On Purpose with Jay Shetty - Evy Poumpouras ON: How To Instantly Read People, Create Connections & Influence People
Episode Date: July 20, 2020Evy Poumpouras speaks to Jay Shetty about her commitment to learning how to read people and react in tense moments has not only saved her life, but earned her the honor of doing security for President...s Bill Clinton, Barack and Michelle Obama, and both George Bushs'. Want tips on how to read people’s body language or pick up on when someone’s lying, from a former secret service agent? Poumpouras shares spy tips that come in handy for any walk of life! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hi, I'm David Eagleman. I have a new podcast called Inner Cosmos on I Heart. I'm going to explore
the relationship between our brains and our experiences by tackling unusual questions. Like, can we
create new senses for humans? So join me weekly to uncover how your brain steers your behavior,
your perception, and your reality. Listen to intercosmos with
David Eagleman on the iHeartRadio app Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
I am Jan LeVan Sant and I'll be your host for The R Spot. Each week listeners will call
me live to discuss their relationship issues. Nothing will tear a relationship down faster than
two people with no vision. Does y'all are just flopping around like fish out of water?
Mommy, daddy, your ex, I'll be talking about those things and so much more. Check out the
R-Spot on the iHeart video app Apple Podcast, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
I'm Munga Shatekler and it turns out astrology is way more widespread than any of us want to believe.
You can find it in major league baseball, international banks,
kpop groups, even the White House. But just what I thought I had to handle on this subject?
Something completely unbelievable happened to me and my whole view on
astrology change. Whether you're a skeptic or a believer, give me a few minutes because I think
your ideas are about to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast,
or wherever you get your podcasts. Now use interviewing and interrogation to change
ably because then the world that came from truly it's the same thing, it's a conversation.
Whether it's me wanting a confession or admission
or information on the case,
or even doing a business deal,
and you know, and I work in television
and negotiating terms, I make sure to hear
what that other person is saying before I say,
hey, let me tell you what I want.
Because also when I hear that, I'm thinking,
okay, this is what's important to them. I can bend on this because I'm not that I'm thinking, okay, this is what's important to them.
I can bend on this because I'm not worried
about this so much.
But this is what's important to me.
So I'll bend here, but I won't bend here.
And so you can come in in a more meaningful way
and connect with people.
Hey, everyone.
Welcome back to on purpose, the number one health podcast in the world.
Thanks to each and every single one of you who are obsessed with learning about your mindset,
learning about human behavior and learning how to make powerful decisions.
Now one of the things that I love about recording the podcast is I get introduced to fascinating
people, people that I've been or heard of before,
people who've had experiences that I can't even imagine,
people who've lived lives that are so extraordinary.
And today's guest is exactly one of those people.
Now, I can't tell you how much I've been looking forward
to this interview.
And today's guest is another than every pomporus.
Now, she is a former secret service special agent.
She was part of the protective details
for President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama,
as well as former president George W. Bush, William J. Clinton
and George H. Bush.
She worked complex criminal investigations
and undercover operations, executed search and arrest
warrants and investigated both violent and financial crimes.
Evie currently can be seen as an assessor on the Bravo series
Spy Games, if you've not seen it, check it out.
Now, today I'm excited to talk to Evie about her amazing new book
called Becoming Bulletproof.
Protect yourself, read people, influence situations,
and live fiercely.
And insight to share the lessons from protecting
presidents, as well as insights and skills from the oldest and most elite
security force in the world to help you prepare for stressful situations,
instantly read people, and really make a difference in your life.
Every holds a master of science from Columbia University in journalism,
a Master of Arts in Forensic Psychology from a Ghost University,
and a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science and International Affairs from Hofstra University.
And as you can see, super academic, super practical,
and someone who literally in two seconds has made me realize,
she's also just really nice and kind.
Evie von Boris, Evie, thank you for being here. Hi Jay, thanks so much for having me.
You are such an accomplished, incredible individual. The life that you've lived just
absolutely fascinates me. I don't even know where to begin to be honest and that's not usually me.
I usually know exactly where to start, but also what I love about it every is, and we've never met before, and I really hope
that one day we do get to meet. But even just interacting with you now, I'm like, how
is this person lived in such a tough, stressful job, yet your energy is so sweet and kind and
soft and loving? Like, tell us about that just to start it off.
Wait, how does that work?
I think though, people feel that there's only one version
of themselves, like you're just one thing.
And it's not true.
Like, there's different versions of us.
And I learned this over time.
Because I would hear people say, I'm just going to be myself.
And I always wonder, like, what is myself?
And I really didn't understand this. It was when I became a polygraph examiner. I became an
interrogator for the US Secret Service. And then I would interview so many people, J. Like,
hundreds of people would come through the door. And I learned that I couldn't be one thing with
everybody. And that people respond to different things and need different things from you.
And so some people needed a more sensitive version of me.
Sometimes I needed to bring out a more authoritative version of me.
But you assess people and you feel you realize I was my audience.
And what's going to resonate best with this audience?
But it's still authentic, it's still me.
And I found out when I started to do this,
I began doing this at work,
but then I began doing it in my relationships.
And I realized that it actually strengthened my relationships
and strengthened my communication skills with people
because I was really paying attention to people
and becoming in tune to them.
So if I had somebody who was soft-spoken and shy,
I would say, okay, this is not a person
that secret service, Evie, would really need to be with
or to be that type of person.
But at the same time, like, you can still be strong
and you can still be assertive
and you don't have to be a jerk about it.
You know, you can still have grace and kindness
and connect with people.
And there's actually part of my studies
when I studied interviewing and interrogation.
And it's really about connecting with people.
People here are a irrigator, and you think of the TV stuff,
and it's not like that at all.
But one of the things that was taught
is that the most successful interviewers, like those
people that would get confessions or admissions or information from people, they were the
ones that were perceived to be competent and then warm.
