course I do, but I'm not going to focus on it being a best seller.
I'm going to focus on writing the best book in the world
that I can possibly write given the skills that I have.
And that's why when I talk about Dharma in the book,
which is helping everyone find their purpose,
Dharma is broken down.
Dharma means purpose loosely and has many different meanings,
but one of them is nature and purpose. You're true nature. And the three aspects that I'll share now
for the, and there's more depth in the book, the three aspects of Dharma are your passion, your skills,
and your compassion. That's what it means. When you have your passion plus your skills,
plus your compassion, that equals purpose.
But for most of us, if we're just looking at numbers and metrics and data, I mean, you'll
be dissatisfied that.
And I'm saying that as someone who really values numbers.
I understand the value of followers, social media.
I get the value of all those things and I'm a highly strategic, but I'll be completely
honest with you.
I'm not focused on the number.
I'm focused on making content.
And that's the message that if we're focused on really creating value in the world, all
of the other stuff will come naturally.
You don't have to go out and separately try and get it.
And you know, Rungan, you've done a great job of this.
You've made content that's very organic to you.
You've made content that's very natural to you. you've made content that's very natural to you.
And I think that's what people gravitate towards you and your podcasts and your books because it's
you being yourself. You're not trying to sound like someone else, you're not trying to be someone else.
And if you look at the most successful creators in the world, they're all like that. They've just
really shared their raw personality with others. Yeah, I mean, that's a sharing that Jay.
And I will just add to that, um, as I have stripped away the
lays of conditioning from my childhood and the insecurities.
And frankly, used a lot of the tools that, you know, that were in your
book, but there's a lot of new ones in there for me to be it, to be
applying, which I'm really grateful that you've written this book, because I think it is incredible,
and I will sit with a lot of these as I already am. But as I have become more me, and I, you know,
I post, frankly, you know, I'm like you, like many people, I'm a busy guy, I've got two young kids.
I made a decision that I,
my spending time with my children,
spending understracted time with my family
is more important to me than other things.
People have heard me say before,
I don't tend to, let's say,
insta story that much or one I'm at home
because my kids are around, for me it doesn't fit
with my values to model to them that every aspect of my life needs to be documented into a screen.
Now that is absolutely not a criticism of people who do do that. I genuinely isn't. It's just not
the way I choose to do things. But really what I was trying to say is that I think what you said about your focus on
making content that changes people's lives.
And of course some people are going to share it because you're giving people something
of value.
And I found not only particularly with this podcast, which is probably the favorite thing
of all the things that I do now. So I get to be myself.
I get to talk with amazing people like you.
We get to have honest conversations
that really, you know, often there's no real agenda.
It's just about trying to share your insight,
my insight, just have these sort of conversations.
And I feel I have become a happier and more content person
since I started doing my podcast because it's helped me be myself. It's exhausting trying to be someone else There's a you know what I mean? It's tiring trying to be someone else and going about to what you said at the start if people are trying to
Spend their lives living
Someone else's life
It's not curing. It's so tiring. It's so tiring. I think I'm sure it's been stated before around how it's so hard trying to act like someone
else and so much easier.
It's less effort being yourself.
But what you said, our childhood has made us believe we're not enough.
And so we think we have to be what's rewarded in society.
And actually, we're now living at a time
where what's being rewarded in society is being yourself.
And you know, and that authenticity, and you're right,
it's not about whether someone's posting
30 stories a day or not.
It's, that's not what it's about.
It's about, is that authentically the life they want to live?
That's the question.
The question isn't, do you make videos
or have a podcast or have millions of followers?
The question is, is that authentic to who you are?
And what you're really trying to do in the world,
because by the way, I know people who've impacted the world,
who have zero followers.
Yeah.
Right?
Like, I know people who've impacted the world, who have no videos or content. There's not the only way to impact the world who have zero followers. Yeah. Right? Like, I know people who have impacted the world who have no videos or content.
There's not the only way to impact the world.
