Pablo Torre Finds Out - Stretch & Share & Tell: The Keys to Happiness with Amin Elhassan, Dan Le Batard, and Pablo
Episode Date: February 8, 2024We're all desperately seeking self-improvement, so Pablo puts aside the spiritual mumbo-jumbo, puts his friends to the test, and emerges with something like service journalism: how to breathe correctl...y, exercise better, appreciate your career choices, accept failure, thank your feet, and learn to love your own superpower. (Even if that superpower is using a Jedi mind trick to singe your own thumb down to ash.)Further reading:The World's Happiest People All Share These 15 Things in Common (CNBC) Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Pablo Torre finds out.
I am Pablo Torre, and today we're going to find out what this sound is.
I possess the ability to stare or even think about one body part and make it hurt.
Right after this ad.
You're listening to Draft King's Network.
Dan needs to get out of here.
It's not the best way to start a special share-and-tel episode of Pablo Tori finds out in Miami.
I am late. I am late.
I promised my wife that work will not keep getting in the way of me.
my health, and I am late after making many promises for two years to an acupuncture appointment.
I have to get out of here.
Well, the good news is this has nothing to do with health, because acupuncture does not work.
Oh, no.
It doesn't work.
Have you done it?
I tried it twice.
I have never done it.
I want to know more about this.
I've been doing it for years.
I've been doing it for years at the insistence of my wife who wants me to holistically heal so I don't
have to have organs removed or gallbladder removed because we're choosing a holistic medicine.
And I understand why you wouldn't believe in it.
I wouldn't either.
I did it a couple of times and thought it was ridiculous.
How would this work?
But I have felt the healing properties and the energies of it in a way that, like, I'm surprised by.
Like, physically felt it.
And Dan said energies and it was like.
I understand why people would be agnostic or atheist about that.
This ties in because I recently started doing yoga.
Now, when I say start doing yoga, I've been stretching, you know, for the last month and some change.
Using yoga positions, that's not what I'm talking about.
I'm talking about an actual yoga class.
A practice?
Do you call it a practice?
A practice.
There it is.
Went into the studio.
It starts at a certain time.
You take your shoes off.
You've got your mat.
Do you do yoga from an emotional space?
Breathing, try to be meditative, peaceful.
Do you do breath work?
Okay, so this is exactly where I'm going with this.
Because every time Dan says, oh, I mean, you're doing yoga.
I'm doing the mechanical stretches.
I'm stretching.
If it's a yoga pose or not, I really don't know.
Walked into the yoga class and was not prepared for the deluge of what I like to call spiritual mumbo-jumbo.
I was told to thank my feet at one point.
And I just had to, you got to be kidding.
I have gratitude for your feet.
I'm trying to look around as anyone else really.
And I realize everyone's bought in.
But aren't you sort of a spiritual atheist here, though?
Like, aren't you the most cynical of hardened, like, okay.
Well, even more than that, I think of Amin as the person who was already just thinking about how to make fun of this later.
The whole time, I swear to God, I want to reach over, grab my phone and write a couple more notes.
This would come in handy on Monday.
I swear to God, the whole time.
Every time something that was just not, well, but would you agree with, I don't know how flexible you physically feel,
but do you agree that there's a physical state where you could be so centered with balance and breathing?
and present in a meditative moment
because your body is flexed out
and you're grateful for it
in a super present moment.
Would you believe in the spirituality of that
or would you just say that's mumbo-jumbo?
No. For me, it comes down to doing the pose,
trying to get a better form on it
through stretching.
And breathing or not...
And breathing or just stretching?
But breathing as a function of...
I don't know why.
I still don't know what the science is,
but I know because even when I go to like a professional stretcher,
they're always like, all right, inhale, exhale, whatever.
Like, there's something there that helps with the stretching.
That's not like inhale, the pure energy, exhale, all the negative.
It's not that.
It's just literally the physics or the science of breathing.
It is.
So I should say that, like, I am no expert in any of this,
but I just do appreciate more than I ever have how essential breathing is,
which is a funny thing to feel revelatory about
because it's the most obvious thing
that we need to stay alive.
Pablo, imagine learning deep into your life
that, oh, I don't know how to breathe,
which is what I learned in the yoga class
because the instructor will say,
inhale through your nose,
and then walk around.
I have just started over the last year
doing breathing exercises every morning
just because of in search of something.
some sort of serenity.
It's not serenity.
I'm just talking about
the start to say,
breathing through your nose,
and then start talking about
something else,
and then, all right,
now exhale out your mouth.
And I was like,
you guys were holding your breath
that whole time?
I want to thank Valerie here,
actually, because I'm somebody
who's read and heard people
talk about breathing,
and of course,
I'm struck by how obvious it is
in retrospect,
but also,
um,
also,
I did not know.
And this is embarrassing
because Valerie put on
Instagram stories,
a graphic about box breathing,
which is a thing that, like, Navy SEALs do, apparently,
and many yogis have mastered,
where it's, you know, just four steps of a certain number of seconds,
four seconds maybe even.
I clearly didn't get the details all written down.
But the point is, I started doing it, and I count to four.