So being fear-based, making people fearful of you, intimidating people, being cold,
thinking that that is going to get people to listen to
you more.
It actually backfires on you.
You're already blowing my mind.
What a great answer, right?
I couldn't agree with you more.
And I love what you said about how it can still be authentic, even if you're adapting,
because I think people feel like if you're using techniques, then how can you be a, you
know, how can you care? But if you're doing it from a place of compassion and a place of connection and a place of wanting to
understand, then that's what brings the authenticity. Am I right? Does that make sense?
Yeah, it does because, but that's, but that's what drives me. I think, you know, I mean,
think of it this way, you ever go to a meeting or have a conversation with someone,
and it's just bumping heads confrontational. You're thinking, why did that happen that way? It's because both
people are trying to shove their ideas and their perceptions almost like down
the other person's throat and it doesn't it doesn't resonate. One of the
things I found like the best in interviewers were the people that made
people feel understood.
Usually we just want to feel understood and some people want to feel understood and
they're very aggressive about it.
You'll have someone maybe just yell and scream and give you their opinion on something.
But what they're really telling you is like, I'm not being heard.
And so I'm screaming and I'm yelling because I want to feel heard.
And once people feel heard, and if you cannot take it personally and think, you know, how
dare you talk to me this way, you can put your ego aside and he goes a big sabotage
or, but if you can put that aside and just understand, this doesn't have to do
with me. This has to do with this person. They're not feeling hurt by me or by
anybody. So let me kind of sit back, be quiet and listen and
let that resonate with them. And then after that's done, you know, come back in a more meaningful
way. I can't tell you how many times I sit in the interview room and people would just
be angry. They're angry. They're there. They're angry that they're talking to a special
agent. They're angry that they're talking to me. They're just angry.
And rather than bump heads and try to put them in their place
because truly that would be my ego doing it.
I'll say, all right, let me just sit back.
Let me let them vent, honestly.
And then once that was done and the steam came out
and they're exhausted too,
then I could really come in in a meaningful way.
And now they've also told me what's resonating with them,
what they're upset about.
And when I speak to them, I can make sure
that I am thoughtful in my conversation,
rather than coming and blind and just pulling things out
of nowhere and then saying the wrong thing.
So look, could you use this to manipulate people?
Like, yes, you could.
But it's going to backfire on you,
because people can read through that nonsense eventually. But if you use it in a way to connect
with people, and you can use compassion or empathy, I use empathy so much, it draws information
out of people, because when you empathize with people, you build rapport, and they trust you,
and the more people trust you, the more they open up.
And that is truly, that's interrogation
that the best interrogator, so to speak.
Now, you use interviewing interrogations
to changeably, because in the world I came from,
truly, it's the same thing.
It's a conversation with people.
But when you can do that, everybody opens up to you,
and you get what you want, whether it's me wanting a confession or admission or information on the case, or even doing
a business deal.
You know, and I work in television and negotiating terms.
I make sure to hear what that other person is saying before I say, hey, let me tell you
what I want.
Because also when I hear that I'm thinking, okay, this is what's important to them.
I can bend on this because I'm not worried about this so much, but this is what's important to me.
So I'll bend here, but I won't bend here. And so you can come in in a more meaningful way and connect with people.
Yeah, do you ever find that people in your personal life because they know your skills and know what you are?
They're like always feeling a bit like, oh no, every can tell what I'm really thinking.
Like do you find that people kind of sometimes like put their guard up when they're like always feeling a bit like, oh no, Evie can tell what I'm really thinking. Like do you find that people kind of sometimes
like put their guard up when they're around you
because they feel like, oh,
Evie can see right through me?
You know, it's interesting.
Some people will say that.
Actually, let me just say this, my family know,
they just do whatever they want to me.
I'll just put that out there.
I don't know why it is, but we can have like degrees
and expertise, but when it comes to family,
none of that matter. It's true. It's true. Very good. I want to hear it. Yeah. But I think it's about
connecting with people, and I don't, but it's genuine, you know, I genuinely listen to people because
I want to know what they think, I care about what they think. And so when it comes from an authentic place,
I don't think people see that.
But when it looks like manufactured, when it looks like
and it feels like someone's selling you something,
you probably had that, we've all had that
where you feel like somebody, all right,
this person's trying to sell me really hard.
And if there's something's truthful and genuine,
you don't have to sell so hard.
The truth is, we used to have this saying in the Secret Service, the truth is simple.
It's simple.
You don't have to work so hard,
but so when somebody's really working hard
to sell you something,
that's when your red flags are up.
That's when you're kind of like,
why is this person working so hard?
Something's not right.
I'm Yvonne Gloria. I'm Eva Longoria.
I'm Maite Gomes-Rechon.
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The therapy for Black Girls podcast is the destination for all things mental health,
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versions of ourselves. Here, we have the conversations that help Black women dig a little deeper into
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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
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Join the journey soon. living fearlessly, we're gonna put the link in the comments section so you're able to buy the book if you're loving this conversation. So, Eddie, before we even
dive into the book, I just want to talk a bit about how do you even get there? Like,
how do you even become the role that you became? Like, what does that process take?
What did you want to do growing up? And how did you find yourself, you know,
becoming such a successful secret agent? Tell us about that journey and that process.
Yeah, I will tell you one thing, work, work,
and more work.
Truly, like, my parents are immigrants.
They came from Greece and, you know, they were very poor.
They grew up in poverty in Greece.
My parents were very, very poor.
And they came to the United States. And we lived in New York City. I was born in Harlem, Washington, Heights area, which was a very high crime, very poor area. And Greek was actually my
first language I learned English in school. And we, I think we grew up around crime, a lot of crime, a lot of drugs.
I saw the difficulties my family faced as immigrants.
You know, they had very heavy accents.
