On Purpose with Jay Shetty - 8 Ways to Improve Your Circle & Accelerate Your Impact in the World
Episode Date: April 29, 2022The people worth keeping in our life are those that see our potential and encourage us to work on them to achieve success at work, in our career, in relationships, and in life. Let the values they sta...nd by influence us positively and allow the valuable life experience and knowledge they share to give us a better life perspective.This week, we listen to Steven Bartlett of The Diary Of A CEO interview Jay Shetty about his childhood, professional career, monkhood, and the life of purpose he is leading as he chats with successful people in pursuit of success, wellbeing, mental health, and love.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/ Key Takeaways:00:00 Intro04:04 Formative things from the early years08:05 3 Steps to self-awareness12:23 I talk aloud to myself a lot16:23 Loneliness and solitude are completely different21:14 The importance of surrounding yourself with people of good value30:58 Are you a remarkable quitter?36:25 It’s always about the middle path43:18 3 effective formats to meditate49:20 How to incorporate meditation in your life54:05 Fear can be healthy or unhealthy based on how we use it01:00:47 We aren’t perfect01:13:38 What does it take to impact someone’s life?01:16:48 Simple fundamentals to live a happy life 01:24:03 The partnership with Calm01:29:40 The people who see your potential01:42:53 The definition of true successLike 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!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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What do a flirtatious gambling double agent in World War II?
An opera singer who burned down an honorary to kidnap her lover, and a pirate queen who
walked free with all of her spoils, haven't comment.
They're all real women who were left out of your history books.
You can hear these stories and more on the Womanica podcast.
Check it out on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen.
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. Oprah, Kobe Bryant, Kevin Hart,
Lewis Hamilton, and many, many more. 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 iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast,
or wherever you get your podcasts. Join the journey soon.
What if you could tell the whole truth about your life,
including all those tender invisible
things we don't usually talk about?
I'm Megan Devine.
Host of the podcast, it's okay that you're not okay.
Look, everyone's at least a little bit not okay these days, and all those things we don't
usually talk about, maybe we should.
This season, I'm joined by Stellar, Gas like Abormatte, Rachel Cargol, and so many more.
It's okay that you're not okay.
New episodes each and every Monday,
available on the iHeartRadio app,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Hey everyone, welcome back to On Purpose,
the number one health podcast in the world,
thanks to each and every single one of you.
I am so excited to share this very special conversation
with you today.
I know that I usually dive into a theme,
but this podcast was super deep.
I think I opened up like I haven't
for a long, long time in a conversation
with my dear friend Steven Bartlett
on his podcast, I re-evers CEO.
And I know you're going to love this conversation.
I talk a lot about the journey I've been on,
mistakes I've made, flaws I have,
things I'm personally working on,
and I think it's gonna give you a deeper insight
into our relationship.
So I'm excited for you to listen to this,
make sure you tag me, share your insights,
I cannot wait to see them.
Thank you so much.
This is a really difficult question to ask,
but it is the best question you can ask yourself.
I enjoyed being a monk, as much as I enjoy understanding media.
And that's really paradoxical for a lot of people, but that's just my truth.
I've always wanted to share meditation at scale with the world.
If you just keep trying to change your environment, hoping that your life's going to improve,
you're going to feel dissatisfied at the next place, and I feel're just conditioned to say okay you don't like your job quit your job,
you don't like your relationship quit your relationship and I think we just keep saying that it's
this external shell that we're in. When it's actually this shell and what's happening inside of it,
that's defining all of these perspectives. I believe that to create happiness day-to-day in one
year, in one month, in a week, you have to have...
day-to-day in one year, in one month, in a week. You have to have...
Quick one. Can you do me a favor if you're listening to this
and hit the subscribe button, the follow button?
Wherever you're listening to this podcast, thank you so much.
Jay Shetty is a household name all around the world.
Here's someone that's provided an inspiration, wisdom, and insight
to billions of people using social media. I don't need to tell you who he is
because his reputation precedes himself. In his early years, he was lost. Becoming a monk
helped him to find himself. And through service, he's gone on to touch the lives of billions of people
through social media. But who is he really? Who's the guy behind the following? Me and Jay have
a connection that I'm yet to experience with pretty much any guest that sat here with me.
And I know you're going to feel that today. This is a truly special, honest, open conversation
between two men about so many things that I genuinely think the world needs to hear.
Thank you, Jay. And when I say thank you to Jay, you're going to understand why shortly.
So without further ado, I'm Stephen Butler, and this is the Diary of a CEO.
I hope nobody's listening. But if you are, then please keep this yourself.
I'm not sure if I can do it. Jane, first of all, you know, I usually start these podcasts in a much more serious way,
but it's good to see you back in the UK.
It's good to see you, and I was just saying this to you offline that I think the first
time we met was around three years ago, three or four years ago in New York, and I think
we have this plan to become best friends.
So we're like, we're like, we this plan to become best friends. We're like,
we're going to see each other. This is this, this is this. And then all of a sudden, I
moved to LA. Yeah. And then you moved back to London too. Yeah. It's so good to see you,
man. It's great to be reunited. I do feel like we've got so much in common in so many unbelievable
ways. But the reason why I was so excited about this conversation is because we've also
got so many, we've walked a different path in our lives, and you're
such a self-aware, sort of self-analysical human being. So the wisdom that I've gained
from watching you online over the years is someone that comes from London, is from the UK as
well, and is speaking to the world through their content and channels. I find truly inspirational.
So let's get into it. So one of the things I always start with with people, and I think
this comes from my experience with like studying childhood psychology is
trying to understand what it was in their early years
that has led them to go on the path they went on
and ultimately to be sat here.
When you look back at those early years in your life
in growing up in London,
what were the formative things that you point at
in hindsight and go, you know,
I wouldn't be who I am now,
a bit of an anomaly if that hadn't happened.
I think one of the biggest things would be that I felt I mediated my parents' marriage
when I was younger.
And so I was there, go to person, for my mom and my dad.
And I have a really good relationship with both of them and love them both.
And they would come to me with their challenges
and their issues and their pain points.
And as I was growing up,
I felt that I was always trying to reconcile,
discuss,
converse, negotiate for both of them on either side.
And one thing I realized very early on as a young child
was I never wanted to take child was, I never wanted
to take a side. I never wanted to make one of them win and one of them lose. I never saw
one of them right and one of them wrong. I really saw them both as two humans who were
trying their best, but just like me, were naturally flawed and fallible and made mistakes.
And I think that gave me a sense of compassion
that runs through to today for myself
and for others and for people that I work with
and the people that we communicate through
the podcast and videos.
Because I just saw very early on in my life
that people could mean well,
people could try their best,
people could try to be loving and share kindness,
but they could still feel that things
weren't working out for them.
So I look at that as a massive moment in my past
because now when I look back at it,
I think I've just been doing this for so long.
Like I feel like I started doing this when I was probably six, seven, maybe 10 years old.
And so now to be still doing it today, it feels like something that was a natural role
that I embodied at that time.
And it's now a role that is evolved into looking internally for myself, also looking at the things that I adopted
from that time that were uncomfortable and things that made me question my own self-worth
and my own meaning of life.
What were those things?
I would say that, for me, I realized that we either try to repeat or avoid what we saw
in our childhood. And that happens either unconsciously or
consciously. So you could be unconsciously repeating what you saw in your childhood or
you could be consciously avoiding it. And I found that there were parts of me that were
really great at avoiding some of the negative things, but there were also subconscious parts
of me that adopted some of those behavior traits that I only discovered in the last two years.
And so I'll give an example with my wife.
I sometimes played the role of sacrificing and overgiving, but then expecting her to give
the same amount back. Now, the way I see sacrifice now is that
if you sacrifice something for someone
and then you want it back, it's not a sacrifice,
it's a transaction, you can't give someone a discount
and then ask them to pay full price
and then say it was a sacrifice
because it wasn't, it was a transaction.
And I saw that in my life, because of the way
I'd received loved from extended families
or loved from school or teachers or whatever it may have been,
I was loved in that way, where I was loved,
but then made to feel guilty if I didn't repay it in full.
And I saw myself adopting that in my own loving relationships
with my wife, with my family,
with my sister, and I literally only spotted that two years ago.
And I thought to myself, this has to stop.
I can't repeat this cycle.
What is the work you do to spot those, to illuminate some of those kind of subconscious
behavior patterns that, because we all have them going on in the back room of our lives
in our minds. We have our childhood, the lessons we learn, and the limiting beliefs we learn.
Almost acting as the puppet master of our adult lives.
And so how does one become, get to a point where they can spot that in go?
Do you know what, that comes from that?
What is there an exercise you've done is there?
You know, you tell me.
I think the first thing is that when you experience conflict with someone or you experience a disagreement
or a disconnect with someone, our society version is blame them.
It's therefore they upset you.
They're wrong.
And our friends will agree with that.
When you go and tell your friend that so and so did something, they'll say, oh, yeah,
well, you know, he or she's a XYZ.
XYZ, sorry.
XYZ, XYZ, sorry, XYZ, the, the,
the, the, the, the, the, the, the X, Y, Z, of, they're so and so, they're like this,
they're like that.
And actually, in that moment, I think the best thing we can do is what's my accountability
in this?
What part of this have I created for myself?
This is a really uncomfortable, difficult question
to ask, but it is the best question you can ask yourself.
If every time something goes wrong
or something doesn't work out,
instead of blaming someone else or blaming yourself,
if you can pause and say, what part of this am I responsible for?
And I think the reason why that's difficult
is because we see everything as binary.
We see it as it's either therefore,
or it's all my fault.
It's all your fault, or it's all my fault.
And the truth is, there is no all.
It's all parts.
It's partly your fault, and it's partly my fault.
But if I don't understand what my part to play is,
then I can't actually understand it.
So the first step is what's my part?
That's the first part of the exercise.
The second part of the exercise is now that I know
what my part is, let me focus on what skill I'm missing,
let me focus on what growth I haven't had,
let me focus on what part of my life feels incomplete that makes me act in my incomplete
way with others.
So what part of me is missing?
And I found that when I was over sacrificing or overgiving, that's because I was trying
to demand love from someone else and demand validation from someone else.
So I was almost trying to achieve or earn that love and validation.
And so I realized I wasn't giving it to myself.
And so now I've realized that whatever you want from someone else, give it to yourself first.
If you want compliments from someone else, give them to yourself first.
If you want validation from someone else, give it to yourself first. If you want validation from someone else, give
it to yourself first, because no matter how many of them they give you, if you never gave
it to yourself in the first place, it will never be enough. So that's the second step.
Whatever you want from someone else, give it to yourself first. And the third step I'd
say to get to that self-awareness is simply sitting down and plotting the three most difficult times in your life.
So sit down and write down what would have been the three most difficult times in my life
for the most painful decision-making points of transition in my life.
And then ask yourself, when you made good decisions, what was the environment like?
Who were you listening to? What were people saying around you? And when you made
poor decisions, what was the environment like? What were people saying? Who were
you listening to? And you'll start to spot a pattern and I found that in my
life, anytime I make a good decision, most people disagree with me. I have to
listen to my inner voice and I'm usually doing
something against the grain. Now that's my pattern but everyone has to find their own.
You've reached a point of self-awareness where you can literally pinpoint the steps of doing that
and obviously your coaching and all the work you do has exacerbated that extremely.
Is there like a practical day-to-day habit you've installed in your life to be able
to look back at how Jay's behaving? Is it a no-pad? Is it voice notes in your phone? Is it meditation?
What is the day-to-day practice that's got you to this point?