Do it, do it right now.
But cynically, doing it cynically, or doing it like, I'm going to try this?
I tried it.
and just the very basic attempt revealed to me
that it was helping me
because I too didn't really know how to breathe.
Yeah, I think that's the thing.
Like, to me, Dan, if you say to me,
hey, do it like this,
you're going to find that you get calmer
because you're actually putting more oxygen into,
oxygenated blood into your brain.
Yeah, but all of that can be so as well.
When you say like the energies and like crystals and things,
I just, I'm...
Okay, but it's...
And so it would be the difference between me saying to you, do you think that my brother can reach me from there or not?
Because I would go into whatever the last year and a half of my life had been, I'm going to say that my brother dies and he's just dead.
And that's it.
And don't talk to me about energies.
That's just death.
That's just over.
And it's gone and it's never coming back.
But if I were to tell you from in the same place where I'm doing the breathing exercises and the acupuncture, and I feel something,
on me that feels healing to me physically, energetically.
If I tell you my brother can reach me from there,
I too would have looked at this a year and a half ago
and said, that idiot, that fool,
he just wants to believe in something.
He just wants to believe in magical energies that heal him.
But I would have been the biggest cynic.
And somewhere in here, I feel something physically on me,
physically, an energy with needles poked into me
where I'm like, my brother's here somewhere.
Like, there's healing and healing.
somewhere. Like, why am I here? I don't believe in any of this shit.
I think needles in my body? Why am I here for three years? I think, Dan, that there is healing,
for sure. But I think what is healing is the acknowledgement and the appreciation of the legacy of your brother.
That's what's, it's you coming to terms. And that's fond and romantic. I can do that logic.
with you, but I'm talking about a physical feeling here.
I'm not inventing a physical feeling.
I'm not, I'm saying to you that you are affiliating
that the needles feel like something.
I mean, they didn't feel like something before.
They feel like something that's healing.
In a room where I'm also doing therapy over here
and I'm being led into the uncomfortable by a therapist
who is at my brother's deathbed who's saying,
just scream into these pillows
and ask your ancestors, your descendants,
for relief from your patterns.
Like scream, scream it out.
You, my repressed friend,
who I hug and moves away from me
because you're not comfortable with these feelings.
My ancestors, my ancestors don't have anything to do with how I feel.
They don't.
That's the reality is, man, I didn't even,
I met, like, for all intents and purposes,
I knew one of my four grandparents.
Forget about ancestors.
One of my four grandparents.
And she was senile for the majority of the time that I knew her.
This is where I think there's like far more overlap in this Venn diagram than either of you guys are giving it, which is there is something physical and real that happens when, for instance, box breathing, right?
In for four, hold for four, out for four, hold for four.
That's it?
Yeah.
Just count.
That's the longest four seconds there.
Yeah.
Okay.
So, but to count in fours like that ultimately allows your body to respond in a way.
that should give some sort of relief to you.
And what I think Dan is describing is a process.
And again, I am not qualified to give the scientific evaluation of this,
but I just know from feeling it,
then when you buy into the idea that, oh, my God,
my body works in ways that I did not appreciate.
And so, therefore, if I try this thing...
I don't know what I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't have any idea of how little I know about, ah, energies, fuck off.
But I'm just saying, are you...
Is it not possible that you were affiliating something
Yeah, I suppose it is.
One thing with a physical feeling over here.
It could be hopeful, but I would say to you that what do I do with,
you think my mind is producing the physical feeling of healing?
Because anybody who's been watching this for the last six months has seen me
physically disinflate because the stress of my brother and that deathbed thing
put 50 pounds on me of stress.
And this and somewhere in here, there's been physical healing that would be obvious to
the eye to anybody looking at me because I'm not all cortisol bloated on on stresses and something
in here feels physically healing my body feels better and and I can't dispute it I'm doing the same
things I've been doing for 10 years with my body might I ask the table a question are you guys
there are things that happen to me that I don't know whether this is everyone or it's just me
since I was a child I possessed the ability to stare or even think about what
body part and make it hurt.
Like right now, my thumb feels fine.
If I, I can think about my left
thumb until it starts to hurt.
I do not
have that superpower. All right.
So given that I can do that.
On the negative. On the dark. On the dark.
That seems like the worst superpower.
It's a terrible superpower.
You just, you just, you singe off your own thumbs
with your will.
With your, with your political will,
you will sing on your, your, your thunds
into dust, into ass.
Isn't it not possible that also similarly someone can, through the power of just belief, find healing and find pain relief, that isn't actually something supernatural coming from another dimension?
Isn't that the entire religious conversation, though, if I were to say to you, you're telling me I'm choosing to believe in something that's hopeful, that there are energies from the beyond that would touch me.
And you're saying, better to live a life where you're singeing your.
thumbs to ash.
Well, I'm not saying, with the lack of belief, with being right instead of, like, and I'm not
even arguing on behalf of anything.
I mean, other than what I physically felt.
So, so one of the things about the human body that has always been enthralling to me is
the placebo effect, right?
So what does this mean?