You know, even my dad, you know, I would see the hardships he would go through.
In fact, when he came to America, he couldn't find a job.
Nobody wanted to hire him.
He had like a really thick accent.
You know, I'm quite fair, but he was quite tanned, very dark, very ethnic looking and they went through such hardship.
And his first job actually in America, he he finally had gone through so many places I remember nobody would give him a job. And the last place he went to was a donut shop, a coffee shop in Harlem. And he went in there. He's like, just, I'll work for free.
Because the guy that was trying to, he didn't want to give him work. And he's like, I'll work for free.
I'll work for food. He's like, let me just get experience here.
So at least I can go somewhere else and say, Hey, I have experience working in the donut shop selling coffees.
Or he's like, I'll take your trash, I'll do whatever.
And my first, my father's first job in America
was working for free.
He worked for free.
And I think it was after a few weeks
that the man actually hired him.
And so I think growing up with that
and seeing the hardship they went through,
I was like, I'm not gonna go through that.
And I wanna make a better life for them.
I was like, you know, and I watch, you know, it sounds silly, but we watch a lot of TV because
we couldn't really play outside that much.
And I would see on TV these people doing extraordinary things and extraordinary roles.
And I went to Greek school.
I went to a Greek American school.
And I learned about Greek mythology and heroes. And I was so inspired by it, you know, like when you're a kid, you're like,
when I grow up, I want to be this.
And I was inspired by courage and by bravery.
And having grown up, you know, we'd been victims of crime and dealt with so many hardships.
I was like, I am not going to grow up afraid.
I'm not going to grow up weak.
I'm going to protect my family.
You know, I'm going to do well so I can help take care of them.
And I think just intuitively it led me into this career because I knew nothing about law enforcement.
Jay, I didn't even like police.
They would pull me over when I was a teenager and I was like the biggest brat.
I knew nothing about that world, but I knew I wanted to serve people and help people.
I created this drive where I was just like work, work hard, work hard, work hard.
Even in college, I got an internship working for a congresswoman.
I'll never forget congresswoman Carolyn McCarthy.
I worked for her for two years, for free, for free.
And everybody's like, you're crazy,
you're wasting your time and I was like, no, I'm learning,
I'm connecting with people that I would never,
Jay, I would never connect to these people.
I had no network, I had no access.
All I knew was my parents immigrant community,
no college education.
I don't even think my mom finished high school, actually,
now that I'm talking or my dad.
And I was just like, I have a choice
and I have to drive myself.
And I think just one thing led to another.
I didn't grow up with this idea when I grew up
on gonna be a Secret Service agent.
I had no idea what that was.
Zero.
And, but I also was of the mindset like, why not?
Like why can't I?
Why can't I help my family and other people
in a meaningful way?
And I think when you're in the struggle
and you see other people struggle
and I think just authentically I wanted to help myself,
help my family.
And first I started in the,
I went into the New York City Police Department,
and I applied, and I was just like, why not?
And I got into the police department,
and I had simultaneously applied
to the US Secret Service.
I bought a book on international careers,
and I spoke languages at the time.
I loved languages, and I spoke multiple languages,
and I'd studied in different countries while I was in college on my own.
I worked like multiple part time jobs and I'm like, all right, this semester I'm going to work and then next semester I'm going to go to Mexico and do a semester there and then I come back and I'd work and then the next semester I'm like, all right, I'm going to go to Italy and now I'm going to go to school there. And I just had this hunger to open up my mind. And I think all those things
kind of led me down a path where I was like, what more could I do? And honestly, the US Secret
Service, I studied government, I studied international affairs. I bought a book that said careers
in international affairs. And I was just and they had about, had about 300 organizations in there.
And I was like, somebody's gonna give me a job in here.
And I sent a resume out, Jay, and this is back in the day
when there was like no internet,
none of that stuff moves around.
And I sent out 300 resumes, the summer I graduated.
I'm like, somebody's gonna say yes.
And I think I got maybe 25 rejection letters.
And then eight or seven people replied,
by, hey, fill out this form.
And one of them happened to be the secret service.
Just happened to be that.
So I was just like, why not?
And I think, although I didn't plan that path,
sometimes I think that life takes you down the path you're
meant to go.
And although you don't, you don't realize it. And I think like when people ask me,
what's your five-year plan or what are your hopes and dreams? And I'm like, look, I, I, I feel it.
I see it. I think this is it. But nothing has ever turned out the way I thought it would or
expected it to work out. And it's almost always for the better.
I'm not saying it's not hard because it's a hardship.
You know, and even, you know, I write it, you know, when I was applying for these jobs,
even when I went to the NYPD, my family was very upset with me.
They were like, why are you doing this?
And even my dad had to get his paperwork, you know, I needed his naturalization
paperwork and all that stuff. And no, though he was a strong, resilient man, like he couldn't understand,
he's like, why are you doing this? Why would you think that they'd hire you? And it was hard,
you know, it's hard to hear that when you're like 18, 19 and you're thinking, I can't listen to this.
I have to just try.
And I was always like, let somebody else tell me no.
Let somebody else reject me.
I'm okay with that.
But I was like, I'm not, I can't listen to other people
because at the end of the day,
like I have to live with myself.
And I learned over time,
because there were moments where I would listen
to other people and I look back and I'm like,
man, I shouldn't have listened to this person person? Should have really done what I wanted to do and show what if I failed.
And that really kind of became part of my DNA after that. I could, and it took a time to get to that
to that point, boy, I could tune people out. I mean, I listen to people. You need good counsel,
but if I felt something, Jay, like I would tune people out and I'd be like,
no, just go forward, do it.
And I think that just kind of became part of who I am
and my internal mantra maybe, so to speak.
Yeah, for sure.
Thank you for sharing that by the way.