So I would say that over time I've done journaling. I love voice notes because I like
speaking sometimes more than writing, but I'd say the biggest one, if I'm completely honest with you,
like sitting here with you and you're looking in my eyes,
asking me that question.
I'm like, the honest answer is,
I talk to myself a lot while driving.
I talk out loud to myself a lot.
And I will sit there while I'm driving
and I will talk through that day about a situation
where I didn't like how I behaved or a situation
where I was really happy about how I behaved.
And so I'll pinpoint and I always think it's really powerful to pinpoint a point where
you were below your expectation and a point where you were above your expectation.
And I'll sit there and ask myself, why was it that I was above my expectation?
Why did I have the ability in that moment to act in that way?
I'll give an example of where I was below my expectation the other day.
I was going to play tennis with a friend in the morning and I was running late because
I woke up, I was figuring things out that morning.
I had a few work emails from the night before.
I'm eight hours ahead of LA right now, so I had things to catch up on. I'm running late to play tennis. We've got
the court booked and it's only booked for an hour, so we might be late. Something really
insignificant, by the way. I turn up and I meet the lady at the front and they haven't
been able to give me a membership card because I'm only here for 10 days and then I'm like,
here's my membership number and they can't figure it out and they don't know if I'm only here for 10 days and then I'm like, here's my membership number and they can't figure it out
and they don't know if I'm in the system
and I'm again later for the court.
And I'm holding my own and I'm on the verge
of just being like, get on with it.
Like, this is not that complicated.
And I resist from that.
But in my head I'm thinking, why did that even happen?
Like, why am I even feeling the urge to put a simple person
trying to do their job?
Why am I thinking to release my anger and anguish onto them?
And when I thought about that later that day,
it was all because I was late.
I was frustrated that my friends gonna be upset
that we're 30 minutes late for the court.
I was upset that we're gonna get even less time.
And I was about to take it out on an innocent person who actually has nothing to do with
any of it who's trying to do their job.
And so for me, talking out loud when I'm on my own, spending time, actually now what I'm
answering your question, spending time alone is the only place where you get to have these
conversations.
And most of us are spending time away from being alone because we're scared of having
these conversations.
I'm sure you've seen they did that study where they asked men and women whether they either
wanted to be alone with their thoughts for 15 minutes or give themselves an electric
shock. Now the results will surprise you.
30% of women gave themselves an electric shock,
and 60% of men gave themselves an electric shock.
And the reason was because they didn't want to be alone
with their thoughts for 15 minutes.
We struggle so much with the idea of being present
in our own minds and bodies and hearts
That we distract ourselves. So really the habit is
Being present with myself with my thoughts and working through
When I'm happy with myself
And when I think I could have done better
You know, I really
Really can relate to that point
about not wanting to be alone with your thoughts,
not from my own experiences,
but because I've got friends around me,
specifically over the last year
when we've been in this lockdown,
who have really struggled.
And even over the Christmas period,
I've got a couple of friends who really, really struggled
because they are alone with their thoughts.
And you've spoken there to the value
of sitting alone with your thoughts
and silence and self-contemplation.
But what is it in the human, in a human
that makes them not want to be alone
with their thoughts?
Why for some are their thoughts so such an unpleasant place
to be?
I think it's because we've equated loneliness
and being alone with abandonment.
And those are two completely different ideas.
You can be lonely, but that doesn't mean
you've been abandoned.
And we confuse this so much, Paul Tillett writes about this
and he says that the challenge today is that we think that there's
only one word for being alone and we call it loneliness.
And he says we've forgotten about a second word, it's called solitude.
Solitude and loneliness externally look the same, but they're completely different things.
And he says that solitude is the strength of being alone.
And loneliness is the weakness.
And to me, it's because being alone
feels like abandonment.
It feels like everyone has left us.
It feels like we're alone at the end of the party
and no one's gonna stay.
We've created a feeling of being enamored
and being forced to admire being together. My other half, my better half, the person who
completes me. It's like all of this language is phrased in a way to make you feel half and
incomplete. When someone came to school and they didn't have someone to sit next to them,
complete. When someone came to school and they didn't have someone to sit next to them, that person was considered the loner. If you had a birthday party and no one showed up,
you were considered unpopular. All of our self-worth since we were young has been defined
by do you have people around you, not the quality of those people, not the depth of those
people, not how much those people actually love you,
just did you have people around you.
And so we've just been conditioned to believe
that being alone means being lonely,
means being abandoned,
when actually being in solitude
could be the most beautiful thing we could do.
So it's just as a society,
we've got to unlearn that conditioning that's
made us forcefully believe that if you don't have someone else, if you turn up to a wedding
and you don't have a plus one, that's like one of the most stressful things for people.
I don't know who I'm going to take. Why is it that prom? If you don't have a date, every
single major life event graduating,
weddings, they're all based around having someone else there
to celebrate you.
Why, why can't we just celebrate ourselves?
And I think that's where we've lost it.
We've lost the idea of celebrating ourselves.
Do you think that, I was just thinking that,
I think that through and I was thinking,
you know, if 10,000 years ago in the tribes of Africa, if I was without a tribe,
I would have been from a reproductive standpoint,
less attractive.
No woman would want to have been with me
because a tribe speaks to the resources I can provide
and bringing up a baby for our family.
But also, you know, I would have been in a great danger.
My social status would have decayed.
And typically, they see this in tribes, I, in monkeys where if you fall out of the
tribe eventually, you get sick or die.
So do you think that's a prehistoric part of our conditioning, or is it like a social,
new age social construct?
I think prehistoricly it makes sense.
But I think the social construct has been that equating
solitude or loneliness with isolation, seclusion and separation. And I think we confuse the two ideas.
Spending time every day in solitude is not me saying to you, don't talk to anyone or yeah.
You're not good enough. Right. Yeah. And it's not like me saying spending some time talking to
yourself and being alone with your
thoughts means never go to a party or an event.
I just think we've got really poor as humans as entertaining two ideas that are supposedly
conflicting, but recognizing that there's a middle ground.
We're poor at saying, okay, well, Jan, Stephen, aren't saying be alone or be surrounded
by people.
We're saying spend some time alone and be intentional about who you spend your time with.
And for some reason, the human mind goes, no, no, no, I think you're telling me that I
have to go live in a forest and be away from everyone.
But that's not really what solitude is.
Solitude is I am comfortable spending time with myself for a few moments a day and enjoying
my own company. And speaking of spending time with people then, so one a day, enjoying my own company.
And speaking of spending time with people then,
so one of the concepts you read a lot about
is this kind of 75% rule.
People often discuss the importance of the company you keep,
whether it's their wisdom, their attitude,
their positivity, their optimism, whatever,
and the effect that can have on you as a human being.
What have you done in your life?
And also what is the importance from what you've experienced of surrounding yourself with people that have
good values that are equally ambitious, that share our sort of similarities as it relates
to who you want to become? Is it important? Does it matter?
I think one of the biggest mistakes I've made and I think we make as humans is we often look for divinity in humanity.
You're looking for that divine person that has all the answers and that is infallible
and perfect.
And when you seek divinity in humanity, you're left with insecurity and anxiety because no one fulfills that divine
search.
And so for me, what I really had to understand as I went down that road and felt like I
was let down and felt like people made me feel unworthy or unequipped, was I recognized
that there were four pillars of relationships and they are
care, competence, consistency and character. Every single person in your life is
going to be able to give you or should be able to give you at least one of these
four characteristics. Very rarely if ever will one person give you all four.
And if you're lucky, you might have a few people
in your life that give you two or three.
So let's talk about each of them.
Care, my mom, there is no one in the world
who cares for me more than my mom.
She would do anything for me, she'd be there for me,
all she wants to make sure,
doesn't matter what I've achieved or what I've done.
If she picks up the phone to me,
her first question is, have you eaten?
What did you eat?
Are you safe?
Are you healthy?
Right?
Like, that's all she cares about.
Now, my mom isn't the person that I go to for business advice.
Or she's not the person I'm saying hypothetically that I go to for social media advice.
That's not her competence, but she doesn't need to be.
She cares for me and that's what I get from her.
Now, let's go to competence.
If I'm thinking about starting a business, you dragging over here, right?
You'd be a great friend to call up.
Your somebody who understands what it takes to get investors, scale a business, build teams,
manage internationally, grow, scale, sell.
Like you have that journey and you have that network, you have that career.
I'd also care about you.
I know you'll say, I've got two out of four of you.
And you got good character.
You don't have the consistency to see each other enough.
So three out of four.
So 35%.
Yes, 75%.
And so for that, for me, is that perfect example of this competence there.
And there is care there, which is wonderful.
And there's character there.
I believe you're someone of good character.
And that's the next one, character.
There are some people in our life that hold us to higher values.
They help us grow with greater integrity.
They help us see things beyond what we're chasing.
They make us look beyond our desires and make us recognize that there's so much more to life.
And those people are massively important.
And those people may not be the people we see every week, they may not be the people we
see every day, they may not be the people that we call up, but you need them as your compass,
the people with character or your compass.
And then finally, you have the people that are consistent.
You have some mates that you just know are always going to pick up the phone.
You know that if you need to move house, you've got a family emergency, you know which
friend you call.
They may not be the competent business advisor.
They may care about you, but they don't care about you as deeply as your mom does, but
they are consistently always there for you.
And that's beautiful, but the problem is,
when we look at our consistent friend,
we think, well, why are you not competent?
When we look at our competent friend, we think,
why don't you have good character?
We look at our character friend and say,
well, why aren't you always there?
And so we're always looking for which see they don't have,
rather than appreciating for them
for exactly what they bring to our life.
You know, I met your wonderful wife.
Yeah, you did.
Yeah, and you're, yeah.
Honestly, in a room full of hundreds and hundreds of people, if there was a
light, like if she felt like a physical, like a light in the room, just her
energy was just unbelievable.
And it's, it's remarkable because she, she felt so much like you in so
anyways.
I'm guessing when you were talking about that third point, about character and for
how you're using, showing you things in life that are beyond what you might have thought
and the meaning of life.
And, you know, from my own 10 minute conversation with her, I feel like she must be in that category,
right?
Yeah.
Right.
I always used to say to people like, so people become friends with me and I hope they
like me. And then I introduced them to my wife and, like, so people become friends with me. And I hope they like me.
And then I introduce them to my wife.
And then I never hear from them again.
So she steals all my friends.
And I'm not even just saying that.
That's genuinely true.
She is stolen every single one of my friends as soon as they meet.
I'm not surprised.
So I can't introduce anyone to her anymore.
But yeah, she's just, I don't know how, and it's been interesting because my wife has taught me so much more about me
and life than I ever thought a partner could. And it's because as my so my wife and I've been together
since before my external career took off. And so she was with me when I had no money, no job.
She introduced me to her family when I had no money,
no job, I met her parents, I met her extended family,
I had no career plan.
So I've been with her for around eight years now
and far before everything kind of took off externally.
And what was really, really phenomenal was
as my life took off externally, I started
to develop this need for validation from her for what I was achieving.
So if I get a big deal, I'd be like, look, look, look, look what I did.
Like look what I did.
Like, isn't this amazing?
And she wouldn't be impressed by it.
And then if I did something and it went viral,
I'd be like, oh, look at this, look at this,
look how cool this is, isn't this amazing?
And she wasn't impressed by it.
And then if I was on the front cover of magazine
or something, I'd be like, oh, look how cool this is,
like, look at this.
And she wouldn't admire it.
And for a long time, I started to think,
did I marry the wrong person?
And I was thinking to myself, did I, am I with the wrong person? And I was thinking to myself, did I,
am I with the wrong person?
