Passion Struck with John R. Miles - Dr. Bob Rosen on Why Change Begins Where Your Old Story Ends EP 631
Episode Date: July 1, 2025In Episode 631 of Passion Struck, John Miles sits down with bestselling author and global CEO advisor Dr. Bob Rosen to launch our new series The Power to Change. This episode delves into the ...often-overlooked truth behind personal transformation: that genuine change starts when we disentangle from the emotional narratives, behaviors, and beliefs that no longer serve us.Bob shares insights from his new book, Detach, revealing how to transition from a state of survival to one of thriving with purpose, presence, and clarity. If you’re feeling stuck, overwhelmed, or uncertain how to move forward—this conversation will give you both the clarity and the courage to start.Visit this link for the full shownotes!Go Deeper: The Ignited LifeIf this episode stirred something in you, The Ignited Life is where the transformation continues. Each week, I share behind-the-scenes insights, science-backed tools, and personal reflections to help you turn intention into action.🔗 Subscribe at TheIgnitedLife.net and get the companion resources delivered straight to your inbox.Catch more of Eli Finkel and Paul Eastwick: https://www.lovefactuallypod.com/If you liked the show, please leave us a review—it only takes a moment and helps us reach more people! Don’t forget to include your Twitter or Instagram handle so we can thank you personally.How to Connect with John:Connect with John on Twitter at @John_RMilesFollow him on Instagram at @John_R_MilesSubscribe to our main YouTube Channel and to our YouTube Clips ChannelFor more insights and resources, visit www.passionstruck.com.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Agent Nate Russo returns in Oracle III, Murder at the Grandview,
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Listen now on Audible.
Coming up next on Passion Struck.
Detached does not mean disengaged or disconnected. Quite the opposite.
It means that you get rid of the stuff that is holding you back and holding you down,
the baggage, and it frees up energy to focus on the things that matter, whether it's our
health and well-being or our communities or democracy or the environment,
wherever you stand politically,
it frees you up for energy.
Welcome to Passion Struck.
Hi, I'm your host, John R. Miles.
And on the show, we decipher the secrets, tips,
and guidance of the world's most inspiring people
and turn their wisdom into practical advice
for you and those around you.
Our mission is to help you unlock the power of intentionality
so that you can become the best version of yourself.
If you're new to the show, I offer advice and answer listener questions on Fridays.
We have long-form interviews the rest of the week with guests ranging from astronauts to authors,
CEOs, creators, innovators, scientists, military
leaders, visionaries and athletes.
Now let's go out there and become passion struck.
Welcome to episode 631 of passion struck.
I'm your host, John Miles.
And this is the show where we ignite change from the inside out so you can live with greater
intention, deeper meaning and a more fulfilling life. Today we're kicking off a brand new series for July titled The Power to Change. A look at
what it really takes to break free from old patterns, rewrite your story, and become the
person you know you were meant to be. But before we dive into this new chapter, here's what you
may have missed last week. In episode 630, I closed out our Connected Life series with a tribute to the late Brian
Wilson of the Beach Boys.
It's one of the most raw and revealing solo episodes I've ever recorded.
Unpacking how incongruence slowly disconnects us from our voice, our gift, and our truth,
and how real connection begins when our inner and outer life match.
Alongside that, I released a congruence workbook on Substack
to help you put these ideas into practice.
And in episode 629, I welcomed Dr. Eli Finkel
and Dr. Paul Eastwhip, hosts of the podcast
Love Factually to explore what actually sustains love
in the modern world.
It's not big romantic gestures, but micro-moments
of emotional presence and psychological safety.
If you're in a relationship or want to be, don't miss it.
Now today marks the beginning of a new kind of conversation.
My guest is Dr. Bob Rosen, bestselling author, psychologist,
and trusted advisor to Fortune 500 leaders around the world.
His newest book, Detach, explores a truth
that most of us avoid.
We don't just resist change, we cling to what's comfortable, even when it's killing us. In this
episode we explore why most people fear change and how to shift that fear into fuel. The hidden
emotional attachments that sabotage growth and how to step out of survival mode and into a life of
real fulfillment. If you felt stuck, stressed,
or like you're living someone else's life,
this conversation might just be your turning point.
And after the interview,
I'll walk you through a free takeaway PDF
I created based on Bob's framework
to help you detach from old beliefs
and step into meaningful transformation.
You can also download the congruence workbook
from last week.
Both are available at the ignitedlife.net.
And don't forget, you can watch the full video alongside
curated shorts and bonus clips on
youtube.com slash John R.R. Miles and PassionStruck clips.
Now let's get into it. Here's my conversation with Dr. Bob Rosen.
Thank you for choosing PassionStruck and choosing me to be your host and guide on your journey to creating an intentional life.
Now, let that journey begin.
I am absolutely thrilled today to welcome Dr. Bob Rosen on to Passion Struck.
Welcome, Bob. How are you today?
Hi there. How are you, John?
I'm doing great. And I'm so excited to have you on today because this podcast is all about, how
do you create a fulfilling life?
And that feels like it hits squarely in your bullseye as well.
Yes, it does.
Both personally and professionally.