It's always fascinating to hear about someone's background
and I love what you said about almost stumbling into this world. And I often say that, you know, we get to where
we want in life, just not in the way you imagined it. And I love the analogy, because I can
connect with what you said so strongly. When I hear you say things like, you know, you
just send out all these resumes and you just wait to see who responded. And for anyone who's listening or watching right now, Evie is talking about a really important
principle is that so often we sit down, we try and figure out like, oh, which path should I take?
And we try and construct it. We try and build it perfectly. And we try and technically figure it out.
And it's almost like the real answer is, open all the doors and see which ones stay open.
Some of them are going to close and some of them are going to stay open and keep walking
through the ones that stay open.
And so we can see that in Abby's life and it led to this incredible journey.
So, Abby, what I want to dive into now is I want to talk about some of the, almost the
mistakes that we make in reading people.
And I think, you know, the biggest challenge that people have is like,
how do I know someone's telling the truth? How do I know if I can trust someone? How do I know
to believe someone? This applies to whether you're a CEO, hiring for your company, whether you're
an entrepreneur, hiring for your startup. It relates to whether you just want to date someone or
you're talking on Tinder or Hinge or whatever it is. Like there are so many places where I feel we ask ourselves the questions.
Can I trust this person?
Is this person telling me the truth?
Tell us the mistakes we make when trying to assess whether we can read someone
right and how to do it properly.
Yeah, I think it's so important because like who you have in your circle of
people, whether business, whether personal relationships is so important,
you have to make sure that people are meant to be there. And sometimes people come in,
and they may have good intentions for us initially, but then sometimes it's like, you know,
this relationship needs to finish and evolve. And I always talk about constantly assessing
everything and everyone around me to make sure like is this working now because it may be working
before and but maybe it's not working later and you know how do you get people to trust you but
the biggest thing is to really read people and it's not like a gimmicky thing like you really have
to pay attention to people. I think one of the greatest mistakes I see that people do is that they will not look at
the actions of a person.
So you may have someone who's like, let's say they're in a relationship, Jay.
And their partner comes home late all the time or their partner makes excuses all their
time or their partner does these things.
And so if you're on the outside of the relationship
and you see all these red flags,
you're like, you look at that person's cheating.
No question.
But then the person that's in the relationship
because they're not, they can't separate the actions
from the person.
They're like, well, he's working late,
or she's working late because of this.
Oh, well, they were talking to that person because of that.
Oh, well, they could have not unlocked their phone for me
because they forgot the security code
because you start to mix the individual
with the actions.
And that's where we make a mistake.
We don't judge the actions.
We look at the person.
And that's what happens when we end up getting betrayed.
It's not until after the fact where you're like, man, like, how did I miss that? You know how
after something happens, all the nickels start dropping. And you're like, but they did this. I knew it.
I dismissed it. I should have paid attention. And that's because you're really focused on the
person. And you help make excuses for the person because it's in your benefit. Because if you've
invested time in someone, as we're talking, let's say a personal relationship, you don't want them
to be unfaithful.
It doesn't suit you for them to be unfaithful because it means you've lost all this time,
all this this investment in this energy.
So it's easier for you to fall into that narrative and listen and believe their excuses because
it's the narrative you want to believe. And so you really have to be careful when somebody shows you things through action,
you have to stop and say, if this action was somebody else independent, someone I didn't have a
relationship with, what would I think? Or if somebody else came to me and said this person did this,
this and this, what would I think? Yeah. Look at the actions people present to you and believe in them.
You know, there's a great quote that always says when people show you who they are,
believe them the first time. Make when they show you, believe it.
Like they're telling you, they're showing you don't, don't create that narrative.
I think that's one of the greatest hurdles I see people
that they can't overcome it.
Like the signs are there,
they can read the person if they want to,
but they choose not to,
because it's not the narrative they want.
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I'm journalist and I'm Morton in my podcast, City of the Rails.
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Absolutely.
And what about situations where like you don't get
to see their actions? I completely agree with you, but what about in situations where like you don't get to see their actions,
I completely agree with you, but what about in this scenario where you're like,
you're just interviewing someone right now that when you're in interrogation, like you're not
gonna, you don't get to see that potential suspects actions, but you're literally reading their
body language, you're reading their communication. Like how are you doing it then when you haven't
actually seen someone's actions? I think about that often. I interview I have a very large team
and I'm always trying to become a better interviewer as well because I'm like you just, you don't know
whether to trust someone, whether to give someone a chance, whether someone's being jettin', like how
do you do it from that perspective without the actions? You know, for like for yourself, like if you're interviewing people and you're hiring people,
one of the biggest and most important things I tell people is whoever you're talking to,
make them feel comfortable.
So you never want to interview somebody like from behind a desk or a table.
You don't want them to feel, this is a thing, Jay, you don't want them to feel like they're
being interviewed.
Because in that moment, I'm like, oh, it's an interview.
I'm going to sit up.
I'm going to be super careful.
And then also keep in mind, like, I always knew this,
and I knew this from doing interviews
that the majority of people will tell some form of lie
or they'll embellish either in their application
or in their interview process.
And how do you corroborate that?
One, the important thing is to know that somebody will do that
so that you're a bit more aware and conscientious of it.
But body language is super important.
If you can talk to people in person,
you should really try to do that.
I can't tell you how much you get from in person interviews,
because you also feel people.
Nobody talks about that, but you feel people's energy.
You sense them.
It's before even cognitively,
you've been able to make any type of assessment of someone intuitively, your six cents, or
to speak, which it absolutely exists, it's telling you something. So when you've got that nagging
feeling, or something's not sitting right, absolutely listen to it, absolutely listen to it.
Then read people, look at their mannerisms. So one of the things you could do, we would start off,
I would talk to someone in a conversation about
very neutral things.
How are you, where are you from?
Oh great, we'll bring you to LA.
But authentically, build that conversation.