Because I know plenty of people who are telling me
that that cover's amazing and that video's amazing
and that podcast is amazing and that person's amazing.
Like, am I not worthy of respect?
And I realized, as I reflected on that, as I said earlier,
I was like, what part of this am I accountable for?
And the answer was really simple
My life my wife loved me for everything that came before that
She loves me despite all of that if all of that was to go away tomorrow
She'd still love me and I'll, isn't that the most beautiful thing? Like, isn't that what we all want? Isn't that what we're truly craving?
Is that we are loved beyond our appearance, our achievements, our ambitions, and our goals?
And I had that, but I wasn't seeing that because I wanted to be loved for my ambitions,
my achievements, my goals. And so, yes, when you talk about my wife being a light, she's one of those people for sure because she's been my guide, my ambitions, my achievements, my goals. And so yes, when you talk about my wife being a light, she's one of those people for
sure because she's been my guide, my coach, my teacher, without even knowing.
If you ask her this question, she wouldn't say that she was doing it intentionally, but
she's been such a great teacher and light in my life in so many ways.
And so I'm always just trying to, anytime she annoys me, I'm like, there's a lesson in this for me.
And there's gonna be something really profound
in this for me because she's cut from a different cloth.
She's remarkable.
I don't even know how she's like,
oh, parents, her parents are incredible.
And they've given her a lot of love.
And so I see that kind of flow through her.
It's so funny, I burst out laughing then
because it reminds me a lot of my girlfriend.
And I've said this on this podcast a lot.
And it's, I've never actually realized the kind of fundamental truth in what you said
there.
But whenever I talk about my girlfriend, I say she doesn't really care when I, if I'm
number one in the charts or if I'm number one here or that, the reaction I get from her
versus other people like my boys
It's kind of a bit more mute
Yeah, maybe she just doesn't care about my you know my like prefer
You've what you've highlighted there is in fact that is somebody that values
Something else yes in you. So my girlfriend would be very very happy and very very impressed with me doing a bunch of other things
That would maybe a bit more pure in their values.
She would celebrate those things.
It's not like she's not celebrating me.
It's just, I don't get the euphoria from the number one in the podcast chart.
Yes.
And it's a question of values.
And in fact, as you say, that's what we should all be looking for.
But society has taught me that you clap when you get big numbers on stuff or you go number
one or the bank
balance is big. So, so interesting, it's probably, I guess someone's going to draw the conclusion
from that, they're going to look at their partner who's been clapping because they've got
like a promotion at work. And they're going to go, you've got by far you love.
And not at all, we should, we should be supportive partners about everything that our partners do,
but it is beautiful that you get an opportunity to learn about your partner's values by what they value in
your own success.
And that doesn't mean that, like you just said, like your girlfriend and my wife, is not
happy when something goes number one or does great.
Of course they're happy.
But there's something deeper than that that makes them happier.
And I think that's really special and that's that character in that light.
When I was reading through your story
and from what I've observed with your story,
there was some really interesting similarities
that really reminded me of mine,
but I feel like are an exception.
And you know what, you said it before we started talking.
You said we were talking about various business things
and business decisions you've made. And also, we were
talking about you moving to LA after just going there with your
wife for a week. And you said, well, it just felt like the right
thing to do. We were there for one week and it felt like the
right thing to do. So although you were leaving New York where
you had all of this stuff and you were starting to build your
presence there,
you used your compass became how you felt. And when I looked through your history from your very, very early days, from a teenager to school to university to going off and becoming a monk to
getting a job at a centre, then pick game picked up by Ariana Huffington, Huffington Post,
and quitting after six months
because you were doing this other thing,
you are a remarkable quitter.
And you seem to be one that's guided by this compass
of how does this feel, not what will people think.
Talk to me about that.
And is that observation accurate?
It's such a hard way to live in one sense
and such an easy way to live in one sense.
That observation, I never put it in those words, but I love those words.
And I've heard you talk about that before about being a good quitter.
And I love that.
I think what you're saying is true.
I agree with you.
I've never articulated in the way you just did, but it feels so true.
I, from a very young age, just felt there was this strong inner voice and I believe everyone has
it. This isn't me being religious or spiritual or woo woo. This is me saying that there is a voice that
we all hear in our minds, in our hearts, in our heads, wherever you want to say it is. It's there.
to say it is, it's there. And the challenge that happens is in our early years, you're told to tell it to be quiet. So every time that voice says, well, maybe no, no, no, no, no,
just do what they're saying, do what they're told. Get on that conveyor belt, get on that
assembly line, stick that barcode on your back, become a machine, go be a robot. And it's almost programmed.
And so that voice that is not machine like that voice is the human inside of us is being
trained to be a machine.
And so we start treating ourselves like machines.
And machines, you just program them and then press enter and then it gives you what it
wants.
But we don't function that way.
We're a conversation
in the universe. We're not a program. And so if you're a conversation and you're an interaction,
you're dynamic, that in a voice becomes so squashed that now by the time we're 20, 30, 40, 50,
50, 60, 70, whatever age you are, you can't hear it anymore. So you say, oh, that's some spiritual mumbo jumbo stuff
because I don't hear that voice.
But that's just because we quietened it.
So for me, even till this day, and by the way,
I have more things trying to quiet that voice today.
I had a conversation with my team recently,
I was talking about a few new things I wanted to try out this year.
And a lot of people said to me, they said,
Jay, don't you think that's a risk to the brand you've created?
Don't you think that's a risk to who you are?
And I said, well, I haven't worked this hard
to not do what I truly want.
Like, I haven't got this far by being someone else.
I've got this far by being true to myself.
So I can only continue to do that.
And so, yes, there are things that I do
that are slightly unconventional for people who've been monks in the past. There are certain
ways that I live my life. And there are certain things that I enjoy. And I always say this,
I enjoyed being a monk as much as I enjoy understanding media. And that's really paradoxical
for a lot of people, but that's just my truth. I enjoy building a business and learning about what it takes
as much as I learn trying to understand
how to meditate deeper and go internal.
I enjoy and appreciate what I gain from all these pursuits.
And I see them as being this beautiful,
you know, beautiful symbiotic, synergetic combination of learning and life and experience,
but the problem is our mind has said, no, those things are paradoxical.
That's an oxymoron.
You can't connect those two things.
Those two things are unconnectable.
And I'm like, well, Steve Jobs said that creativity is connecting things and connected
thinkers will rule the future. So if we can't spot connections in anomalies,
then I think we actually sell us off short.
And so when you say being a remarkable quitter,
I see that as me saying,
I only have trained myself to know
that I can only do what I really feel like doing
with the awareness that this could be a risk,
but I'm okay with that.
Does that answer your question?
100%.
And you know, you, you put it up another point now, which I think is, is equally, and this
sounds a bit like a pun, but equally connected, which is, you know, society will give you a label.
They'll say, okay, you're a monk.
So, act like and behave like a monk.
We know what monks are.
Here's the instruction manual of being a monk.
And if you do anything other than the instruction manual there, then they'll say contradiction.
They'll say, you're a monk, how'd you live in LAJ?
Yes.
You have a nice home.
You make money.
And so what is it about these labels that we give people?
And then we society then tries to enforce.
And if you step outside of the implicit instructions
of the box that we've labeled you in, we go fraud.
Yeah.
What is that?
There's a really good meme on social media
that I've seen fly about for years.
And it says, society says, be yourself.
And then it says, no, not like that.
And I don't know who invented it,
but it's been out there in the meme world for years.
And I love it because I'm like, that's exactly it.
And the way you just explain what you said,
I've actually never heard it said better than that.
So you've just explained in 30 seconds.
I've run a roundabout for the past three minutes.
But that's exactly it.
That we want to label people, we want to label things,
we want to label everyone.
Now let's take the rock, Dwayne the Rock Johnson.
We lay, we could label him a wrestler, but that wrestler
is one of the biggest actors in the world today
and forget actors, he's a brand beyond that.
Now, if we labeled him as a wrestler and said,
no, no, no, you just have to stay a wrestler.
You never get to see this.
If you look at Steve Jobs,
well, you started by making computers.
You're a computer maker, so just make computers.
Why are you inventing iTunes?
Why are you inventing the phone?
Now, I think it gets harder when it gets to things that are spiritually intertwined.
And I grew up with a belief for a long time that if you were truly spiritual,
you had to be poor, you had to have nothing, you had to be completely detached and disconnected.
And I found that that's a worthy pursuit
and has some beautiful rewards at the end of it as a journey.
But I also saw having lived that life as a monk
that there were certain areas of impact,
certain conversations that we never got to be a part of.
There were certain things in mainstream society
that we never got to shift.
And that's something that called out to my heart personally, where I felt,
well, what if mental health was mainstream, that that was a mainstream conversation
that everyone in the world had access to the tools to help themselves for free
through podcasting, through interviews, through books, through videos,
through content, what if everyone in the world had access to what I have access to as a monk?
But what does that need?
That needs staff, it needs employees, it needs eight cameras, it needs a microphone,
it needs people, it needs teams, it needs a business.
So what looks like a business on the outside is just purpose on the inside.
But we're so
the outside is just purpose on the inside, but we're so scored and trained to judge things for what they externally look like, not what they internally are, that we don't give
ourselves that expansive, abundant mindset to say, well, maybe this could be more.
Now, I'm not saying that I don't have imperfections and I'm not saying that I don't love things
as well. I like nice things.
I like nice clothes.
I like fashion.
I like living in a nice space.
So I like nice things that I would never shy away from that.
But I'm also fully aware that I don't depend on my happiness on those things.
I'm not putting what I believe is going to make me joyful on those things.
But I appreciate having them. But I've also appreciated life when I didn't have them.
So they've never defined whether I've worked hard or worked on my purpose, if that makes
sense.
100%.
Now, there's two times in this conversation where you've made points where the kind of conclusion
that my head has arrived at is we have to meet in the middleist if we're going to make progress.
The first time you did that was when you were talking about having like an argument with a wife or a partner or whatever
it might be. You've got to actually like meet in the middle and say, this is maybe where
I can improve and maybe this is where you step to file. And then you set it again there
with the example of spirituality and probably like the business world. They're seen as
polar opposites. One is all about, you know, maybe a less, less of a desire for material possession and attainment and climbing and capitalism.
And the other is the definition of it. And you're saying, well, really, if we are to spread the
message of spirituality around the world, we're going to need to learn a little bit from the other
side about building and scaling. And I just think that phrase, the truth is in the middle, has haunted
me for the last couple of weeks
since I came back from Indonesia
because it seems to be the nature of everything.
And we're actually living away from that
as a Polaroi society, black, white, police, the people,
rich, poor, you know.
And a woman, exactly.
So yeah.
And it's beautiful you said that actually
because the Buddha always talked about the middle path.
So he called it the middle path.
In just that reason for what you just said, that it was always about the middle path. So he called it the middle path. Interesting.
All that reason for what you just said,
that it was always about the middle path,
that the answer was somewhere,
I interviewed Kristen Bell recently,
and she wrote a book called,
Why the World Needs More Purple People.
And that's because of the red and blue states.
So the idea of this,
idea of like, meeting in the middle,
that there's some answers that you only come across
if you can entertain
this idea and this idea and look for the connection. And what I love is that for everything
we're talking about, someone's thought about it and talked about it before. And when I think
of someone who defined what we're talking about really well, and this is a quote, a thought
that an insight that I try and live my life by and
it's from Martin Luther King.
And he said that the people that love peace need to learn to organize themselves as well
as the people who love war.
And to me, that's what's been missing so for so long in spirituality, in wellness, in
health is that we can speak about these things in this
really organic, beautiful way.