So you are a New York Times bestselling author and you've written powerfully
about your own battles
with anxiety and addiction.
How did facing those parts of you reshape
your own understanding of attachment,
which is something that you are known for?
I'm a psychologist and businessman
and I've spent my life passionately interested
in self-awareness and self-development.
I spent my career coaching CEOs, traveling around the world.
I got very interested in Eastern and Western psychology.
In 2008, I had a dream.
And the dream was that I was tied up by a handful of attachments, the attachment to the future
and the attachment to success. And I woke up and I wrote these 10 attachments that came to my mind
at the time, the attachment to stability, to the past, the, control, perfection, success, the attachment to youth,
to pleasure, to yourself, and to life. And I wrote them down and I didn't have time to write that
book, so I put them in the attic and brought them down in 2021 and the book came out of me in about a year, I have found personally that every
time I experienced some kind of angst, I turned to these 10 attachments and I've noticed that
varieties of people and the leaders that I've coached have also been hijacked by these 10 attachments in one form or another.
As I focus on these attachments and I can breathe through them in meditation,
they just go away. The angst goes away. I think that there may be more, but these are 10
be more, but these are 10 ways of thinking, 10 kinds of baggage, 10 obstacles, 10 belief systems that we have in our head that stand in the way of our happiness.
Thank you for sharing that.
And those all come out of your new book, which we're going to be discussing in more detail
today, titled Detach, Ditch Your Baggage a more fulfilling life. But before we go there,
you brought up that you've spent many decades studying both Eastern and Western psychology.
What's something Western achievers deeply need from the East? And what's something that
Easterneers need from the West? Wow, Great question. Western psychology teaches us about positive thinking.
It teaches us about dreaming, setting goals and aspirations.
And we're a very forward-looking, problem-solving culture.
Eastern psychology teaches us about impermanence or constant change.
It talks about how we get in the way of our own happiness by having attachments.
And the key is to detach from these attachments,
and it frees us up to be freer and happier and more liberated. So I think that both cultures need to blend the best of each
in order to be successful in life and successful in business.
It's so interesting.
I asked this because I recently wrote a children's book.
It's coming out in December and it's titled You Matter
and the character's name is Luma.
She's a little bunny.
But in the book, I don't think a child would pick up on it, but I blend
Eastern and Western science in it.
So I bring in Buddhist principles and I really layer it with behavioral science
and positive psychology throughout the different scenes in the book.
and positive psychology throughout the different scenes in the book. And I find that when you do that, you really create a foundation of the best of both worlds,
because there's so much we can learn from both.
So I thought it's important to combine them,
and I'm sure that's how you help coach the CEOs that you do? Right. I've spent my career advising or studying or coaching over 500 CEOs of large
corporations in about 60 countries and the heads of Toyota and Canon and Boeing
and Coca-Cola companies like that.
And I have found that the very best ones are self-aware and committed
to their own development. So I've learned a lot from them. So this Eastern psychology
is critical for Western people. One of the main lessons that I've found is that nobody teaches us how to live and thrive in an uncertain world
where the world is constantly changing. Our brains are constantly changing. We
all know that's called neuroplasticity, but we're not taught how to thrive in
that. And one of the contributions of Eastern psychology is it basically says that there's no such
thing as stability.
Stability is an illusion and uncertainty is reality.
And so that actually leads to the first attachment, which is the attachment to stability.
And I want to dive into the attachment to stability here in a few minutes, but
I want to go back just a little bit and talk about these CEOs just for another
second, because in my own career, and I know you're just learning about me.
I was a C-level in a fortune 50 company, a senior executive in a couple
fortune fifties before that.
And then I became a CEO of four or five private equity companies.
And I used to have a coaching business where I would go in as a fractional
executive to coach and help the founders of, of different small and medium size
businesses.
And it's interesting to me.
What I found across the board is regardless of the size of the company, they all had the same
recurring issues. It was more the scale that you were dealing with between a company that I was
with like Dell compared to a startup or a small business, but the issues seem to be eerily similar.
Did you find the same thing?
Pretty much. I always had a curiosity that every business model was different,
but the human problems were all the same. And what I find is that the more aware,
self-aware leaders are able to understand the value of the human strategy of their business and building of a healthy culture
because they have insights about human nature
and human development.
And, but a lot of leaders are shackled
by issues of ambition, anxiety, feelings of grandiosity,
unnecessary perceptions of power, perfectionism, the attachment
to control. And it really gets it in the way of their leadership and their relationships with
their boards and their executive teams. And they really can't see the value of creating a covenant with their workforce.
And it influences their trust and you name it.
I saw a lot of these things in business.
I did too.
And if I think, since you're wearing green
of the Marshall Goldsmith book,
what got you here isn't gonna get you
to where you wanna go.
What do you think is the biggest thing
that stops so many people
from getting to that next level of becoming a CEO? I think there is, first of all, they spend their
entire lives aspiring to this job and they finally get there and the first day is the first day to the next phase of their life. But they
come with some very well-crafted belief systems about how to create value and an
organization. And I think one of the problems is they believe those belief
systems too much and they don't allow them to evolve and change and in
fact transform. And so they get stuck in their own mindsets. I think that's the primary
obstacle I find and their companies are changing, but they're changing faster than
their mindsets. And so they really have to focus on allowing themselves
to learn in real time.