It means that the human brain, when convinced that something is happening medically, can
actually will it to happen in lieu of the actual medicine or science being applied.
But if you can imagine yourself to healing and then you then get healed, is it faith or did you heal yourself?
Well, that's why what I am thinking about all of this, especially the tension that you guys have around what's really happening, is just a vocabulary concern.
Because when I hear Dan say energy, what I'm really hearing is Dan allowing him to feel things that the clenching of his body would not permit unless it was stimulated by a needle, by.
the power of his brain, by whatever, an SSRI, anything,
into just feeling something that he has wanted to feel but could not before.
And that superpower, by any name, feels like healing.
And so what does it take to get there?
Does it take acupuncture?
Does it take ayahuasca?
I'm open to any of these things as long as it works.
Right.
And the comedy, I think, is in the marketing.
What are you being sold as opposed to what are you actually feeling?
And also, who's buying, right?
When I entered that yoga classroom and this lady's telling me to thank my feet.
And I'm like, guys, you get a little, oh, snap, you guys are all actually doing it.
Because they come in preconditioned to want to believe.
They want to believe that through.
this, they are going to find
whatever that is. But if they feel
in a way of all... But if they feel better,
does it matter at the end of it? Whether you're right
or wrong about their motives on getting to feeling
better? Like, if they just imagine themselves
into feeling better, then
isn't... It matters
in that that's the consumer.
I'm a different consumer.
I walk in and I want you to tell
me the things that will
in my mind
logically lead to that. Like, I don't tell me
thank your feet. Tell me, roll
Hold your foot in a circle this way.
Roll it that way.
What if I were through the breath?
What if I were through the death of my brother?
I can't advocate for this now because it forces me to continue on a path that has been hard and rigorous.
Because I've done these things with breathing, with needles, with diet, with sleep help, with exercise,
with all of the sciences trying to heal myself up.
And what I needed was to feel more joyful, right?
When I'm talking to you about praying to descendants,
I'm sitting there at 50 years old,
not understanding what love is supposed to feel like,
beating on pillows and everything else,
and pleading with my dead grandparents
to give me a different relationship with life and a woman
than the ones they all had
because I hand me down to a bunch of male, Latino, lonely people,
didn't know how to turn themselves over to a woman.
Culturally, man is boss, man runs household.
And I needed all of that to, like,
like totally dissolve in the face of love, which I have now found, deepest of all,
which has pushed me toward the light of, try the needles, try the breathwork,
try the yoga, try the things that might heal you up, whether it's God or not.
I think in that, right, what I sense is the attempt for you to be able to wrap your brain
around why you've inherited certain practices, norms, expectations,
psychological burdens
and there is something about
creating a ritual that allows you to
throw those off, right? This is something
that has been common
throughout just like human ritual throughout history.
What Amin is asking
is for yoga
for skeptics.
Yoga for
guy who wants to make a joke about
this and doesn't want to be tempted.
It has permission. Yes, doesn't want to be tempted
into the exit ramp of like,
Well, now I'm just going to get lost on the vocabulary.
I have to buy the spiritual mumbo jumbo too.
I can't just come here and stretch.
Right.
Exactly.
I can't just come in there and do a figure four or whatever.
But do something that is legitimately healing to your body, which is an hour of stretching.
Yes.
And leave me alone.
I'd like to leave with my mat now.
Because the extra stuff may work for the consumer who's looking to buy.
But for me, it is incredibly distracting and incredibly annoying.
At the best part, it's what Pablo said.
Amin sitting there and he's just thinking of jokes the whole time.
So not tools for yoga, yoga for tools.
That's what you want to...
You want to inverse the way yoga's marketed.
I just like that so far in Amin's story about going to yoga,
we're like one minute into the class.
Well, do you have 50 minutes of jokes here on yoga?
You could do a whole stand-up routine.
What's the deal with these names, right?
Downward dog.
No, it's like upward dog and cobra.
What the hell is the difference?
And then they tell me the difference is your hips is on foot.
Hey, you know what?
Let's keep it out of the dog family.
It's funny that at some point the hippiness comes all the way back around to science
because we're all just kind of, you know, we're all star dust, as they say, right?
Like me and this table are mostly made of fundamentally the same thing, just like some stuff.
And so what are we?
We're kind of all the same in a literal way, but also like a very woo-woo.
Amin is like guffawing in the corner.
writing this down to his phone sort of a way.
And so all of which is to lead us to this thing about blue zones.
So there has been this research that's tried to put some actual science and demographic study
to what it means to be happier, right?
We're all searching for happiness and for relief from pain.
And so there is this researcher, this guy, Dan Boatner, B-U-E-T-N-E-R,
who's become famous for this blue zone.
own concept. And I don't want to buy his stuff as if this is religious authority. But what they've
done, he has done, is spent the last 20 years studying what turns out to be five areas of the
planet where people are making it to 90 years old, 100 years old at the highest rates without
the diseases that are killing Americans. And accompanying that, Dan, is this greater happiness.
They seem to really enjoy their lives more. And so they set out to study.
Well, what is it that these zones are doing right?