That is A way to impact the world.
And that's a way that I had to pursue and Rungans pursued in a different way in his life.
And if you look at Rungans journey, in my journey, we're doing it different ways.
There's no sameness in how it's being done because everyone has that.
So don't limit yourself to believe there's only one way
to getting to where you want to go.
There are multiple parts,
and you probably have to test an experiment
and take a few of them to see which one actually
comes to fruition.
And I took many parts.
I tried so many things before I tried social media
that social media was the only option I had left.
And so for me, social media wasn't even my first choice.
Social media was my last choice of how to work, but I was getting no breakthroughs from
media companies and media execs and content level.
I just, I got no love from it all.
So I had to turn to social media.
Wow.
That's just so powerful, so incredible, Jay.
I mean, Jay, look, I had so many things to talk to you
about relationships and about service and about,
you know, the four Cs, a friendship, you know,
which again is expanding a vocabulary for people
to be able to understand their lives,
but understand their friends better,
get less frustrated, but Jay,
this podcast is called Feel Better Live More. And that's because
when we feel better in ourselves, we get more out of our life. Now, you shared some wonderful
insights and practical tips of people in the show today. I always like to leave people
where the few practical things that they can think about introducing into their life immediately
to change the quality of the lives, to change the way they feel.
You have so many tips.
I know it's a tricky question, but do you have three or four sort of closing tips,
words of wisdom for people to really start changing things immediately?
So they call them three S's, the sights, the sense and the sound.
So what we see, what we hear and what we smell
has a huge impact on how we feel.
And we actually underestimate our senses
because we rely so much on our eyes.
I'll give you an example.
Everyone's been wearing masks recently.
Right?
Like everyone's been wearing a mask recently.
How many of you struggle to understand what people
are saying because you can't read their lips anymore?
Yeah.
We're so used to looking at people's lips as they talk
that we know what words they're saying.
Now that we can't see their lips,
we realize we're actually not that great listeners.
And our ears are almost asleep,
so we rely so much on our eyes.
So let me explain to you what you can change.
Let's talk about sight, what you see.
Ask yourself, right now, what's the first thing
you see in the morning?
What's the first thing?
80% of people they see their phone first thing in the morning
and last thing in the night.
After they see their partner and before they see them
in the morning, 80% of us change it.
I want you to see something in the morning
that fills you with joy.
It could be your favorite quote,
it could be your favorite teaching,
it could be a picture that your kids drew,
that you absolutely love,
it could be a photo of your family,
it could be a work of art that inspires you.
I surround myself with my studio
with pictures of places I've lived,
people that I'm inspired by stories that I've told because it fills my mind with energy when
I walk into this room. If I walked in and saw a blank white wall, of course I'm going
to go. This is way more interesting, but my wall is more interesting than this to me because
it's meaningful. And so the first thing you see in the morning, don't make it something
reactive, don't make it a message or an email, make it something that you've chosen to inspire you.
That's the first thing.
The second thing is the sense in your life. Why is it that when you walk into a spa or you get a massage, you feel relaxed?
It's because they have sandalwood, lavender, and eucalyptus just spraying out of diffusers and candles.
And it's an instant way of feeling calm.
If you just inhale on your inward breath
for account of four and exhale for account of four,
if you just inhale Eucalyptus, Lavender, Sandalwood,
whatever scent you like from a diffuser or a candle,
you will feel a natural sense of calm in your life
and feel that clarity
that you need to drop out of that anxious feeling you may have.
And you can have a different scent in your living room, a different scent in your bedroom,
a different scent in your kitchen, one that feels right for the energy you want in that
room.
And the third and final one is sound.
So many of us don't realize the power of sound, but whether you're listening to your favorite
song or whether you listen to nature sounds, when we were monks we would rise to nature sounds.
And we found that the sound of nature is so at pace with the body and the mind. And when I lived in
New York, I'd often feel exhausted mentally, and I wonder why I exercise, I meditate, why is it that
I feel that way? And I realized because it's of something when I researched, called cognitive load,
your brain is making sense of insignificant sounds, of drilling, of construction work,
of cars and taxis and horns.