But if it doesn't get organized, and if it doesn't get strategic, and it doesn't get
focused, it just kind of feels like splattered pain.
And it doesn't allow people to practically apply it in their life.
So sometimes when people say, Jay, what you're saying is so simple, it's so basic.
I'm like, yeah, I'm choosing to do that because that's what we all need.
Like, don't we all need to make this really simple and easy and practical?
I know that's what I need. And by the way, I love getting caught up
in a heavy intellectual conversation. And I've studied the
Vedas that are 5,000 years old and I can rel off
verses and talk about philosophical intricacies, but
I don't think that's going to help people at this stage.
And that doesn't help me when I started.
So for me, I like to focus in on how can we get focused around powerful, simple ideas.
And a powerful, simple idea that loads of my guests come here and talk about.
And it's interesting that they do because they are incredibly successful people typically. Is this idea of meditation and the power of meditation. Now I've heard
this word meditation for many a year and increasingly over time I've become more compelled by it
and started doing it. Thanks a lot to my girlfriend as well.
So and you write about it a lot in your book. I mean, a couple of the chapters mentioned,
I mean, pretty much several of the chapters mentioned the power of meditation. Talk to me about this simple idea of meditation
and what the impact has been for you and can be for those listening.
So in the book, I present three different types of meditation that I was trained in as
a monk and that I was exposed to. And they are breath work, visualization and mantra.
So if you look at all types of meditations
that exist today in the world,
there are three tools or three formats
in which you can do it.
Breath work, obviously, naturally,
it says it in the name.
It's all about your breathing.
And breath work is generally aimed at body and physical.
So if you're having physical anxiety, physical stress,
if you're rushing around, your heart rate's gone up,
breath work is a beautiful way to come back into alignment.
Now, visualization's really interesting
because visualization is used by everyone from Lewis Hamilton
when he's driving his car around a track
through to David Beckham before he took a free kick.
Visualization was the art of sitting in one place,
closing your eyes, and visualizing what's that track
gonna look like?
What's that turn gonna feel like?
How's that ball gonna move?
It's visualizing the process, not the result,
and that's what's fascinating.
Western societies made it all about visualizing the result.
Visualize yourself at the top of the podium and the goal.
The smartest people in the world are visualizing the process and the work and the journey.
And that's where manifestation has gone wrong. We can get back to that.
And then finally, mantra or sound. So, the oldest text on meditation believe that sound
has the power to transport and connect us in a way that no other type of meditation can.
Now we all have experience of this.
When you hear a song from your past, you're taken back there immediately.
When you hear a song that has maybe some ego in it, or there's a song that you that
you listen to on your way to a party or an i-club because it pumps you up and it makes
you feel good. There are songs that make you feel violent.
Sound has the ability to wake you up in the morning.
You don't wake up by sight.
You don't wake up by scent.
You don't wake up by taste.
You wake up by sound.
Sound has the power to awaken deeper parts of us, depending on what level it's at.
So when you look at meditation, you have breathwork, you have visualization, you have sound. You can try a mix, you can try one or the other.
Ultimately, for me, meditation is an opportunity to build a relationship with yourself.
That's truly what it is. To build your relationship with your body, with your mind, with your heart,
and with your consciousness. And as you continue to meditate through breath work,
through visualization, through mantra and sound,
that's all that's doing.
It's just deepening your relationship with yourself.
It's almost like saying,
oh, when I'm with my girlfriend or my wife, what do I do?
Oh, there's a few activities and experiences that you do.
You got for dinner, you watch a movie, you go for a walk.
Okay, well, what do I do with my own?
Well, when I meditate on my own, I get to know myself better. And that's
the beginning of what meditation is. But the greatest benefits of meditation come from
using the right tool for the right part of your life. So before I'm coming on a podcast
like this or going on stage, if I'm feeling nervous or my heart rate's going up, I've recognized
that that's because I care. It's because I really, really care what I'm feeling nervous or my heart rate's going up, I've recognized that that's because I care.
It's because I really, really care what I'm about to do
and I want to be of service to others.
I want what I say to help someone.
I want what I say to hopefully start someone's meditation
journey potentially.
And if that's the case, then I need to be aligned.
So I'll practice breath work.
I'll breathe in for four and out for four. This
simple practice just brings me back into alignment. See, Stephen, we all have this experience.
How many times have you ever woken up and you feel your mind is ahead of your body? Every
day. Your body was in bed and your mind is racing. Yeah. Or you experience the opposite. Your body is racing and your mind is still in bed.
So most of our stress and tension in life
comes from a lack of alignment in our body and our mind.
Our body is racing 100 miles per hour
and our mind is slow or our mind is racing
100 miles per hour and our body is slow.
To bring them back into alignment,
you breathe in for the same amount of time as you breathe out. Simply doing that brings you back into alignment. Visualization I use
for when I think I'm about to start a difficult journey. And I think I may lose a bit of patience
or I feel like I really need to practice this. Imagine this as I'm about to go on stage,
doing something that's really big deal and important for me, I'm going to visualize myself pacing back and forth on stage.
I'm going to visualize myself communicating that message.
I'm going to visualize myself being really energetic on stage.
Notice I'm not visualizing people clapping.
I'm not visualizing people saying that was amazing because that's just setting a false
expectation.
I'm visualizing my performance being the best that it possibly can.
And the mantra and sound,
which is a big part of my meditation every day,
I do to connect with my deepest self.
I do to awaken parts of me that have forgotten
and to feel a connection to a higher power in the divine.
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.
Quarattasted.
I've never wanted us to have a gun bite.
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 these for a damn bar of chocolate.
Listen to obsessions while chocolate
on the I Heart 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 Video app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you listen to 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.
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 Hawke, it's not about us as a generation at this point. It's about us trying our best to create
change. Lumin's Hamilton, that's for me, been taking 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 iHeart Radio app, Apple
podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts, join the journey soon.
There's so many people listening, right? And you said that so beautifully and eloquently,
who I imagine listening to me doing these podcasts, maybe tuned in because they wanted a business podcast and they go, oh, here, go Steve again talking about meditation or whatever.
And the reaction, that reaction is probably caused by the, I don't know, the historic kind of snobbery
that's around spirituality.
It can be quite a exclusive club, right?
And the terminology can feel very exclusive to normal people
and shakras and all of this stuff and alignment.
And when words like that are said to some people
who aren't near the middle,
who are very much at the other end of the spectrum,
they just turn off to it.
So if I was to be someone who's listening to this now
driving in my van on my way to work this morning,
and I see a lot of people in their van's driving
listening to the podcast,
what would you say is a really good,
just a first step to investigate for themselves,
subjectively, if meditation can add value to their life?
Where would they start?
Yeah, I would say that the first thing you want to do is put something in your schedule
in your calendar, which is time for you.
If you look at your schedule, you would never cancel an important meeting with someone else,
but we don't even schedule one with ourselves.
There is nothing in the calendar that's time with myself, time for me, time for you, time for just this,
this whole thing that's going on right now.
Literally put it in for five minutes a day.
It's kind of five minutes, do it for two minutes a day.
Just put it in there, because if you start putting that in there,
you might then tomorrow go, okay,
well, what am I gonna do with this time?
I've got five minutes, wow, okay,
what am I gonna do with it?
So start putting it in there, that's the first step.
The second step, I would say,
is definitely focus on your breath.
I think the breath is just something
we can all relate to, it's tangible.
By the way, athletes have to learn
how to control their breath.
Musicians have to learn how to control their breath.
Whether you're a Dell, or whether you're a football player,
you have to learn how to breathe in order to perform.
Me, you and everyone, we're all athletes in different ways.
We all use our bodies, we all use our minds,
whether you're a business person,
or whether you're an actual athlete playing on a court
or a pitch.
But you sing that I don't know how to breathe.
I am saying you don't know how to breathe.
Yeah, and not you specifically.
I'm saying that most people don't know how to breathe.
And I didn't know how to breathe
until I was taught how to breathe.
And I know that sounds ridiculous,
but how many times a day do you get out of breath?
I know there's times of days that I get out of breath.
How many times of the day do you feel
that when you're experiencing an emotion,
your breath changes?
Like when you're crying or you're sad or you're upset,
your breath changes.
When you're happy and elated, your breath changes.
So our breath is connected to every single emotion.
So if we want to navigate our emotions and our life,
we have to train our breath.
So I would just say to everyone, take out two to three minutes
and just take a moment to breathe in and out
and breathe in for four and out for four.
Just try it as simply as that.
Now, if you're someone who struggles to get to sleep,
which can often be something that I think everyone struggles with,
that's when you want to breathe out for longer than you breathe in. So if you're someone who struggles to get to sleep, which can often be something that I think everyone struggles with, that's when you want to breathe out for longer than you
breathe in.
So if you're breathing in for four, breathe out for more than four to relax and rest
your body.
And if you're one of these people that goes, Jay, I've got, you know, I've got, like you
said, I've got to do a delivery today.
I've got to run to this meeting.
I've got to get to this.
And you need more energy.
Breathe out for less time than you breathe in.
So you may breathe in for a second
and breathe out for a millisecond.
It's a really sharp breath out.
And if you do that, you'll feel this pumping energy
in your body.
And so to me, it's, these are really practical tools
that I think we all need to sleep.
So everyone knows their meditation for sleep.
We all need to get energized.
So that's a simple meditation of energized.
And we all need to just feel like we're not rushing.
So I think those are hopefully quick things
that feel practical to anyone and everyone.
Yeah, I mean, I think my natural position
on things is to be a little bit of a skeptic.
And when I was in Indonesia the last time,
my girlfriend brought me to see a breathwork coach.
And before we did the breathwork, he explained it to me.
And so this is, as a logical guy like I am,
the explanation matters a lot. And he was talking to me about And so this is, this is as a logical guy like I am, the explanation matters a lot.
And he was talking to me about how we pretty much live most of our lives these days because of the
overstimulation, because of the stress, because of the screens, in this kind of like permanent
state of fight or flight. And when you look at what happens in fight flight and I studied biology,
I know what happens to the body anatomically and physically, you're what happens to your digestive tract.
And I mean, this is what a lot of people say
when they say I'm nervous and they've lost their appetite.
That's your body preparing and keeping the minerals
and nutrients it needs to expend energy
to help you in a situation on the serengeti
when a line is running at you.
That's a very prehistoric in eight part of our conditioning.
And we do live on edge,
our notifications run our lives and all do live on edge. Our notifications run
our lives and all of these things. So when we think about why people might be getting a little
bit more anxious day today, it's probably because we're living in like a heightened state or
fight or flight and one of the things that happens in fight or flight as well as your breathing
changes. So yeah, and then I think about the moments where I'm feeling a little bit stressed
and one thing I've done, my funny say for any of my head went straight to New York City,
a little bit stressed. And one thing I've done, my funny safe, my head went straight to New York City, is I'll go, I'll stop it, I'll just go, and whenever I do that, someone
turns to me and goes, are you okay? I'm fine, I'm just...
You look at him now. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
But no, I completely agree. I think it's one of those things that I think everybody listening,
regardless of who you are or how much of a tough guy you are, you should definitely consider yourself.
Can we do a tough guy's Steven, so you're not really?
No, not really.
I'm a bit soft.
Okay.
You know, around the edges.
Let's talk a little bit about fear then.
Yes.
We talked about that there.
In your book in chapter three, you talk about there being good fear and bad fear.
How can fear be a good thing? I realize that fear could be healthy or unhealthy based on how I used it.
And most of us don't realize that we get consumed by fear instead of using fear.
So fear becomes our being in the sense that fear becomes what controls us.
It tells us what we should do and what we shouldn't do.