And I don't know if you guys are familiar with any of these places, but here are the five.
Well, my favorite one is just have tons of money.
Have like have financial, total financial security.
No, hold on.
I want to give the list and we'll get to the criteria.
We're going to take a test together, which is something that I love to do on this show,
is figure out what kind of fucked up are we by taking a test.
But the blue zones are Okinawa, Japan.
Okay.
Sardinia, Italy.
Lovely.
Nicoya Costa Rica.
Lovely.
Akaria, Greece.
Uh-huh.
And Loma Linda, California.
Oh, so not Cleveland.
Telling people who just wake up happy.
I'm just thinking the joke, Kim Noah.
People wake up happy.
They're in Cleveland.
He's going to go after Cleveland again.
That's what you're going to do with this spiritual time.
You're just going to go, you're going to develop a war against Cleveland again.
I just write it in my notes.
So, Dan, they have come up with a list of 15 cowbell
metrics that signal happiness.
I'm not, I would imagine, when I was reading this, I was imagining a mean scoffing and how
simplistic the questions were, right?
Well, let's not take the jury pool.
But I'm just, I imagine a mean getting this.
And really, the secret to happiness in 15 questions here, oh, you haven't seen.
Haven't seen the questions.
I did not see the question.
I read the first part about the blue zones, but I didn't read the questions.
Okay.
So this is the heading, right?
If you agree with these statements, you are happier than most people.
Okay.
We're going to read them out.
We're going to discuss.
as we go. Number one, you manage your finance as well and live within your means. You have enough
money to do everything you want to do. No. I mean, yeah, that money would buy happiness there,
right? That's what they're saying. Number one is like, yeah, and I imagine most people listening
to this would say there aren't any greater problems than not having money. And I would say, well, not having
health. Well, hold on, hold on. I want to give you a little bit of vocabulary lesson here.
because what they're saying is actually more complicated than that.
What they're saying is that, look, look at the sentence,
you have enough money to do everything you want to do.
That's my no.
I don't have enough money to do everything I want to do.
So part of this, the implication here, is a you problem.
Right.
What do you want to do, I mean?
You miserable, b-s.
Old people are climbing hills and fucking eating fruits off of trees,
and they are loving their lives.
What do you want to do?
want to do.
I don't want to take it into a deeply emotional space.
Saving my country would be on that list of things I want to do.
The Trump card.
Yeah.
Small goals.
Yeah.
I mean, look.
You're failing.
You're talking about me being happy.
Like, yeah, like, I'm unhappy that I'm helpless.
Well, this, no, this is, and this permeates all of a means being, right?
He, I think that it's hard to be happy.
Is one of the questions there about Survivor's guilt?
like because yeah
if
Amin thinks he could be doing more
for people who he loves
and that
I'm not speaking for you when I say
Sudan is not a blue zone
far from it now
far from it
I don't but I don't speak for you
when I say you
I mean carries himself
with something as if
as if he's soaked in cowardice every day
just because he's not doing more
for his people every minute
I feel it every every single day
every moment, like, every moment is either thinking of it or actively trying to forget about it
and then feeling guilty that I have that feeling.
So, but even if I were to leave Sudan aside, I was trying to bait you into saying speedboat.
You went the other way.
Sorry.
I'm sorry.
Dan?
You feel like you're reasonably checking that box?
I mean, I'm pretty close.
I would say that if there were more time to see the world with my wife, that would be a grand thing to do.
But financially, by the way, I am with you.
Yes, I largely feel like I have the financial freedom to do what I wish to do, but...
Not the time freedom.
I bought an Apple Vision Pro this week, so I can only say yes to this question.
You fell for it.
Sorry to Violet and her future education.
I've made choices about what I want to do.
And it's amazing, right?
And it's amazing.
It's amazing.
That's a separate future episode,
but it's actually amazing.
And also, I've never felt more pathetic
when I look at myself in the mirror.
Number two,
you set and reach goals on an ongoing basis.
Yes.
Yeah?
Yes.
I feel like that one we can all feel reasonably good about.
Yeah.
Number three, you always make time for
trips or vacations with family and friends.
And there, Dan, you have reached the no.
That was the part of your answer to number one.
Right.
That, yeah, I mean, I would like, I mean, we're going to Vegas this week, right?
So it's work and pleasure, but it's not exactly seeing the world.
That's, I mean, that's my life.
Is any, 99% of the trips I take, whether it's, I have fun on that trip or not,
is in some way work-related.
Same.
And so, like, I took a, I took.
told the story. I took my parents and my whole family, my brother, his wife, his kid, my kids,
my sister to Hawaii for my parents' 50th anniversary. And I think that was the first honest-to-god
vacation that I had been on with my family since before the pandemic.
Pablo, do people understand what a hustler, this guy is? Like, he made a bold career choice, man.
And you've seen it. Like, he's, he busts his ass. I mean, it is unusual to be. He's flying.
He is flying across the country all the time to be a part of what we're doing every day.
Like, nobody else is doing that.
Nobody I know is more plausibly, theoretically on vacation more than a mean without ever actually being on it.
You're going, L.A., Miami, all of the time.