And so your brain doesn't have the power to deal with what's actually it's trying to focus on.
So ask yourself, what are the sounds in the background of your life?
Are they songs that bring you to life?
Are they music that calm you down before you go to bed?
Use sites, sense, and sounds to change the state
and energy of any environment in your home.
And if you literally walked into every room in your house
and you said, what is the site that inspires me in this room?
What is the scent that calms me in this room? And what is the sound that makes site that inspires me in this room? What is the scent that calms me in this room?
And what is the sound that makes me feel at ease in this room?
And you sound design, site design, and scent design, each of your rooms.
We're just to candle a picture and a playlist.
You'll transform the way you feel starting today.
Yeah, just brilliant tips, Jay, really, really great. And, and makes me think about
my own morning, and you know, that even sense, I like that. That is something I hadn't really
thought about. Although I often do come into the garden and sort of first thing, but I could
come in and really pay attention to what I'm smelling rather than just being in nature. I could come in and really pay attention to what I'm smelling rather than just being in nature. I could also smell something.
So I will do that tomorrow morning. You might you might be getting another voice message of gratitude.
I love it.
But I'm but I'm the spirit of what you said before of gratitude. I really I do want to say that what you have done by living your life, by going on your
journey is impact the lives of millions of people around the world. And I think you're continuing
that path with this wonderful book that I really do hope is a bestseller all around the
world because I think it's jam packed for the wisdom. And I just want to acknowledge you
for that. Say thank you. Thank you for giving up some of your precious times today.
We, me, the listeners have loved having you on for your battle with more and a look
for us for the next time.
Rangan, thank you so much. I want to be grateful to you too because, you know, when I got
that message and you've got, and I can tell, obviously in this interview, you've spent
so much time with the book,
it means a lot to me. I mean, there's no greater feeling of satisfaction as a creator than when what you create is consumed and used and practiced. And, you know, there's nothing better than that. And so, you know, you've given me a real gift today.
And I'm so grateful that you've shared this with your audience and your community.
And I can't wait to do lots more together, man.
I'm excited.
I genuinely am.
I really look forward to it because, yeah, this was such a joy and such a treat.
And this was my first thing of the day.
So I'm glad I got to do this with you.
Thank you so much.
Thanks, Jay.
Yeah.
Thank you, man. You're here right now listening to this.
There's something beautiful about that because no matter what you've experienced in your
life, you've made it to this moment.
And that on its own is an accomplishment.
The next seven minutes are about acknowledging the person most responsible for getting
you here.
You.
I'm Jay Shetty.
Welcome to the Daily J. Let's start as usual with three deep breaths to get centered. Breathing in and
breathing out. Feeling your body rise and letting it fall. One more.
And on we go.
I've talked before about how much I love sending thank you notes.
They're a powerful expression of gratitude, equally impactful for both the giver and the
receiver.
But in writing our thank you notes, there may be one important person we've been leaving out.
Researchers recruited more than 1100 study participants and had them write one of three letters.
One group wrote a thank you letter to someone who done something for them.
Another group wrote a letter describing something positive that
had happened to them. And the third group was instructed to address their letter, dear past
me, and express gratitude for something they had done for themselves. The traditional thank you notes and the letters
describing something positive were all great and filled people with happy vibes.
But the researchers noticed something interesting about the third set of
letters. When people wrote to their past selves, they tended to focus on a difficult experience, and thank themselves for persevering
through a tough time. The word brave came up frequently.
Lead researcher Matt Baldwin says that thank me letters seem to bring us closer to a sense
of who we really are by underscoring the good qualities we've shown over our lifetime.
And they remind us how we've already demonstrated to ourselves that we can overcome challenges
and obstacles. Once we recognize that we've done it before, we realize we can do it again.