It tells us how we should think and we shouldn't think.
It stops us from doing stuff that's really important to us.
And it makes us do things that we would never ever do.
It makes us say things to people that we love, that we would never want to say to them.
And on the other end, it stops you from that we would never want to say to them.
And on the other end, it stops you from saying things you really want to say to someone,
because you don't want to appear weak, and your ego won't let you.
So fear takes this really magnetic, controlling effect on our whole lives.
But fear at the same time can be one of the healthiest things, because it's basically giving
you a signal as to what's important.
It's basically giving you as a signal as to how you feel.
When you use it as a signal, not as a suggestion or a push, it changes everything.
Let's make that practical.
When you are in your home and if the fire alarm goes off, that gives you a signal to say check for the fire,
check if there's a fire, right? Now, if you go or just turn it off, it doesn't matter. Let's avoid
my fear. Let's avoid it. Let's just turn it off. Let's forget about it. Your house could burn down
or if you're lucky, there was nothing and it's fine. But the odds are that they could be a fire.
thing and it's fine, but the odds are that they could be a fire. Now, if you're someone who goes, well, let me inspect it. Let me be curious about that. I am scared that there's a fire in my house,
now that I've heard the fire alarm, but let me be curious. Let me inspect. Let me check. Imagine
we approached our fear in that way. Imagine every time I felt scared of something. I said, well,
let me get curious about this. Why am I scared of this? Why is it affecting me so much?
What about this scares me?
Is it all of it?
Or is it just a part of it?
When you start doing it, you start to break that fear down
and that's the healthy way of looking at fear
rather than the unhealthy way of saying,
forget about it, keep it away from me.
I don't wanna go there.
And so for me, I really feel that fear is what blocks us
from these beautiful breakthroughs in life.
And it has such a chokehold on us,
like it has such a strong hold on us.
And I think most of us are living our lives
because we're scared of what someone will say,
what someone will think, or what someone will do.
And that feels like something that we're gonna regret
when we're at the end of our lives.
Well, they do, right?
So they interview people as you know on their deathbed
and this is the number one regret of the day.
Your DMs, they must be full of people
that are exhibiting exactly that behavior.
Cause I know mine are a young person saying,
I'm in this job, I'm in this relationship,
I, it sucks, but fear, right? fear, fear of change, fear of uncertainty, whatever it might be.
What do you typically say to those people that they hate the situation they're in, but the fear is kind of imprisoning them into an action? I think I always meet it. I always, I was saying this to someone on my team this morning, actually, I always try
and meet everyone with compassion and not judgment because I know what it feels like to
experience that and I still experience that in different areas of my life.
So it's always there.
And I think if you don't meet it with compassion, you can kind of say something really energetic
in the moment and kind of make them feel like they've solved it, but that isn't really wearing it down.
I think for me, the first thing is to acknowledge that that fear is real.
To acknowledge that there potentially will be backlash, that there potentially will be
someone who's upset.
Because I think often we're told, oh no, just do what you want and it doesn't matter.
And I'm like, well, it does matter because maybe you are a good person and you don't want
someone to be upset, or you don't want to let your parents down,
or you don't want to hurt someone, right?
Or you don't want to ruin your reputation
by quitting your job or whatever it may be.
And I think it's important to acknowledge that,
that's real and that may happen.
But I think what I try and do next is say,
okay, well let's say you didn't change anything.
How are you gonna feel in five to 10 years?
And that's my favorite question to ask someone.
Let's not change anything about your life.
How does it feel in five to 10 years?
And if it feels worse,
then what you think it is now, chances are
that even if you're gonna hurt someone,
that's probably the better way to go.
But if you say you're gonna feel the same or better,
then sure, just accept that.
And most people will say, well, no, if I don't change anything,
if I don't get out of this, my life's going to be worse.
But here's the other thing.
I think we're always conditioned to think
that we need to change our situation
to create a change in our life.
And actually, with what both of us believe,
it's all about a change in perspective and mindset.
I have learned things from jobs that I hated, but that are so useful to me right now.
I have learned things from relationships with people I've had,
and those people that I didn't get along with, but those lessons are still serving me today.
I've been in countless situations where I wanted to get out of that situation,
but that situation was perfectly designed to show me today. I've been in countless situations where I wanted to get out of that situation, but that situation was perfectly designed to show me something. And the problem is we're
constantly trying to just move and get away. And so really what I say to everyone is I want
you to find out what is the perspective shift that this situation is trying to create in
your life, because if you take that with you, that perspective is going to stay with you no matter the situation.
But if you just keep trying to change your environment, hoping that your life's going to improve,
you're going to feel dissatisfied at the next place and the next place and the one after
that.
And I feel we're just conditioned to say, okay, you don't like your job, quit your job.
You don't like your relationship, quit your relationship.
It's not the job of a relationship, it's the way you see it.
And I think we just keep saying that it's this external shell that we're in.
When it's actually this shell and what's happening inside of it, that's defining all of these perspectives.
So much, I mean, that was an unbelievably beautiful answer. I'm going to 100% still that answer, I want you to know.
Especially that five-year point, because it is a really good sort of mental game to roleplay.
One of the things I was thinking when you were talking then is about a lot of those messages that will get on
Instagram wherever it might be. They're centered in insecurity, some kind of insecurity and because we have a lot of followers
you significantly more than me and because we have a big audience
what people will assume is that we have all the answers
because we have a big audience, what people will assume is that we have all the answers,
but we've got it all figured out
and that we live our lives like saints.
And I always wanna be really clear on this podcast
that I absolutely do not.
So let's talk about that.
How about we go back and forward
and we just say a couple of things
we're really, really bad at
and we wanna improve on whether they are in securities,
they are lessen, wisdom we know,
but we don't follow, et cetera, et cetera.
You please be my guest.
Yes, I'll go.
Oh, this one's been the one that the universe keeps teaching me.
So if I think about this question, this is the first thing that came to my mind.
I keep believing that I'm going to meet someone who's going to help me take my work to the
next level.
And so I always have had this belief, and I don't know where it comes from.
It's one of those ones that I still need to figure out.
Where every year I'll be like,
oh well, yeah, yeah, if I'm working with that person,
that person like as a manager or an agent
or whatever it was like, that person's gonna
help me get to another stage.
And the universe just keeps teaching me every year
that it's you, it's you, it's you, it's you,
like you've gotta do it for yourself.
There's not gonna be anyone that comes into your life and changes your life, but my you, it's you, it's you. Like you've got to do it for yourself. There's not going to be anyone that comes into your life
and changes your life, but my naivety every year
is to try and look for that person.
And if someone asked me and said,
well, Jay, who's going to be that person for me?
I would tell them, no, what are you talking about to you?
That's what I would say to them.
I, off the bat, I would say to someone,
stop depending on other people.
Stop waiting for someone to change your life.
You have to change your life. you have to change your life.
But then in my own life, I keep my action show that I'm still looking for that.
So that's the first thing, I'm sure that let's go back and forth.
I like this.
Yeah, there's going to be plenty more.
Okay, so the first, the first, I just, I'll try and start from the top.
So the first thing that came to mind that I, I know the truth upon and I would preach
about on this podcast, but I find it hard to do is I
Still kind of impose my own bias and beliefs on the world onto others
And I still loosely
Don't understand why everybody doesn't want to do what I want to do with their life
So I don't understand why everybody doesn't want to be successful and push and climb the ladder and pursue
And have nice things and build wealth and build an empire.
So sometimes there's this real bias in the advice I give people.
And this real kind of like naivety and lack of understanding that happiness is the North Star.
We all have our own path to getting there.
And I can even exhibit that as an employer.
I can, my voice can sometimes question why team members might not behave in the same way as me.
And it's fundamentally because again,
the North Star is happiness.
And their path to being happy is not the same as mine.
And that's a really dangerous game to play,
especially when you've got a big platform
because you'll make people feel inadequate
for their journey to happiness
because it doesn't resemble your own.
And so I really need to get better at understanding.
We all have different paths. And if I just say to myself, the North Star is happiness and we will have our own ways there,
then I can stop preaching upon people or assuming that because they are not following my path,
they are incorrect. Yes, I love that. I think one of the biggest things I obviously talk about is
asking people to take time for themselves and make time for themselves.
is asking people to take time for themselves and make time for themselves.
You really know where this is going.
And I think it's really interesting
because I think I try and I think I do,
but I know that this year, when it came to,
so I try and take a full month off every year for myself
and usually I go to India and because of COVID,
I haven't been able to go for the last two years and I usually go and live with the monks again
and take part in all the meditations and practices for a month and it's one of my favorite things
to do. I haven't been able to do it for the last two years so I still decided I would take
a month off and it came and I said I would do from the 15th of December to the 15th of Jan
and then I found out a week before that,
I kind of had to stay for an extra week in LA for work.
So I delayed it and I was like,
all right, I'm gonna do a 20 second of December
to the 17th of Jan.
And then I got to London and I started taking that break off,
but it was like, I got to a point where I could see
that I'd been delaying my self-care.
And I kept delaying it even by that week.
And in that week before I left,
I could tell that I needed a break,
like I needed to switch off.
And my advice to everyone is,
don't let it get to that point.
You've got to take it just before that.
And I was planning on doing that.
It was scheduled,
but because of commitments and priorities
and important things,
I had to push that extra mile and, sure, I'm fine and I'm okay and I feel great, but I don't think that that's
sustainable.
And I think it was a different journey.
And this is being honest too.
I don't think I'm a proponent of work-life balance, although it may appear that way.
So this may actually be a perception thing.
I think people may perceive that Jay believes
in perfect work-life balance.
And the truth is I don't.
I believe in purpose and purpose to me
is being obsessed about what you care about
and what's important to you.
And so for me, what I do is my purpose.
And so I'm obsessed about it.
I care about it.
I love it.
I breathe it.
I live it.
And when I was building, I breathe it, I live it. And when I was building,
I was working 18 hours a day. I was, you know, a couple of those were meditations, sure,
but then I was sleeping for six hours. But I was working 18 hours a day, is for two to
three years straight, seven days a week. And I think the perception is often people may
feel that no, Jay, you live a perfectly balanced life.
And I'm like, well, no, no, I haven't.
There's a different skill required to go upwards
than stay, maintain, create momentum.
Like it's a different gear that you're in all the time.
And so today my life is far more disciplined
in my health and wellness than it's ever been before.
But there have been periods of the years getting here that didn't look like that at all.
If that, I'm just, I'm completely get that.
Thank you for showing that.
Super valuable.
My next one would be what you described at the tennis court, which was some days, especially
because, I mean, these are probably, everything I say now is probably going to be an excuse,
but I'm going to say it anyway, but I've presented it as an excuse, so hopefully that kind
of is okay.
But I think I've geared my mind to care so much
about being time efficient,
that in situations where things aren't moving
with the efficiency that I would,
I demand from my business life,
yeah, I can bring you out of here.
That I, because of my expectations are of efficiency
and speed, when I encounter a situation,
maybe like the people that were bumbling around
with the clipboard at the tennis court
that you described trying to find your membership, whatever,
my expectation goes on, Matt, frustration arrives,
and then I might compromise on the way that I behave.
And that might mean being abrupt,
being too forward with somebody,
or being too harsh, lacking compassion
in the way that I say something.
People don't know this about me.
But when I'm alone, I think about this,
it's probably the number one thing I think about.
I reflect on how I treated people that day.
And there's been too many days in a row
where I've gone, you fucked that up against me.
Be better tomorrow.
And then I'll come into tomorrow,
the expectation will go in, Matt,
I'll become a person I don't wanna be.