And in that moment, you're really assessing that person,
J.S. to how they are when they're relaxed.
How they're sitting.
So if they're, for example, sitting and I'll give you a very, very basic example, if they're
sitting a certain way and then they shift during the interview, you can take notice of
that.
Actually, I'll use one of your interviews for an example.
So I watched your interview with Curtis Jackson from a couple of weeks ago.
And I was watching you ask Curtis questions about his book.
And anytime you ask Curtis a question that had to do with him remembering something or recall
calling something, Curtis would always look up into the right always.
Every time he had to access a memory and idea.
And so I would watch that interview
and I don't know him. I, the first time I'm really watching him during an interview. And in that
moment, I'm like, every time Curtis needs to remember something, that's where he looks. Up into the
right, he's recalling a memory. So now in that situation, if you ask Curtis something else, right?
You see Curtis doing this over and over again, then you ask him another question. That's a question
related to memory. But then you don't see him look up into the right. You see him doing this over and over again. Then you ask him another question. That's a question related to memory.
But then you don't see him look up into the right.
You see him look somewhere else.
That would be a pause.
You'd say, OK, up until this point, every time
I asked him something about memory or something
about recalling an event, he looked this way.
But now he's looking somewhere else.
So in that moment, you could argue,
or your reply could go up.
Maybe Curtis is creating a memory
now.
I'm not saying he did this, but sometimes like when people create lies, they access a different
part of their brain.
So you may access a part of your brain when you're trying to remember something.
And for him, all that was was he would lock up up into the right.
That was just Curtis.
But I wouldn't have noticed that if I didn't watch and pay attention to his patterns.
And so I would watch a deviation,
or if you ask somebody a question
and they're sitting in their relaxed posture,
then out of nowhere you ask them something
and you know it's a sensitive topic,
or maybe you're not even sure.
And their posture switches to something very common,
something like this.
You could say in that moment, all right,
I just asked the question
and his or her posture just shifted.
Why?
Now, could it be they got tired?
Could it be that that's their normal posture?
It could be.
But if they're not like this the whole time, that should be an indicator to you.
Like, there's something that happened here that they shifted their posture.
So, when you see these defy deviations and then you're able to realize certain people's
patterns, that's when
you become a better reader of people. And there's certain things, positions you want to look for,
even verbal language is super important. And I talk about red flag verbal language. I talk about
something like, for example, what I would see a lot when I worked financial institution crimes.
One of the things I would hear victims tell me a lot,
when I'd say, hey, why did you give this person your money
and not ask questions?
And they would say, you know, well, I asked,
but he said, you know, trust me.
And, you know, anytime I would hear that,
it was a huge red flag, it still is.
And so a truthful person will explain things to you,
a deceptive person won't. They won't explain things to you because they don't want will explain things to you. A deceptive person won't.
They won't explain things to you,
because they don't want to explain things to you.
So even there's certain patterns in language,
or somebody that repeatedly says,
I don't know, I don't recall.
I call it, I have a term for this.
It's like, I think that I have amnesia,
tactic that people use.
You see it deployed when people don't want to answer questions.
And that's really important with reading people, but I think what's also important for
people to understand is like the way people deceive, the way people lie. And we think that
a liar is going to be very obvious. So like there's three ways people lie. The first
way people lie, Jay, is they can make something up.
From beginning to end, it's a fabricated story.
It's completely made up.
The second way people lie is I put in a little bit of truth,
a little bit of lie, a little bit of truth,
a little bit of lie.
So I mix it up.
So it's kind of like a peak and valley thing.
The most common way people lie is through a mission. And it's what they don't tell you.
They leave it out.
And the majority of us, because we feel bad,
most of us that do have a conscience,
and some people have it more cutely than others.
But most of us just won't say it,
because we're like, I don't want to be a liar,
but I'll leave this part out.
The thing is, it's still a lie,
because you left it out,
it changes the story fundamentally. And that's where we really have to read people, but when you see something,
you also have to be able to come up with follow up questions. And that's another big thing.
A lot of times we let things slide. And don't we don't inquire, we're not inquisitive,
we'll take what people give us and then move on.
So if you ask somebody a question, you keep saying, I don't know, I don't know, and you
let it go, that's something that you have to look at and be like, okay, they're dodging
this question, how can I come back and ask this or maybe ask it later?
You know, it's kind of like you put a pin in it.
And these are some of the fundamental things that you want to look for body language.
Reading people, connecting with people, openness, when people feel relaxed too, they're going
to give you more information with their body.
We call it bleeding information.
So also, 2J, when people lie, they're nervous.
Nobody wants to get caught in a lie.
There's a stress response that happens.
So you'll see them, their body leak, bleed,
we used to use bleed, they would bleed information.
And so you'd say, why are they doing this with their body?
You know, while of a sudden, you know, they're sitting calmly
and all of a sudden, now they're scratching their head
when we're talking about, you know,
whether or not they got fired from their last job.
That's a deviation from what they were.
And so it really is about being in tune and looking
for all those different things. But most importantly, knowing when you see it and then coming back in
with questions. And another key thing that's really important is asking open-ended questions. And
I'm a huge advocate of this. If you get people to tell you a story. You want people to tell you a story. And the more they talk,
the more you will learn about people, they'll tell you what they're thinking, what they're feeling,
what their values are. You get a really good read on them, a really good read. And again,
that read will help you later on when you get into areas that you're concerned about, whether they've
been fired, whether, you know, they've been fired, whether they've been
to jail or stolen money or done whatever or whether what they put on their resumes truthful,
and that's what you look for those deviations.
Wow, you're playing my mind right now.
This is great.
Everyone, I hope you take in notes, right?
Evie's given us so many practical tips already, the three types of lying, fascinating, right?
The need for open-ended questions.