We've done it before. We've realized we can do it again. We tend to think of gratitude as an external practice.
We direct our appreciation towards others, to our spouse, our dog, our favorite podcaster.
We might even give thanks to the sun for shining or to our car for being so reliable.
And that's great. It's wonderful to acknowledge
others. But don't forget yourself because you're the person most deserving of your thanks.
We're often quick to be harsh with ourselves and slow to show compassion and kindness.
Conscious self-gratitude helps with that. I know that life's
journey isn't always pretty. Sometimes we encounter challenges that were convinced are insurmountable.
Maybe you're even experiencing a situation like that now. If so, there's no better time to reach out to your past self.
Recall and acknowledge your fortitude, your creativity,
all your ability to hang in there and get to that next day,
that next hour, even that next minute.
Every single one of us is so much more powerful, capable,
and resilient than we often believe. So every once in a while,
stop and thank yourself for all the ways, large or small that you've showed up for yourself in
the past and continue to do so each day. With that in mind, let's practice a gratitude-based body scan.
We're going to check in with ourselves, part by part, while saying thanks to our body
for supporting us throughout the day.
And if any piece of this practice doesn't feel right for you or your body, go ahead
and modify it to best suit you.
First bring your attention to your eyes, closing them if you'd like and observing how they
feel.
Maybe tired, maybe alert. It's okay if you don't observe anything at all. Say a choir, thank you.
For all your eyes do, to any sounds that may be present.
Express gratitude for this moment and all others. Moving your awareness to your jaw and consciously letting it relax.
Our jaw does a lot every day, but how often do we acknowledge it? For the next few moments, I want to give you the space to decide which body parts to scan
and thank.
Maybe there are lungs for breathing, the heart for beating, the hands for working so hard.
Totally your core.
And now let's open this up.
With our time remaining, I want you to think about how you would start your thank me
note. want you to think about how you would start, you'll thank me, no.
Begin with, dear past me, and express gratitude for something, anything you've done for yourself.
Your homework is to finish your letter today,
and I'd encourage you to put it on paper.
Remember you are deserving of gratitude from yourself.
I should also say that I'm grateful for you and I look forward to seeing you tomorrow.
I'm Yvonne Gloria and I'm Maite Gomes-Rajon.
We're so excited to introduce you to our new podcast, Hungry for History!
On every episode, we're exploring some of our favorite dishes, ingredients, beverages,
from our Mexican culture.
We'll share personal memories and family stories,
decode culinary customs, and even provide a recipe or two for you to try at home. Listen to Hungry for History on the I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, it's Debbie Brown, host of the Deeply Well Podcast, where we hold conscious conversations
with leaders and radical healers and wellness around topics that are meant to expand and support you on your
well-being journey. Deeply well is your soft place to land, to work on yourself without judgment, to heal, to learn, to grow, to become who you deserve to be.
Deeply well with Debbie Brown is available now on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen to podcasts. Namaste.
Regardless of the progress you've made in life, I believe we could all benefit from wisdom
on handling common problems, making life seem more manageable, now more than ever.
I'm Eric Zimmer, host of the One-Dee Feed Podcast, where I interview thought-provoking guests
who offer practical wisdom that you can use to create the life you want. 25 years ago, I was homeless and addicted to heroin. I've made my way through addiction
recovery, learned to navigate my clinical depression, and figured out how to build a fulfilling
life. The one you feed has over 30 million downloads and was named one of the best podcasts
by Apple Podcasts. Oprah Magazine named this is one of 22 podcasts to help you live your
best life. You always have the chance to begin again and feed the best of yourself.
The trap is the person often thinks they'll act once they feel better.
It's actually the other way around.
I have had over 500 conversations with world-renowned experts and yet I'm still striving to be better.
Join me on this journey.
Listen to the one you feed on the iHeart Radio App Apple Podcast or wherever you get your podcasts.
Yet, I'm still striving to be better.
Join me on this journey.
Listen to the one you feed on the I Heart Radio app,
Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.