And I'll say to myself in my private time,
I say you fucked that up again.
And I've been doing that too much for too long.
I think we all have, I talk about it in my book.
I had this moment, same thing as you just said.
I, this was a couple of years ago in LA
and I was traveling around in Ubers
and going here and there and getting in or lift
and calling one and jumping in and going on.
And I got in and I was on my phone and doing whatever.
And then five minutes later I realized we hadn't moved.
And that's how consumed I was on my phone,
whether I was scrolling or texting or emailing.
And I said to the driver, I said,
is everything okay?
And he said, you didn't say hello.
And he said, I said hello to you five minutes ago. And you didn't say hello. And he said, I said hello to you five minutes ago.
And you didn't say hello.
And I just, it was such a...
I was late for my meeting.
I was late for a big thing.
What? I felt terrible.
I felt so, so bad.
And I was like, I really want people to connect.
I mean, everyone is a human.
And I said, I'm so sorry. What's your name?
Like, like, and then... And he said driving. And he wasn't trying to... People are connected with everyone as a human. I said, I'm so sorry, what's your name?
And he started driving and he wasn't even trying to be abrasive. Like some people would say, oh, well, that's a bit.
He's not doing this.
I actually don't think it's his fault at all.
I think he taught me such a valuable lesson
because I was just kind of like, oh, yeah,
to service a book to treating him like a robot,
treating him like a machine.
And yet, one day, we'll have driverless cars
and I won't have to say hello, sure,
but treating a human in that way, Treating them like a machine and yet one day we'll have driverless cars and I won't have to say hello sure, but
Treating a human in that way I
I think that goes against everything I stand for is that I want us to become more human
And I want us to not lose our humanity as technology advances and I love technology and it's great
But let's not lose our ability to have human connection
Which is what brings
so much joy to our lives.
And so, yeah, I, you know, that's one of those moments that I was like, you know, you've
really tried to teach me a lesson here.
It is.
Yeah.
You know what, this whole back and forward, if it's taught us anything, it's that even people
that you presume to have the answers from the outside.
In fact, maybe the correct answer is to understand one's
own faults, understand were all really, really imperfect, to be self aware about those faults,
and then make a commitment to being better every day. I think I'll die imperfect, but
trying to be better. I don't think I'll die perfect. And I think that is maybe, there'll
probably be people that view the work that you do and
say, God, he's got it all figured out.
100% of things.
And I don't so I'm inadequate.
Yes.
I need to be J.
And if I'm not J, then I'm inadequate.
I'm morally wrong.
My value is about, I'm a bad person.
So that's kind of, I love that.
I'm so glad, I love the back and forth too.
You know, for me, it's always wonderful to talk about these things.
And I think that's what our generation has changed in this space, because I think we did
live at a time when gurus and guides and coaches were revered as flawless, perfect, and you
never really saw the behind the scenes.
And I think I always say to my team, like, I'm always trying to, I don't want, I don't
even want that pressure.
It's pressure and it actually stops you
from being sincere and genuine and authentic.
And I feel that pressure sometimes.
Like I feel that pressure when someone has a question
and I need to rush off and I'm like,
I wanna answer it, but I also need to rush off
and I feel that pressure.
And it's just, I've realized I don't want that pressure,
like because I'm not perfect and I don't wanna try and pretend I am or I don't want that pressure, like because I'm not perfect, and I don't want to try and pretend I am,
or I don't want to have to live up to it,
because it will just let someone down.
And it's really interesting, because this was around,
probably around 11 years ago now,
and this was, I was mentoring before I became a monk.
When I was a monk, I was a mentor,
and then I became a coach.
And whenever I took on a mentee or a coach,
coaching client or anyone,
one of the first things I'd say to them
in our first meeting is,
I just want you to know that I will let you down.
I just want you to know that.
That there will be something I do
that upsets you, disappoints you, or lets you down.
If you're okay with that, let's get started.
Like, let's get going.
And I saw the amount of people
that walked out that door.
Really? Yeah, there were people that walked out that door.
Really?
Yeah, there were people that left
because they were expecting divinity and humanity
and they were expecting perfection.
And I'm really happy that they left
because I would never have been able to live up to that.
And I don't even want the pressure.
And so I'm really clear with people
even now like I work with so many clients.
And that's one of the first things I'll say to them.
And you see that the people that stay recognized that because they understand they have flaws
and we all do.
And I also took off the pressure, especially in coaching where a lot of people think you
can change their life.
And as an immature coach or therapist, you may think you can change someone else's life.
And the more I've coached and the more hours I've racked up with coaching, the more I've realized I don't, I can't change someone's life. And the more I've coached and the more hours I've racked up with coaching, the more
I've realized I don't, I can't change someone's life. I don't have what it takes to change
someone's life. I don't have to say something profound every word I say. And not everything
I say is going to be perfect and incredible and insightful. And if I can let go of that,
I actually might allow something beautiful to happen.
Actually trying to do all those things,
trying to say something profound every sentence,
trying to magically solve someone's problems,
trying to be perfect,
all of these things actually block something beautiful
from happening.
Kind of interesting,
because it very much links to what you said about,
not putting the expectation on the outcome.
You said that earlier, I'm not gonna try and change your life today. But let's just focus in as you said earlier on the process of like what we can do today.
I guess part of my point, the first thing that came to mind there was we both write quotes and put them out on the internet and that kind of thing.
But I'm going to be completely honest when I write quotes on Instagram, I have no expectation that it's going to change the life of pretty much. I actually don't think even if people agree with it, most of them won't actually do anything, probably over 95,
maybe 99% of them. But what does it take to have an impact on someone's life? Is it something that
you can do as a coach or is it something inside them that is you're just the oxygen to their flame?
What is it? I believe that we need different language, different perspectives, different
faces, different voices to connect with every person on the planet.
You're going to say the same thing in your own way, from your own mind and heart and your
experience, and that's going to touch someone in a way that what I said can't. And then I'm
going to say something in a context that's's gonna impact someone else that your words may not speak to,
because I've heard truth again and again and again
and again and again and again.
And then I hear it again last week and it clicks.
Because I heard it from someone that said it in a way
that speaks to the language of my soul,
that speaks to the language of my mind and heart.
And I think that's what's so fascinating
about needing more voices and more faces
and more people trying to serve.
But when you talk about what creates change,
in coaching, there's four steps
to making a change in someone's life.
It goes theoretical, meaningful, practical,
and applicable.
So most people, when they like a post on Instagram, or maybe
they comment, that's them saying theoretically, I agree with this and I understand it. I
understand the theory that what you're saying is true and I like it and I agree with it
theoretically. But that theoretical understanding doesn't create transformation, that theoretical
understanding doesn't change someone's life.
It may hit them here and hit them here.
The next step actually is from here to here, which is, is it meaningful to them?
So I'll give an example, let's say someone reads a quote, but they just lost their parent,
or they just lost a family member they love.
I know I've had that happen to me in the last couple of years.
I'm sure many people listening have.
Now it's not theory, it's meaningful
because it's hit your heart.
It's gone from here to here.
And you're like, okay, that really resonated.
But again, that doesn't change your life
because now it's meaningful,
it's emotional, it's internal
but that hasn't changed into your action or your behavior.
So the next step is making that practical. Okay, Stephen wrote that amazing quote, how do I make that practical?
Let me reflect. This is the work that the coachy or the client needs to do. Okay, Stephen
presented it beautifully. Connected with my head, it hit my heart. How do I actually make
that practical in my day-to-day life? I'm not Stephen, I'm not Jay. How do I actually
practically do that? And then finally, what's the part that I apply and take action on? So as a receiver of wisdom and
knowledge, you have to do half that journey. All you can do is the theoretical and the meaningful,
and you may even help with practical tips and application, but someone still has to sit there and go,
how do I do that? Unless you're sitting in them with them one-on-one, obviously.
And you can't do the practical bit
for someone else forever.
Ever, yeah.
You could help them today or tomorrow.
Totally.
Not for a lifetime, it's not gonna be the fishing rod.
Over the years, I've tried to kind of simplify
what happiness is, and I sit here with my guests
and Mo Gadot was great at that as well.
Yeah, of course.
He was unbelievable at kind of the concept of happiness.
What are the kind of simple fundamentals that Jay
Shetty requires in his life to live a happy life? I'm going to use the word happy. I know it's a
shitty word of any respects, but I just want to use that as the the word. Yeah, I'd say that I look
at happiness as daily habits and then deeper purpose. So there's things you can do daily that
keep that happiness kind of moving and feel it's growing. And then there's
almost the objective, the compass, the reason why you live and why you exist.
And for me, it's been really clear that finding your passion and using it in
the service of others is what creates the greatest
deepest happiness.
When you find what you love, what you excel at, what you're brilliant at, and then you
can actually use that to improve people's lives.
And you can use that skill, that passion, that energy to make a difference in someone's
life.
There is no better feeling than that.
And what I find is I meet a lot of people
who've mastered their passion, but not for service.
They mastered it for business.
They mastered it for money.
They are mastered it for success.
And they have all of that,
but they haven't got the service element in their life.
They don't understand how to use their passion for a purpose.
And so they feel unequipped.
And then I know lots of people are trying to serve
or trying to make a difference,
or trying to do charity work,
they're trying to do all this good work.
And they feel good about it,
but they still don't feel fulfilled
because they're missing what is my special role,
like what's my position,
what's my offering in this space?
You kind of get lost after a while.
And so to me, happiness is where both come together
where it's like, I know what I love
and what makes me happy.
And when I do that for others to improve their lives,
it makes them happy.
So if you can do what makes you happy
and do it for others and it makes them happy,
that's gonna give you happiness.
And I have tested that principle time and time again
with clients, with friends, with family, with myself
and I've seen it to be true again and again and again.
But that's that bigger happiness piece.
Let's go to the daily habits, like the daily stuff.
And I wanna try and avoid the stuff that I think
people have heard and people have probably come across
before in many different places.
Maybe I've spoken about them, maybe other people have.
But one of the biggest ones for me is I read a book a few years ago about flow state,
and that book really transformed how I felt about things.
And it talks about how being in flow is the intersection where your skills and your challenge
match. So if your skills are higher than your
challenge, you will feel bored, lethargic, and maybe feel stuck. But if your challenge is
greater than your skills, you feel overwhelmed, potentially depressed, and disconnected, and
disappointed. So most of us are living in one of those discrepancies and I find on a daily basis,
I'm playing around with that equation for happiness because that flow state, when you know you have
a skill and your challenge is met and even if you lose, you still get such a joy out of it because
you know that you're still working in the right direction. And I think that is an underplayed part of
happiness because it doesn't sound like something predictable or obvious because people go, well, working in the right direction. And I think that is an underplayed part of happiness
because it doesn't sound like something predictable or obvious
because people go, well, that's achievement,
that's ambition.
It's actually not.
It's just saying, for most people, it's either raw.
Their challenge is greater than their skill
or their skills greater than their challenge.
So I would ask everyone to say, look at your life.
Do you need to improve your skills
or do you need to broaden your challenge?
Is this a year of expanding your challenges or is this a year of broadening your skills?
And I promise you, if you start with that, you're going to get so busy and active changing
one of those.
The happiness is going to naturally flow.
This comes into a little model I created of creating happiness for my year.
And that one sits in one of them.
So I'll explain which one it's in.
I believe that to create happiness day-to-day in one year, in one month, in a week, you have
to have three things.
You have to learn something every year.
You have to launch something every year.
And you have to love something every year.
And that's how I've lived for the last three to five years.
Every year I'm learning something,
every year I'm launching something,
and every year I'm loving something.
And I'll give you an example.