And that's not what we're talking about with number three.
Well, I mean, like the secret in my life that I found was that I would rather work every single day of my life, maybe an hour a day on some of those days.
then get a month off of work
and then come back and just go back to,
I can't do it.
It's the hardest thing for me.
Oh, but I don't know how much, look, man.
I mean, I don't know how much you hide
from the despair of your homeland in your work.
Like, it's a nice place to hide
to work so hard on creative things
that you're not thinking about the things that make you go dark.
Like the things that make you feel helpless
in this country at this time
because we've got so many problems over here
that nobody can't even care
about what your pain is every day.
Number four, you use your strengths
to do what you do best every day.
It's all feel our immigrant fathers
on this one for a second.
I would say no.
Oh, wow.
I'm going to say yes.
I'm going to say yes,
and I attribute that yes
to this show that I'm doing
in which I feel like I get fulfillment
from a thing that feels like me.
I feel very privileged in a real way to get to say yes to number four because of this program.
I would say our company fails if it doesn't get you to the same place because, like, that's, I insist upon it being that.
I think it's bigger than your job, right?
Well, but not if you tie up, not if you tie up so much of your identity in your job, right?
Like, it can be.
But here's the thing, Dan.
Let's read it again.
Your strengths to do what you do.
best, I have fought for a long time
this other alternate life calling.
You should have been a doctor.
Should have been a doctor, a senator,
use your smarts to do something that
make what if you're best at something more serious?
Yeah.
And I mean is...
That's exactly, that's exactly like I spent a life
dicking around, talking about people putting a ball
in a basket.
Oh, wow.
That's midlife crisis self-worth shit.
That's early.
That's my whole life.
Amin,
so Amin and I spent time in the same part of Manhattan
where I grew up.
Amin was around.
You hustled your way to a career in this nonsense.
In this nonsense, you hustled your way.
Nonsense.
To a media career.
No, but the degree of difficulty
choosing the other path,
choosing the hardest path to follow laughs or your passions.
I told Pablo this story.
What I told my parents,
I didn't want to be an engineer.
I want to be,
I want to work it back.
I think I might have gotten a better reaction had I said I'm quitting I'm
But you followed your heart I'm joining the circus and also by the way
But you followed your but you followed your heart and now and now you say oh what's the worth of it? I just followed my heart no but I could have been
Hardiothoracic surgeon I'm answering that question though making jokes on the side
I'm answering yeah pretty much during during some sort of yeah okay I'm answering I'm answering the question the question
is, am I using my strengths
to the best of my ability?
And no, I'm using it to
goof off with my friends. Can you imagine
the alternate world? I mentioned our shared
background in like Murray Hill in Manhattan
But hold on a minute, to hustle your way
to a career that saves and protects your entire
family now because... But
the point I'm trying to make is that
Amin, where I grew up,
Amin knew some of those
Sudanese people
because they were diplomats.
And so this notion of
like, ah, I could be using my strengths to do something.
By building a bridge.
My dad is a diplomat.
That's why I say it.
By building a bridge between Nick's fans and Heath fans as an adult, making a career out of it
because you can bring together worlds goofing around because you enjoy it more than perhaps
saving your country on a daily basis.
I'm going to blow by number five.
You feel safe and secure in your community.
I feel like we're all thankfully pretty good on that.
Number six, you learn something new or.
interesting every day. Not every day.
But no, I didn't. I didn't.
I wanted to be that person.
I want to feel like that person.
You should host the show called Dan Libetard Finds Out.
He's got to there.
Or listen to it. How dare you?
Number seven, you have
someone in your life who encourages
you to be healthy.
My mom. Does that count?
Mom still count, right? What does encourage mean?
Well, that's a funny word, right? Because I don't
think this one, now this one's interesting.
I mean, this one relationship-wise, is
interesting. Like the thing, when I, the things that I learn about where my blind spots are and stuff,
they almost always have to reveal themselves to me. Like, I can't be talked into, so my wife has
to be very gentle around some delicate feelings that I wish she didn't have to be so gentle with
because, because I have to see my blind spots for myself in order to sort of make the changes
that have to be made so that I can be actually healthy. My wife, my wife tells me to, like,
eat more fiber.
So I'm going to say yes to this one.
I think we're all coming for the same place here.
Yep, yep.
Number eight, relatedly, you eat healthy every day.
Number nine, you eat five servings of fruits and vegetables,
at least four days every week.
That seems like, yeah.
That was aggressive.
But I do eat healthy.
Most people, yeah, would probably be surprised.
But I am, yes.
I am now.
We can talk about that too.
My daily diet is very boring.
It is annoyingly boring for people who want to go out to dinner
with you in a city like, say, New York.
Yeah. And the city's like, say, city.
Yeah. Any city. Yeah. Really annoying.
A lot of limitations.
Garlic to gluten. It's annoying.
I would hate us if I were a server.
And they do, by and large, I think.
They should.
Number 10, you get to the dentist at least once per year.
Oh, yeah. I'm killing that one.
I am too. Three times a year, at least.
Yeah, every three months.
Three months. Wow.