We don't ask enough of them, and that's something that we all know. We know we should ask open-ended
questions, but we don't know how to ask them. We don't know when to ask them. We we slow to
remember to ask them when we ended asking yes and no, and close questions. And so,
everything that everything, I hope you take notes because I'm taking mental notes a lot of these
things, and I promise you that there are so many practical tips in there as to how to
really build that rapport, how to build that connection and how to build that trust. Now,
every, you say that law enforcement academies are there to break you down and build your resilience.
How do they do that? Because it's almost like I feel like for anyone who wants to build their
resilience, first we have to break ourselves down to in order to really build it.
I remember in my monk training,
I felt like monk training broke me down
before we built anything.
Tell us about how it's done in the law enforcement academies
that you've explained.
I honestly think it's done in a similar way
that the foundation of it is similar
because it's stripping you of all your flaws.
It's stripping you of all the weaknesses, it's stripping you of all the weaknesses
that you may have that you should not have.
And it feels, it's hard.
My first week in the Academy, Jay,
like I was like, I wanna quit.
Everyone's yelling at me.
I don't know what I'm doing.
I'm super confused.
I came here with good intentions,
no matter what I do, I can't get it right.
And it was done purposefully because they want you to know what it feels like to have to be stressed out and
they want to see how you're going to react. How do you react to stress? You know
and even like what we're seeing today when you see officers doing certain
things that they should absolutely not be doing. Like when you are out there, you
can't you can't be like everybody else. Yeah, people can get in your face and people can be rude and people can put hands on you.
But you, you can't be them.
Just because somebody else escalates you don't escalate.
You have to keep it together.
And that is one of the most important things with regard to the profession and part of why
they try to do that in the training process.
And it's actually, they call it hormesis, with regard to the profession and part of why they try to do that in the training process.
And it's actually, they call it hormises,
HOTOMISE is the Greek word,
HORMETIC,
EFFECTS,
where you induce small amounts of stress into somebody.
They adapt to that stress,
they overcome that stress,
and then they're stronger,
more resilient a little bit,
and then you give them another stressful situation.
They adapt to that, they overcome it, and then another, and then another.
So then what happens is you've created a pattern or a habit rather, you create a habit
in which stress comes, you recognize it.
Oh, no big deal.
I've seen this before.
You accept the stress, and then you adapt to it. But when we are really kind of buffered from stress
in life and then when it does happen we're thinking, oh my god, this stressful situation happened,
what do I do? That's because you're not used to that. You've not adapted that. And so with training,
especially Secret Service Training, I mean, it was large amounts of stress and like running and being tactical and having
somebody yell at you and treat you like garbage and then failing at something and being humiliated
and then ridiculed.
You know, all these things and then you have to sit there and take it and stomach it
and sometimes it's truthful and then sometimes there's a little bit of drama and theatrics
involved because they want to break you down.
But the mindset was, if you can't handle this in here,
what are you gonna do out there?
Out there when people, especially in the secret service
when you're dealing with threats,
you're protecting other people's lives.
Like you have to keep it together.
So when the whole world is falling apart around you
or there's chaos, you can't follow suit.
You have to be so streamlined, so focused.
Like, I get havoc is happening around me,
but I got it, I'm laser focused.
And truly, Jay, that can only be done to you
by breaking you down, making you feel that burden
and that pressure and that stress.
And then you overcoming it. And then it also makes you more confident after that. You become
more confident in yourself. You're like, yeah, I've been here. I overcame this.
I'm good and it really does something for yourself is stream. Your self is
seem and your decision making abilities. They teach you to be decisive. It teaches
you to be decisive. To not you to be decisive. It's
not looked to like shop around for other people's answers, but intuitively to say to
yourself, I know the answer. This is my answer. I don't need anybody else's
okay to do this. And so I think that like that process really helps create a
strong people. But there's also another part of it that's called the self-selection
process where only people, I would see this pattern, like it is like this with special forces
and even certain jobs out there, only the people that really believe already from the
get go that they can do something, only those people put in for it.
You know, I hear people a lot of times say to me like,
oh my god, I could never have been the secret service agent.
I could never have gone through training.
And I think to myself, why not?
Why not? How did I?
And we, we defeat ourselves before we even try to do anything.
Like, well, we'll create a dream and kill it within like a minute.
That is so powerful.
You just said about how we defeat ourselves, even before we try.
And I don't know if you meant to rhyme it, but you did rhyme.
You said, we create a dream and then kill it within a minute.
And it's, it's so true.
It's so true.
And what I wonder is when you describe the tough, challenging,
resilient trainer you went through, it sounds like for a lot of people, the stress of their
lives feels like that high stress environment, but we don't react well to stress.
And what you were taught to do effectively is how to deal with very acute levels of stress. So what would have, if you were to break it down into a process
of like three or four steps,
and what were the steps of that training
to get better at dealing with more stress?
I love one example that you gave of like,
you know, more and more stress,
like smaller amounts of stress,
the bigger amounts of stress,
but what were other techniques that were used to help you do that?
Because I think a lot of people could benefit
from them right now?
When something happens, don't resist it. We resist things. Like even if you take J like the pandemic,
like I'll hear people like I can't believe this is happening. I can't believe this is happening.
I want things to go back. And we don't live in the truth of things. We live in the past. We live
in where we wish to be. And that destroys you right there So the first thing is you have to accept this is where I'm at it sucks
But this is where I'm at so you accept it and then now once you accept it and that's the biggest hurdle believe it or not
It's you we are always our biggest hurdles, but once you accept it not it's like okay
How do I handle it? How do I adapt? And can you filter out the noise?
Because there's always so much noise around us. And filtering out the noise is really,
really powerful. And you know, and you did say something earlier about how do we have stressful
lives? Something that's really important that I want to emphasize is that you are also the
gatekeeper of what kind of stress you allow into your life.