So when I talk about flow state,
that comes into the idea of raising your challenge
is like launching something.
The reason why launching something creates happiness is because it creates a feeling of
nervousness, it creates a feeling of butterflies, creates a feeling of excitement, like I don't
know what's going to happen.
We all need a feeling of surprise in life.
We all need that feeling of, I don't know, the sense of the unknown can actually cause
happiness.
And so launching something is such a powerful way.
And I think too many people will think for five years
and think for 10 years,
and maybe launch one thing in their whole life.
And me and you, I mean, I can't wait to interview
on my podcast, but I have launched so much stuff there.
We're gonna get into that.
Yeah, but that launch creates so much joy,
it creates so much happiness.
So launch something and we can dive into that. Then there's learn something, which is what we just
talked about learning a skills. So that's the, that's the idea of creating your flow state
by saying, what skill do I want to learn? And every year I pick a skill. And it's usually
based on what I want to launch the next year. So I'll go, okay, I need to learn podcasting.
So 2018, I studied podcasting, 2019, we launched the podcast.
So what you learn turns into what you launch
and what you launch turns into what you love.
And what we try and do is we try and do it the other way around.
We try and love something before we learn and launch it.
It doesn't make sense.
You've got to learn about something first.
And then you can fall in love with it.
You can't love something and then learn about
it. You can, but it doesn't always work that way. So I try and plan my years out in that
way. I go, what am I going to learn? What am I going to launch? And what am I going to
love? So yeah, I think that's how I try and create happiness on a daily, weekly, monthly
basis without diving into things like gratitude and meditation, which are huge parts of my
daily happiness. But I think those are ideas that are out there and that we've talked about before probably.
And you've launched a lot of stuff.
A lot of stuff.
And we're going to talk a little bit about some of those things that you've launched.
I mean, you've got your genius community, which has been going for a long time now, brilliant,
a really brilliant business and really stand out business in this whole industry in terms
of the way you
executed it and the, I mean, even the design of the programs and I remember going on the website and trying to, I think, into myself, would I be able to make something as quality as this
in the future and sort of modeling myself on that? You've got your certification school for
coaches as well. You've launched your T business and there's also, really, I guess this is a bit
of an exclusive, your partnership with Calm,
the Mindfulness Meditation App.
And I think they also call themselves a sleep app as well now.
I think that's a more modern description of them.
So why did you partner with Calm?
So Michael and I, Michael's one of the co-founders
of Calm.
He's been on this podcast.
Yes, exactly.
And we got introduced probably around four years ago now.
And he came over for lunch to my place.
We were hanging out, connecting, getting to know each other.
He was being told that he should really connect with me.
And I was being told I should connect with him.
And finally, we got together.
So we had lunch in my home.
My wife made us this incredible lunch
and we sat down and he brought a friend
and I had a couple of people there
and we just hung out.
And in that meeting, I met someone who I really believed
was not trying to build an app.
And I met someone who was not trying to build a platform. And I met someone who was not trying to build a platform.
And I met someone who was not trying to build technology.
He was trying to build an experience.
He was trying to build a journey for people to go on.
He was trying to build a practical daily habit
for each and every single person in the world.
And that was really beautiful for me to hear
because I'd been an admirer of calm
when it first started out and I first heard about it,
probably eight years before we met.
And I've been seeing what they were doing
and creating and to meet the person behind it
and for them to be as genuine sincere
and wonderful as Michael is, you've met him.
So you know what he's like.
I was really blown away by that.
I was just blown away by that vision.
And having spent hours and years meditating in the monastery
and then meditating afterwards,
I've always wanted to share meditation
at scale with the world.
I think it's a habit that 80 to 90% of the world's
most healthy, wealthy, and successful people live by.
So if we could make it accessible,
practical, and relevant to each and every person's daily life,
can you imagine the transformation that they'll have?
And I've experienced that as a monk,
I saw it for years and years and years.
I've seen it last year during the pandemic.
I went live for 20 days on Instagram
and taught meditation just to everyone and anyone
because I felt quite inadequate.
I was like, I'm not a frontline worker,
I can't save lives, I'm not a delivery person,
I'm not helping people with their groceries
and their food, I was like, what can I offer?
And I thought, well, maybe if people
are gonna have a minute of peace and calm,
then that might be worth it.
And across 40 days, I end up doing 14 instead of 20,
across 40 days, we're 20 million people tuning.
And it was just so mind-blowing to me
and most of the people were saying they'd never meditated before.
And I thought to myself how beautiful that was
and one of the biggest pieces of feedback I get for my audience is,
well, Jay, we want to meditate with you every day.
Why can't we keep doing that? And I was like, wow, those 40 days of live meditations were
really intense and a lot of work went into them. So I wanted a home for where I could share
meditation every single day, a new piece of meditation insight that each and every single person
could build a daily habit every day.
Every day. What? Of seven minutes a day. You're going to do seven minutes a day every day.
Seven minutes a day every day. Wow. Five days a week. Five days a week. Not weekends. You get days off.
Everyone gets two days off. You don't have to meditate on the weekends. You can sleep in.
But you're going to, you've recorded a meditation income for 365.
We haven't recorded all of them. We haven't recorded all of them because they're fresh and they're moving and they're based
on my weekly inspiration.
So we record them monthly.
So we record them monthly.
So I've recorded for the next month ahead because I have to because everyone's going to
need them.
But I'm basing it on like what my inspiration is that week and what my day is that week,
but it's a seven minute meditation.
And I truly believe that everyone can find seven minutes.
And if everyone could just find seven minutes in their day,
in their calendar, as I said, that they put aside
for themselves, I believe in those seven minutes,
everyone could build a beautiful habit.
Now, the difference with our meditation
is that the meditations we've created,
we believe that meditation is that inspire action.
So all of them are not just sitting there
on your own with yourself breathing,
they're interconnected with the change in your daily behavior.
So each and every single one of them have a takeaway, have an insight
that you can go and apply no matter what you do across the world.
So the goal is where meditation meets action, where meditation can actually help you change how
you feel that day through your real life. And so why I chose calm was, I wanted a home,
I wanted to work with Michael and the team
who I just believe are dreaming beautifully
about how to bring meditation to the world.
And so sincerely and genuinely care about each and every person.
And I just love how, I would say I love how universally they approach meditation.
I think they approach meditation in this universal, expansive, abundant mindset way, which
makes story the apart of meditation, which makes visualization the apart of meditation.
And that's how I was trained in meditation as a monk.
So it feels very philosophically aligned as well. You know, you've done so much.
And really, from what I observed even, you really started in 2000, and I'd say the sort
of external social media content journey started in 2016.
Yes, yes.
That is mad.
That is mad.
You've gone from 2016, making your first content to in 2022 now just and you're this global household name
as it relates to contents of improvement, meditation, all of these topics, right?
That's a short period of time. When you look back and you try and connect the docs as Steve
Jobs often did about how Apple came to be in the little moments and the little things,
whether it was a moment of good fortune
or whether it was something that you have spotted in hindsight in your character, why was
J. Shetty successful in such a short period of time in such a big way?
Give me the honest practical answer.
I don't want anything.
Why were you successful?
So I'm going to give you my monk answer, then I'm
going to give the media answer. So, and I live by both, right? Like you have, you have
to see things as both. And that's why I love my, my monk answer is I was really fortunate
to meet incredible people when I was young. I met a few people that absolutely transformed
my life. I'm eternally indebted to them, grateful to them, and I owe it all to them. And so I give all my success to them.
You know, without meeting those amazing mentors
and those phenomenal thought leaders and thinkers
who are not famous, who are not known,
who are not present, like they're not in the social media world,
they're not big names or whatever, those people, you know,
those people, if I never met them,
none of this would have happened. I can see that. The emotion in your face when you say this. Yeah, I just, I really, you know, those people, if I never met them, none of this would have happened.
I can see that.
The emotion in your face when you say this.
Yeah, I just, I really, you know, we skipped it earlier,
but I just feel like the gratitude that I have
for people who saw potential in me
when I didn't see it myself,
that is just the greatest gift you can give to someone.
Like, I today have self awareness
and I have confidence and I know who I am and I wasn't always like that.
Like there were tons of years where I was insecure and you know I was bullied for being
overweight and I was bullied for being the only Indian at school and there was so much
like baggage to do with just my body, my how I how I language I used and all this kind of stuff and to
to have someone notice that you may have something. I mean, you've had that and that is just you
you like honor that person for the rest of your life and the best thing is those people don't
even want it. So, you know, the best thing about all of this is the people there are not going,
oh yeah, we did that. They're actually saying no, no, no, it's not us like it's you. And I think
that's the beauty of that.
So I have to say that it's important that I share that answer,
not because I'm trying to give a more strategic answer,
but I think it's important because it is a big part of it.
And so that would be the monks that I met,
it would be the coaches that I met, the guides that I met.
Looking at it from a very practical strategic standpoint,
shifting now, my parents forced
me to go to public speaking and drama school when I was 11 years old. And I really didn't want to go
because I was shy. I was uncomfortable. I was insecure about being on stage or being in a
public setting. I actually loved acting growing up. I really enjoyed acting and doing theatre and
things like that, whereas playing another character. But being myself on stage, that was the last thing I wanted to do.
And my parents saw that and they saw that as something that I should work on. So they forced me
and my school to enroll me in a public speaking course. So from the age of 11 through to the age of 18,
for three hours a day, three days a week, so nine hours a week, for seven years,
I went to public speaking school.
Really?
For seven years of my life, I went to public speaking school.
So when I look back at my ability
to communicate my ability to understand ideas,
and by the way, public speaking school
is examination base two.
So we had exams where they would give you a topic
15 minutes before, you have 15 minutes to research a topic
from the books in the room that they give you
because there was no smartphone at the time
when we were 11, 12 years old.
And you'd have to create a speech in 15 minutes
about that subject from the books that were in the room.
You had to read from a book that you'd never read before,
they'd pick a random page
and they'd ask you to read it out.
So the examination of a public,
and this was at the London Academy of Music,
Drama and Arts, it's called Lambda.
And that's where I studied for seven years.
So that's a very strategic skill set that I had the time to develop thanks to my parents,
you know, like without my parents, none of that would have ever happened.
And I think that's a big part of why people hopefully appreciate how I communicate ideas
because I've spent a lot of time understanding communication.
But when I was 18, I had nothing to talk about.
So even though I had all these tools and skills,
I didn't really use them because I didn't care
about anything.
So sure, I gave a good presentation at university
and work experience and an internship,
but it was never something that brought me to life.
And so then when I met the monks,
and I got an opportunity to study the Vedas,
which are 5,000 years old,
and again, we were put through rigorous study.
We sat down, we had to learn verses, we had to analyze purports, commentaries on ancient
scriptures, we had to do comparative analysis of religions and traditions.
Like, when I was a month, we were massively trained in philosophical analysis.
And that, to me, gave me a real strength and confidence in these ideas.
So some of the ideas I present today that may sound simple,
they're based on these really ancient, deep truths that I've had the time to grapple with with the
greats who really understand them.
So that to me is a big benefit I've had where I've had three years of complete
dedication to studying philosophy and not just studying the intellectual areas,
but the practical and the applicable areas as well.
So thanks to my monk teachers who gave me that.
And then when I went to Accenture, where people were like, J.U., just a monk, why did you
go to Accenture?
I had to pay the bills.
I couldn't rely on my parents.
And, you know, my parents are not wealthy that they could pay my way through life.
And I moved back into their, I moved back into my childhood bedroom when I was 26,
living with my parents with £18,000 worth of debt
and just feeling that, what do I do now?