Yeah, well, just, yeah.
Good for you.
Well, I go four months.
Well, I think a lot of.
of disease starts in the mouth, right? I think a lot of, like, I heard David Samson one time
in one of the worst and best, like, emotional speech to be made at a bar mitzvah, just yell.
Floss, everybody. Sorry, I kind of blew that, but floss. Yeah, floss. Your mouth is the,
is a place for a lot of disease. You're saying we should thank our mouth.
I hate that I'm now a life coach here, I feel, but I feel like I've also learned some of these
things over the last four years in a way that I was really, really ignorant around before.
So for the podcast audience, Dan has largely been doing this show with his eyes closed,
which I think is suggestive of how...
It's how I do therapy a little time.
Real all of this is to him?
My therapist calls me on this.
Yeah, because I often do it with my eyes closed.
It makes me listen better and interrupt less.
If Dan was a life coach, he'd be like, what's my man's name before McVeigh?
Jeff Fisher.
A really shi life coach.
No, it's just like an average.
An eight and eight life coach.
Eight, A-T-E and eight.
Yeah.
I've been, no, man, but I've been eating my, God almighty,
I've been eating my feelings since my mom,
yeah, fed me from a kid, and that's what love looked like.
Yeah, yeah.
That's how you become a fat kid.
Oh, no.
What's next?
Number 11, I mean, qualifies if this, in fact,
qualifies as the city or area where you live
because number 11 is,
in the last 12 months,
you have received recognition
for helping to improve the city or area where you live.
For sure, Miami, yes.
Like, dude, TSA agents love me.
Why?
I don't know.
I don't, it's because of him.
They love him.
And so I get the leftover glow.
But, yeah, I would say most people in Miami
seem to like me.
in a way that I don't feel that in Phoenix, which is weird.
Even, and it's not just a function of me being here a lot lately, even before.
Oh, wow, that is so cool.
I didn't realize that that, no, but they associate you with being a representative
for, like, the things that Miami and the heat are about, like, to the country.
Yeah, I feel embraced by the city in a way that, like, I almost feel like, well, guys,
you guys, you guys know I'm not from here.
I don't want to be a fraud on this.
Guys, this is the city or area where I live.
Yeah, I don't even live here, but I've always,
felt really, really embraced by Miami.
And obviously it's because of you, Dan.
Well, no, you say it's because of me, but you do understand, right?
Like, it's a cool thing that we built in Miami,
and Miami means a great deal to me.
But Miami knows what you did, I mean, like,
the reason our audience is so uniquely loyal,
the most, like, the craziest of them,
four hours a day, don't touch this fucking thing.
It's pure.
Don't fuck it all up.
Like, they saw what you did, dude.
You threw your career in the air and said,
no, I ride with these fuckers.
Like, come on.
And those people will ride with you for fucking ever, dude.
For fucking ever.
Because they saw what you did, man.
I get no recognition for helping to improve New York City for the record.
None of that applies to me.
How cool is that, though, that they see you in the streets and they know that that's what you represent?
How cool is it specifically that TSA?
Amina al-Hasson, little Amin al-Hasson.
I don't think the airport was the place where you would feel most safe.
On Levitard show, we talked about, like, what's the level of fame?
That's the appropriate level of fame, where you get stuff done, but you're not hampered by it.
And I would say when the TSA agents know who you are and, like, are cool with you, that, for me particularly.
But do you know where that comes from?
Because I think that is where when people think that we're a cult or an addiction or stuff, this is the coolest part of what we do, man.
When you say you don't, that what you do doesn't have real value or isn't fixing your homeland.
people who are unhappy in their work for eight hours a day
have four hours where they feel like they know these group of clowns here,
this group of clowns who are taking them through half a workday
that would have been more miserable if they didn't have us with them there.
Those people ride with us hundreds, thousands strong from there.
It's why they're the most loyal audience, man,
and they know you from there.
They feel like they know you.
I mean, sure.
You sound like Johnny Depp on Life's Too Short.
when he's talking about.
I bring joy to people.
Pirates of the Caribbean,
but a lot of joy to people.
And you think you're funny
with your little jokes, Ricky Jervais.
Like, that's what it feels.
Like, I get it.
We provide a service,
but it feels like a service
that empty calories?
Yeah.
Okay, that making people
half less miserable at work is empty calories?
I just like the progress
that America has shown
in Amin El-Hasson.
TSA hit.
Being welcomed by the security at an airport.
Also, I don't think
they know about my career, like that part.
Like, because many of them are still saying,
I haven't seen you guys on ESPN for a while.
Oh, no, but I think that's true.
I think, yes, that's true.
That is ESPN's reach and fame.
And that is, but that's the risk you took with your career.
Sure.
They don't know that, though.
Well, they may not.
I think, but I'm saying they should.
It's meaningful.
I think, I think what you said first is that, like,
if I'm able to make their work day a little less arduous.
Why do you make it sound like that doesn't have any work?
People are really deeply unhappy at work.
That's got to be one of the 15, no?
Like, do you do something?
Let's polish these off.
Number 12, you don't smoke?