So, you have access to people that cause consistent and chronic amounts of stress in your
life, that's no good. That's not a good thing. You are the gatekeeper. And so, you have to
say, noise, chatter, this is all not good for me because it makes you more chaotic. If
you're around chaos, you're going to be chaotic. And you push, you have to, you have to be
the gatekeeper and keep that stuff away from you.
But for those moments, when things do happen,
it's the acceptance and then your ability to adapt and to be okay when you don't adapt right.
So there's plenty of times where I've not adapted right or done the right thing or handle something right.
And I always go back and even training was like that.
What did you learn?
What are you gonna do better next time?
Training was designed to make you fail
over and over and over again.
I failed, like failure was like my, my, my, my,
my, my keep crusade, like I failed at so many things.
And, but when I failed, I was like, all right,
what do I need to do differently?
Why didn't I perform at the level I was supposed to?
And then the fear of that failure, the fear of like, I might not graduate as a special agent
and I'm not going to lose this opportunity.
So passion is the big thing.
Whatever you're pursuing or dealing with, you have to have passion and drive.
You have to say, this is important to me.
If something's not important to you, you're not gonna,
it's not gonna matter.
You're gonna be flippant with it.
But I think that those are like the key things.
And then just when stress does happen to you,
I guess I tell people in the way I was taught,
like don't look at it as a horrible thing.
Look at it as an opportunity to learn and make it embrace it
and embrace the challenge, embrace the confrontation,
embrace the hardship.
Yeah, someone's coming at you now what?
And I know I'm talking in a tactical sense.
You know, I remember in training,
I didn't write about this in the book,
but we did something called Red Man.
And they would put us in the room
as one of the final training things.
And they put us in the room to fight somebody,
like really fight someone.
And they're like, okay, you have to go.
I can't believe.
I've re- freehand somebody.
We call it Red Man because he was like covered in a gear.
And Jay, he would beat the crap out of you.
I mean, he literally lifted me up this guy.
And it was an instructor.
I can't remember if he was two instructors
and like throw me across the room and they're like,
go get him, go get him.
And when instinctually you want to like kind of hide,
you know what I'm thinking, man, I'm going to get a beat down. But I remember thinking, I'm like, you're going to have to earn that beat down.
You may beat me, but you're going to have to earn it. And not being afraid to lose,
not being afraid to fail, not being afraid to be rejected. And I've, you undergo those things
in training all the time. Your ego goes out the door. You got an ego, you're the first person
that leaves that academy.
They will push you out.
They will make your life hell till you go.
And so embracing that and embracing failure
is so powerful.
Just being like, all right, what's up next?
That's insane, that is insane.
It's crazy to think about it because yeah
There are multiple ways to break someone down and I'm hoping as you're listening and watching to this
You realize in the messages that are coming out of what every saying around how you know
We're not going we're not getting chucked around in that way
But we're going through our own failures and our own rejections and our own stress and
Learning to not resist that stress learning to not resist that pain allows us to actually strengthen our resilience muscle.
Now, now, you've worked with some incredible leaders, and leaders that people have, you know,
people watched on TV and obsessed over and learn about, and I'm intrigued by what you feel you've learned from them or what you observed and then so if you take someone like, you know, former president Bill Clinton,
like I've always heard that he was extremely charming.
He was able to make everyone for special,
like there were the only people in the room.
What was something that you observed about him
that you think we're less aware of maybe?
I was so lucky.
There was, I remember there was a pointer
and remember walking into the White House here later
and I'd have moments like these days,
I was like, oh, my office is a White House.
I'm about to go see the president.
And in the beginning, you have those moments,
and after a while, you get used to it,
but even sometimes once in a while,
I'd be like, oh, yeah, okay, Bill Clinton coming,
or okay, oh, Baroque's coming down the hall, you know?
Let's go.
But look, I was there to do my job. So I wasn't there to be a
groupie. I wasn't there to be like, sir, sir, I have a question. How would you
handle this problem? Like, that stuff didn't fly like I were there to do a function.
But like, Jay, I was like a sponge, a sponge. And I absorbed from everything.
Because in the White House, you'd have the presidents coming through the first
ladies coming through foreign heads of state coming through, sometimes really remarkable people
who had extraordinary lives, Nobel Peace Prize winners. And I was like, I am so lucky to be here,
I'm going to absorb everything I can. And like, you know, you bring up Bill Clinton because he was
one of my first protecties truly. And I spent a lot of time with him and he really was like, you know, you bring up Bill Clinton because he was one of my first protectees truly. And I spent a lot of time with him.
And he really was like, you'd see him.
He talks to people and he was like,
hey, how are you?
He'd make, he'd connect with people.
He'd pull them in.
There was like, there was in the superficial like,
oh, hey, how are you?
And go.
And I saw with that, why people loved him.
Because I remember when I first started,
everywhere we went, there was like, droves of people. And I was like, do you loved him. Because I remember when I first started, everywhere we went,
there was like droves of people.
And I was like, do you like the most popular protectee?
Like the most popular president out there.
And after a while, I saw why?
Because he would really go shake hands with people,
talk to them.
He would remember a face he meets someone,
and then see somebody later be like, oh, yeah,
I met that guy five months ago somewhere.
And you're thinking, how do you remember? Cause this is someone who meets thousands of people.
And that was a skill. It came from a genuine place. Don't get me wrong, but a lot of these are skills and habits that you, you tweak and you, you, you, you find tune, especially when you're a leader.
And sometimes people think, oh, that's the president, you know, he has to be a leader. I'm not going to be a leader. I'm not going to be a leader.
I'm not going to be a leader.
I'm not going to be a leader.
I'm not going to be a leader.
I'm not going to be a leader.
I'm not going to be a leader.
I'm not going to be a leader.
I'm not going to be a leader.
I'm not going to be a leader.
I'm not going to be a leader.