And I applied to 40 companies that would have given me a job
on my first class honours degree student. I'm a straight A student.
And I was rejected from 40 companies
because surprise, surprise,
no one wanted to hire a monk.
So everyone goes,
what are your transferable skills sitting quietly
and sitting on the floor like no one needs that?
So 40 companies say no to me.
Accenture finally give me a shot.
And I meet someone called Thomas Power.
And Thomas Power,
I don't know if you ever met him actually.
He's London based.
He started up like an early LinkedIn kind of version
called Academy.
And he was, he's very networked in London
in the business space.
Definitely want to introduce you guys.
He's awesome.
And he was brought in by Accenture
to train us in social media
and train us in this new wave of this new thing
that was happening.
And it's really interesting because we've talked about it
me and him many times.
I'm gonna have him on my podcast soon.
And I realized I was like,
you didn't really teach me much about social media,
but you've really taught me about breaking my mindset.
And he would always repeat Napoleon Hill,
you become what you think about.
And he'd always tell me that.
I'd be like, keep saying that to yourself.
And I'd keep saying that to myself when you become what you think about.
And then I was like,
oh, what am I thinking about?
I'm not thinking about anything.
So what am I gonna become? Nothing. And it was just really interesting. And so he would give me
these little tools and little things to play with. He had another one called ORS, which he would say
that successful people have to be open random and supportive. And he'd say that most unsuccessful
people are closed, selective, and controlling CSC. And he was saying that when you live in a CSC mindset, you limit your
growth. But when you live in an ORS mindset, open random and supportive, you expand your
growth. So you'd encourage me to be open with strangers on Twitter. It encouraged me to
be open with random people with me at our conference. And he was just training me in behaviors
and mindsets. It wasn't like how to post and what time to post and this is how you make
it. It wasn't how to make something go viral. Like that wasn't it. It was how to post and what time to post and this is how you make it wasn't how to make something go viral
Like that wasn't it it was how to engage how to push your comfort zone how to challenge your fear
Why are you so uncomfortable to walk up to that person and tweet them?
You know all of those kind of things and I saw that my mind just became
Just open to the idea so he was told me you're an entrepreneur
I've like no, I'm not no, I'm not meant to work for. And so he would keep pushing me until I'd get really angry with him.
I'm like, you don't even know who I am.
Only for me to realize he saw something in me that I never saw.
And then I'd say from there on,
that's kind of what gets me to the beginning of it.
I would say that for 10 years before 2016,
I was making content and delivering it in small venues in London. So I had an event
in London at university called Think Out Loud. Every single week, I would design a poster on Photoshop,
I taught myself Photoshop, and I would make a poster, and I would talk about a movie from a
philosophical, psychological, and spiritual perspective. So I'd take a movie like Inception,
and I'd break it down.
And 10 students would come every week.
And then I'd teach meditation, which I'd learned from the monks.
And then 20 students would come.
And then by the time I finished university,
a hundred people came every single week to hear me break down.
And this was no followers.
The events were free.
I was preparing for free, doing everything for free.
And I loved it.
And I got so much joy.
And then afterwards, when I was at Accenture, I ran an event in London called Conscious Living. And it was
just a, it was an event which was probably like five pound on a Friday night. And again,
I was teaching philosophy, spirituality and meditation. And I was lucky if five people turned
up. It wasn't university anymore where you could go and deck the halls with flyers and
posters and the common room and the community area.
So we'd get like five to ten people every Friday night, paying five to ten quid just for
the food that we gave and the posters that we made just to cover the costs.
So for ten years before I ever made a piece of content online, I've practiced, rehearsed,
experimented, grappled, challenged these ideas again and again and again and again and again
and again without any followers, without any money and without anything else coming from
it, apart from the fact that I love it, I love the idea of reading a book and trying
to make it relevant.
So I would say that the biggest reason is because I've done this for 10 years offline before
it ever went online.
So I've been doing it for like 16 years and that doesn't count the
11-year-old public speaking classes. It's really, there's something really beautiful about that because I think it gives a sense of, it's incredibly inspiring, but it also gives a sense of peace
to people who are at a stage in their journey, whether it's sat on the phones in a call center selling
I don't know, double glazing like I was, and they're thinking this is a waste of time.
They're thinking, picking up this phone
and trying to persuade Margaret to buy some windows
is a waste of time.
And it's not serving my where I wanna go.
And it's only in hindsight when you speak to people
like yourself where you hear about Steve Jobs' journey
or really anybody that sits here on this podcast.
You.
Yeah, like those are some of the most unbelievably formative
and most pivotal experiences as it relates to
the thing you will go on to do.
And you never know when that's gonna happen, right?
You never know when opportunity is gonna meet
preparation in your life.
Totally.
And that also speaks to something you said earlier,
which is, it's about the mindset you have
when you're doing those things.
And if you believe, I think if you believe
that sitting on that phone is gonna be the rest
of your life forever, you're increasing the chances of that being the case.
And I'm not putting down people that do cool set of jobs.
It's actually one of my favorite and the job I did the longest.
But I just think that's such an important mindset shift that can inspire and not demotivate.
Yeah, I think we have to look at our life as a series of things that add up each other
rather than like, this is a waste,
this is a waste, and that's not a waste.
And by the way, you said call center,
that's spark to memory.
I had a internship when I was 16 years old
at the business design center in Angel.
And I was working for a company called Upper Street Events
that sold events space to companies
for these big exhibitions and events
that happen in the venue.
And I remember at 16 having to call up Nissan, BMW, VW, Audi, Voxel, etc. because they were
doing a big car exhibition. Now by the way, I was a 16 year old kid who didn't really
know I was doing, but the people trained me really well. And I was cold calling. And
I completely agree with you. I think that gave me so much confidence
to be able to pick up the phone to anyone and everyone, to tweet anyone and everyone, to DM anyone
and everyone. By the way, Krishan O'Ranado has the longest list of DMs for me that he's never seen.
Right. He has the longest list of DMs for me that he's never seen, but I'm hoping that one day he's
going to see them. And I'm going to get to interview him and it's the idea of like, I don't, I'm not
worried if he doesn't see them. I'm not upset. If one day he sees 30 DMs from me
because I know that that's what it takes and I'm okay with that. There's no ego that I'm
so happy. If Cristiano Ronaldo opened it up and saw this guy's desperate, I would take
that all day because I think he's a I think he has a phenomenal mind and I would love
to sit down with him. What did you lose? What did you lose, right?
But that comes from when you're cold calling
in the call center.
You learn that mindset of,
what did I lose if this person said no,
and there's 300 people on this list,
and that person might be the one that wants it now,
and that person might come back around,
and you get to develop those skills.
So I just hope that wherever you are listening
to this right now, wherever you're watching it,
you just take a moment to realize that that place can teach you everything you need to know about
your purpose. And if you just approach it in that way, you're going to walk to work with a
pepinius therapy like this energy that's going to be so electric and so magnetic that everyone's
going to know what's going on with you. And all it is is that you're looking at life as an edition
rather than a subtraction. And you'll receive in a completely different way, right? Correct. Yeah.
We have a longstanding tradition on this podcast where the previous guest writes a question for
the next guest in the diary. That's genius. I love that. It's fairly new edition. But it's beautiful.
I love it. Well, the reason why we did it, and I've never really explained this, is we want to
basically connect the episodes together and the guests together in some way
and do it in a wonderful way.
By question written in the diaries our way.
Who came up with that?
Great idea.
It's brilliant.
It's absolutely fantastic.
I'm going to tell my team.
You can have all the good things.
I'm not happy with my team.
From what we're talking about.
It's funny.
It's funny because this question is actually
what I think I asked you.
Ready, so.
You can ask me another one if you want.
You can pick a random one.
I can make one up.
So the question asked, what is your definition of true success?
I'd say my definition of true success is that there are four important decisions we
make in our life and if you can make every decision
intentionally
with the desire to
learn and serve
then that's all you can do. So the four most important decisions we make in our life are
how do I feel about myself?
What do I do for money?
Who do I give my love to and how do I feel about myself? What do I do for money? Who do I give my love to?
And how do I serve others?
And if you spend your life focusing
on intentionally making those choices,
then your life is a success.
Because all you can do is try to live intentionally
and try to hope that it helps other people.
Amen.
Listen, Jay, I can't thank you enough
for coming here and doing this.
I know you are very in demand, very, very, I can't thank you enough for coming here and doing this. I know you are
very in demand, very, very, very successful man who's only in the UK for a short period of time.
So it was a true honour that you would come here and sit with me and have this conversation.
For me, you've been a real role model in many, many ways. And you've led the way in the content,
the self-development, the helping people change their lives, domain, especially as someone that
comes from the same country as me for the longest time. So I've always looked to you. For the last
I don't know, seven years since I've I've started doing this and I think your success has propelled
and enabled mine from a point of inspiration but also from giving me a blueprint on how to serve.
So I've never got to say that to you before but I really want to say thank you because that's
you know you've helped, you're probably the reason I get to help people as well in my own way.
So that means you know it means a ton to me
that you would come here and sit with me.
And yeah, it's just my second time.
Thank you.
That is probably one of the most humbling things
anyone's ever said to me because I'm a huge fan
of the podcast.
I think you do an incredible job.
And I think you have some amazing guests,
guests that I've never sat down with
or you know, may not be in my radar or radius
and you've shared things with them that have just been phenomenal.
And so when I'm listening and watching,
I want to get my head cut, yeah, I was talking to my head wrestler about you.
I was like, I'm going, this podcast tomorrow and, you know,
and he listens to you as well and knows who you are.
And I was just like, yeah, and the easiest thing that came back to me was just,
yeah, Stephen's a really nice guy, like he's really down to earth,
he's really humble.
And I find that phenomenal because of your age,
because of what you've achieved,
I've never felt like even a drop of ego around you.
And whether that's in your online presence,
whether that's when we met in New York,
whether that's on Twitter or all those years ago,
whether it's today, before we were on camera,
and I really appreciate that.
I think as monks, we were trained that the most admirable quality in a human is humility.
That was seen as like the... If we could say that in the material world, the highest thing
about someone is whatever it is, the currency in monk life was humility.
When I meet people who have humility, they're like the people that I get drawn to the most. And you just have in bags for it.
And I just think you're going to go off and do even more incredible, successful, phenomenal
things for the world. And I'm excited to watch them, excited to be a fan, a friend, and
hopefully we get to do stuff together too. But this was beautiful, man. Thank you so much.
Thank you. Thank you. I want it to come on. This is beautiful. This is brilliant. I hope we do it more and I can't
wait to have you on. I'm very excited. Now that you're coming to the LASER, we're going
to have you on. Thank you so much for listening to that conversation. Make sure you tag me
in Stephen letting us know what you learned from this, what you took away. Maybe something
that made you reflect and introspect,
and I'll see you again next week.
Thanks for listening.
What if you could tell the whole truth about your life, including all those tender, invisible
things we don't usually talk about?
I'm Megan Devine.
Post to the podcast, it's okay that you're not okay.
Look, everyone's at least a little bit not okay these days, and all those things we don't
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This season I'm joined by Stellar, gas like Abbermote, Rachel Cargol, and so many more.
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Hi, I'm Brendan Francis Nuneum, I'm a journalist, a wanderer, and a bit of a bond vivant, but
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And not lost is my new podcast about all those things.
It's a travel show where each week I go with a friend to a new place and to really understand
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Ooh, I have to get back to you.
Listen to Not Lost on the iHeart radio app
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Regardless of the progress you've made in life,
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I'm Eric Zimmer, host of the One-Dee Feed Podcast,
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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 Podcast.
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.