I don't, but I do smoke hookah, but not enough to call myself a smear.
Where are you on the hookah now these days?
I mean, I still do it, but not frequently.
Yeah.
Scars on occasion.
But, yeah, not very often.
We stuffed into a one-hitter that I carry around with me.
Whatever.
Number 13.
It's just the one where we all feel.
It's just you are of a normal healthy weight,
and I don't want to dwell on this.
I think I am.
I'm overweight.
Very good.
Still.
I could lose 30 pounds.
Number 14, you exercise at least 30 minutes,
at least three days per week.
Yo.
So, and number 15, you are active and productive every day.
The big realizations of the Blue Zone people are that they're not like pumping iron.
They're not going to the gym.
What they are doing is living in places where they walk and garden and they're not using, like, mechanical conveniences.
They've just kept their metabolisms high because they're moving around a lot.
And for me, like, if we can call rebrand exercise or rebrand walking around New York City as exercise, then absolutely I'm doing this.
And walking around New York City is my favorite thing to do in the way.
the world by myself.
New York makes it very easy to walk.
Every time I'm in New York, I'm astounded by what my Apple Watch tells me I've done
by way of what it classifies as exercise, which is walking at a brisk pace for a sustained
amount of time.
So the length of the amount of miles that I walk, the heart rate that I get doing it, the calories
that I burn.
But connection to city, you would say was energy there, right?
Or no?
Well, no, it's just because I think the, the, the, you know, the, you know, the, you know, the,
It's a city designed to be walked.
But I'm saying you don't feel energetically connected to New York more than you would the average city?
Like just walking around, wanting to walk around because there's a vibrant city.
I do because I'm from there, though.
Well, but here, okay, I mean, here's my thing about New York.
As I visit Miami from New York and I am a New York elitist.
It is a city even for those who grew up in and I've spent their entire lives there.
It's a city that is perpetually there to be rediscovered.
There's always new stuff happening.
For sure.
I went to a jazz club for the first time in my life last week.
I went to Village Vanguard, had never gone.
It's one of the great sites of jazz music in American history.
That is an incredible New York dynamic of like best-in-class thing that it took me 39 years to get to.
And I stumbled ass backwards into it.
That's the beauty of New York.
The beauty of New York is, I do this a lot where someone says, you want to go to something to eat?
I say, yes.
And they take out their phone and try to look up someone on Yelp, I say, no.
We're going to walk down this box.
Yes.
We're going to look at the menu outside.
Yep.
You're going to wander around.
Yep.
We'll eat it.
It's like when we're in New Orleans.
God.
Look, me and Pablo, all-star weekend in New Orleans, this is years ago.
Dane was there?
This is great.
It was there.
Parts of this.
Yes.
But like at a certain time, we were like, hey, let's go get something to eat.
Or is it, or is it, it was me and, yeah, it was me and you, right?
We were going to get something to eat.
And then we were walking and looking and searching and looking.
and hours later we ran into Justin Tinsley
who we had seen at the beginning of our day
and he said so where did you guys end up going?
I mean we still haven't found a place.
We just kept walking and exploring.
So I would say that New Orleans is actually great for that night
I think about it, but New York absolutely is number one
of the idea that I'm not going to use
all of these conventions that everyone uses in every other city
where you have to.
I want to find something good to eat.
I don't need a plan.
I don't need to figure out who's going to be the designated driver.
where am I going to park?
It's simply a matter of like a childlike perpetual curiosity of like what's around the corner.
Didn't we just talk about this with Mina, the freedom to get lost?
I think Beaumani did a TEDs talk one time on the freedom of structure.
Right.
And I was sort of saying the opposite.
Yes.
The freedom to get lost.
I think sometimes you grow up with so many responsibilities and so many ways that you see how to get ahead.
that I don't often get lost enough
in the spaces where creativity should reside,
which is you're freest because you're lost,
you're stumbling around,
as opposed to not enjoying the making of it
because you're too, you know, you're not free enough.
You're not actually free enough.
You just feel the burdens of it.
Does that make sense creatively to you?
Yeah, if you're re-wearing the tread on the same path,
and I think this is just like a physical thing,
often. Like, L.A. is such a city
built around cars.
Miami relatively, too.
I think that for me,
as I host a show premised on my curiosity,
like having that
presented to me without me trying,
new stuff all of the time
is a gift. And sometimes
it ends up being,
well, this is the thing about it,
right? You just got to not be disappointed
when it's not the greatest thing you've ever
try. You have to accept that
failure or whatever you want to call it
is part of this experience.
Exactly.
Sometimes you'll meet Justin Tinsley again
as opposed to finding a meal.
No, but you guys, this is,
but this is the curse.
You say, okay, so failure
should just be treated as learning
if you're totally forgiving with yourself.
If you can be that gentle
with yourself.
But failure is just failure if you're failing.
Like, if you always have to get ahead,
if you always have to be better,
if you always have to be,
like, I don't,
I marvel at the strength of mental strength of athletes because there's so much failure involved in what it is that they're doing.
Most of what they do is failure.
And so there's so much tougher than I, in the face of that, I feel super weak there.