I'm not going to be a leader. I'm not going to be a student. I would go to work and I do my job, but I was a student. Whatever I could see, whatever assignment I can volunteer for, I was that person. To be in proximity and to learn from successes and
failures and also talk about stress. These, their jobs, regardless of your political affiliation or
anything like the presidents that I would be around, they would deal with high-stress situations.
They couldn't fall to pieces. They couldn't.
They couldn't be upset or cry
because somebody called them horrible names
or insulted them on national TV,
because that would happen.
They were like, I gotta keep it together
and they kept it together until,
sometimes when you're around, not sometimes,
when you are around strong people like that,
you become that.
You absorb the energy of the people around you. You become
resilient. And so in that way, although maybe growing up, I didn't have that. I didn't have
access to people like that. I didn't have access to anything like that, but because I worked
hard to, I put myself in an environment that allowed me to have access to people like
that. You know, I did that. I made that happen. And then the people around us, we absorb that energy,
we absorb those habits, we absorb those characteristics. And I keep that to this day.
You know, I'm like, who's habits do I want to absorb? And then even Jail, so I learned from
some politicians, and not necessarily like the presidents are first ladies, but you know,
other politicians, habits where I'm
like, that's something I will never do. That's something
that's not right. You know, you can learn from not just the
positive people, the positive things people do, but even the
negative things people do. Like they can teach you how not to
be who not to be.
So I said, so I said, I think that's brilliant. And that's
something all of us can do, right?
Like whether you're working in a company or working at a startup or anything like any one of us can look to people.
And yeah, people with negative behavior teaches what we don't want to be like.
Can people with positive behavior teaches what we do want to be like?
And I think that that's something that we can all do so practically because when people say like,
well, what's the good and being in a bad situation, that's what
it is. You learn what you don't want to repeat. You learn what you don't want to recreate.
And I think that's really, really beautiful to explain. But yeah, okay. So, Evie, what I
want to end with you is your final five. These are your rapid fire questions. So you've
given us some incredible answers with so much depth and insight.
Now we've got to turn it the other way. So you'll be a pro at this,
because I'm guessing you've done so much more of this than I have. But you've got to answer the next
five questions with either one word or one sentence maximum. Oh, the pressure, Jay, the pressure.
Yeah, I mean, this is like easy for you. You're like, come on, I got thrown around a room.
But let's do it. Let's do it. Okay, so
the first question is what question do you usually open interrogations with?
Tell me about your day. Oh, interesting. Okay, question number two, what is the most powerful thing
you learn from Barack Obama or observing Barack Obama? It doesn't have to be directly for him.
His voice, the power of voice.
Wow.
His voice, like he commanded his voice.
Yes.
And I never thought about that till I watched him.
And how would a powerful tool that is parallel linguistics?
Not what you say, but how you say it.
Yes.
Great lesson, love it. What's one thing you learned from
Michelle Obama? Self-worth. She taught me like that I think because I grew up a certain way and
I we didn't grew up in poverty but we didn't grow up great either and I always thought that taking
care of yourself and doing certain things
meant was a luxury and you shouldn't do that.
And I had a wrong perception of it and I learned from her that that just means you love
yourself and you respect yourself.
So I learned self-worth.
Taking care of yourself.
That's beautiful.
Okay question number four out of your five.
If you could create one
law that everyone else in the world had to follow, what would it be?
Stop trying to shove your opinion down somebody else's throat. Just listen, you don't have
to like it, but just allow people to express themselves, even if you don't like it.
Great answer. And question number five, what's the biggest lesson you've learned in the
last 12 months?
Um, hmm, God, man, there's so many. I've learned that during a time of crisis, you can either be a giver or you can be a taker.
And you choose who you want to be. So when this whole thing is over,
when I look back and when you look back or whenever a person looks back,
what were you? Were you someone who gave to help during the pandemic?
Or these issues? Or did you say you were someone who took?
And so I learned that there's a role to play
and you have a choice.
Beautiful, what a great answer.
Everyone that is heavy upon porous,
we've been talking about the coming bullet proof,
I will put the link to the book in the comments.
If you wanna build up a mental shield,
if you wanna read people, understand body language,
influence scenarios, and most importantly,
live fearlessly.
This is the book that you want to go and grab.
Full of incredible stories, insights.
We haven't even dived into,
we literally scratched the surface today.
There is so much more that Evie has to share
about human behavior, the mind,
and those fascinating stories that underpin her life.
Evie, thank you so much for joining us today on on purpose.
It's been so wonderful speaking with you.
I hope we get to meet at some stage.
And I just want to thank you for the incredible work you did.
So thank you so much.
Thank you so much, Jay. It was awesome.
I hope we get to meet too. Be well, be safe.
Music
Hi, I'm Brendan Francis Nuneum, I'm a journalist, a wanderer, and a bit of a bon vivant, but mostly
a human just trying to figure out what it's all about.
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
it, I try to get invited to a local's house for dinner,
where kind of trying to get invited to a dinner party,
it doesn't always work out.
Ooh, I have to get back to you.
Listen to not lost on the I Heart radio app
or wherever you get your podcasts.
The one you feed explores how to build a fulfilling life
admits the challenges we face.
We share manageable steps to living with more joy
and less fear
through guidance on emotional resilience,
transformational habits, and personal growth.
I'm your host, Eric Zimmer, and I speak with experts
ranging from psychologists to spiritual teachers,
offering powerful lessons to apply daily.
Create the life you want now.
Listen to the one you feed on the I Heart Radio app, Apple
Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Eva Longoria and I'm Maite Gomes-Rachon.
We're so excited to introduce you to our new podcast, Hungry for History!
On every episode, we're exploring some of our favorite dishes, ingredients, beverages,
from our Mexican culture. We'll share personal memories and family stories,
decode culinary customs,
and even provide a recipe or two for you to try at home.
Listen to Hungry for History on the I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you
get your podcasts.