Like, I feel that I am so blistering in my self-assessment on failure, so unforgiving, so unloving to myself, that it can't be learning.
It's punishing.
It's disappointing, man.
It's punishing.
It's punishing.
Well, I think the stakes also matter, right?
If I messed up where we went to lunch,
is not as bad as if I messed up my career
by making this wrong decision.
Yes, there's learning in all of it,
but I think it's easier to accept
when you know the stakes aren't high.
And I think a lot of people...
What if the stakes are your career in your life
and your children?
Like, the stakes are that high?
I did.
I mean, but I think I've steeled myself for...
I knew I was making a big...
decision as opposed to
finding somebody to eat New Orleans. I mean, you jumped out of a
burning plane though. Like you said, I knew
I was making a big decision. We weren't even a company
yet. On to a burning bus. But we
weren't even a company. Like, we weren't anything other than
something the left ESPN. And you
came to this country with your
But Dan, but then, like
you see it as I jumped out of
jumped into like the abyss.
I saw, see it as
I made an incredibly calculated
decision. And I think that's the part
where I don't, you keep, I
admire that you think that I was just like sight unseen. I just know it's going to work out.
Catch me, Dan. It was incredibly calculated. Dan, it was incredibly calculated.
I tend to not play up this. Almost everything I do is a calculated decision. Where I went through a million
different scenarios. What happens if I do it like this? And this is the decision I come up with sometimes.
I like that we... Hold on. Hold on.
No, Pablo.
Wait, I just like that we've finally gotten to a point in the show where Amin is essentially complimenting Dan, and now Dan is uncomfortable.
Okay, but Pablo, let's think about what.
Okay, he's being flippin about how calculated he was with his career decision.
I'm not flippant.
Pablo, but, so Pablo had a kid to worry about.
Pablo's had to make a similar career decision.
This is, like, it's hard to leave there.
It's, but also calculated.
So, for me.
I think that's a funny thing for Dan to realize.
I mean, okay, so you're not selfless human beings.
No, no, no, no.
But it's even more than that, though, if I hear what I mean is saying,
it's that it's not driven by this, like, animalistic desperation of like,
I need something else.
I hear people say, oh, I quit my job and I'm moving to California.
I'm like, oh, do you get a job there?
Nope.
You got some family you're living?
Nope, I'm just going to figure out when I get there.
It blows my mind.
It blows my mind that people do this.
Because for me, every part of this is like doing the math.
I told the story about the first time,
or pretty much the only time I took Adderall
because I wanted to be more focused
than writing this thing.
And while I was waiting for it to kick in,
I wanted to order something to eat from Uber Eats.
So I looked up Chick-fil-A and I was like,
oh, Chick-fil-A is not too far.
Okay, 15 to 30 minutes delivered.
Cool.
All right, I'm really hungry, though.
I want a chicken sandwich meal
and I also want the nuggets.
Wait, is it cheaper to get the nuggets meal and the sandwich on the side or the sandwich meal and the nuggets on the side?
And also, by the way, 15 to 30 minutes to thing, this thing is like down the block.
It's probably quicker for me to go.
And I realized the Adderall was fueling what my brain already does, which is calculate every last part of why did I mean get up instead of doing his job.
Why didn't he get, why did he get up getting his car and go to Chick-Pillet and order it?
Because I did every single permutation of what's the most efficient way to do this.
I do this all the time, Dan.
But I make it look like,
ah, let's do that, let's go to Chick-fil-A.
So at the end of the show,
we say what we found out today.
And I want to speak on behalf of a mean here.
I never do this.
Because what I found out
is that Dan is now finding out
that we believe in him.
I mean, that's moronic, though.
What have you done?
Like, we calculated this.
And we agreed to believe it.
All right.
Well, you're idiots.
Like, why would you do that?
It seems stupid.
I didn't say always get it right.
It seems stupid.
Like, it seems careless.
It seems really careless.
We cared a lot.
Yeah.
So, what, yeah, what did I learn?
I learned.
See, this is the sappy part, right?
I mean, am I inventing it?
Is this these energies is something that feels like love?
real. I feel like I could be myself around two human beings who I know more than believe in me,
love me. Like, like, and I feel that. Like, so am I imagining it or is it so? Well, no, I don't,
think that part is. But I feel it physically is what I'm telling you. Like, I feel it has an energy
on me that feels, like, am I imagining the healing in that receiving, right, receiving love? Like,
receiving, actually receiving love?
Am I imagining that?
Is that logical, or am I physically feeling it right now?
I would imagine that your brain from being stimulated and the receptors getting the things that it needed, then sends out physical manifestation.
So maybe that's healing too, though, right?
Why are we back on that?
I mean, what?
Just say that it's love.
Okay.
All right.
Thank you.
Let's all thank our love.
You can't do it.
Let's all say thank you to our love.
He's so repressed.
He's so...
Thank you to...
Thank you for your feet.
I mean, thank you for your feet.
Thank you.
For your feet.
This has been Pablo Torre finds out.
A Metal Arc Media production.
And I'll talk to you next time.