And that's hard for them because it involves vulnerability,
it involves imperfection, it involves not having answers,
and you get to the top and there's pressure for people,
for CEOs to have all the answers.
Man, I felt it. And the difference I felt is no one has your back.
You think that the board might be helpful and to an extent you can go to them for some counsel,
but you don't want to seem weak in their eyes at all.
So you're really in this point where you got to seem like you're strong to the people underneath you.
You've got to feel like you're a force with the board.
So you're really putting a pickle
if you're faced with a situation
where you don't have the answer
and you're on the fly trying to figure it out.
So I've been there and it's difficult.
Well, I think one of the challenges that we have in society is that everybody is the CEO of their own job.
So this goes all the way down all organizations in countries all over the world.
And we suck out the authenticity of people inside our institutions,
and we don't allow them to be whole human beings
in the workplace.
Now, we were moving in that direction
over the last 20 years,
but I sense that workplaces are becoming less healthy,
not more healthy right now,
because they're moving from this concept
of stakeholder capitalism to being really
focused on the shareholders again alone.
And I think that's a troubling thing for all the stakeholders.
Yeah.
That's why I really liked what Sir Richard Branson was trying to do with his concept
of the B team, where he was trying to get a bunch of CEOs to start thinking about
what is the value system
that a company should be valued on other than shareholder value and things like that. So
I wish we could go more down those lines because it's going to take these companies
to create the systems change that we need to solve so many of the world's issues.
In fact, I think that the next group of people who are going to be the primary catalysts
in changing society are business people, but they have to have the courage to do it.
And that takes confidence and self-awareness and a commitment to their own development
to show up as an open, authentic learning individual.
And it's hard inside institutions to do that.
So I agree with you.
Yeah.
I used to work as a fractional executive for a company called Bold Business.
It was founded by this business executive named Ed Kopko, who used to be the
publisher of Chief Executive Magazine.
And he's been a serial, have even heard of Ed.
Well, I've been in the magazine a couple of times.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So Ed is one of the smartest people I know.
And he created this brand because he truly felt that people don't understand
how much businesses can change the world.
And an example he would always use is you think of Verizon as a cell phone company,
but you don't think of the power that comes from the
mobility and devices that they offer and how much it's changed society for the
better, nor the philanthropic things that companies do to make the world a better
place.
So I love your answer and that's where I was going with it.
I'm going to get back to the book.
So let's go to chapter one, the attachment to stability.
And you write, let's
face it, stability is an illusion. Uncertainty is reality. And that line really hit me. What's
been the hardest part of accepting that truth for you personally?
I've had quite a bit of health problems in my 30s and 40s, I had a couple bowel obstructions that led to some intestinal surgery.
I had two back surgeries.
I was diagnosed with atrial fib when I was 41 years old, and I got a pacemaker five years
ago.
All of that, and still very healthy, I work out six times a week, but all of that forced me to change
my relationship to change. Rather than seeing change happening to me, I really started recognizing
over time that change was happening for me and that it was really an uncertain world
and I had to change my relationship to change. And, but there's no such thing as stability.
And every time we breathe,
the world changes and we breathe into a vulnerable condition.
So we start to fear change.
The antidote is to learn how to embrace agility,
to recognize that change is happening all the time.
And what holds us back are these attachments, the fears that we hold inside ourselves and
the belief systems that are wrapped around these fears.
So the attachment to stability is fundamental.
I write in the book, there are 30 stories in the book and lots of
questions to engage you, and I write about David who was an attorney, kept everything structured
in his life and he couldn't develop a relationship. He kept all his friends separate and at some point
he decided that he needed to change.
So he went to his Enneagram teacher, who basically said,
go out and risk falling down and getting up.
Well, he got a call the next week from the Department of Commerce
to be an assistant secretary, totally a surprise.
And he met his partner two months later
and they got married.
Sometimes you just got to step outside of your comfort zone
and lean into the uncertainty and it opens up your world.
And a lot of people get attached to stability.
I'm glad you brought up David's story
because he went from a person, if I remember the story
correctly, scarred by abandonment from his childhood,
which led him to build a life anchored in control
and structure.
Exactly.
And he ended up, I think, mistaking
that control for safety.
How common is that, and why do we fall into that trap?
Well, we think that stability and safety and structure will protect us, but in fact, it
oftentimes holds us back because we don't know how to thrive in uncertainty. And the world is
always changing faster than our ability to adapt.
It's just the way it goes. And we have to give that up. And it's very scary for people.
Under each of these attachments is fear. Fear is the most fundamental emotion that there
is and all the secondary emotions emanate from it, grief and sadness and anxiety. So fear is critical,
and if we don't face our fears directly, they don't change. Belief systems are programmed into our
mind. They're very hard to change. I'm a big believer that if you want to change your behavior, you have to start with the
psychological pain that is inside of you, and only through acknowledging that pain, those fears,
can it release the energy for behavior change. And we have all these gimmicks for how to get
people to change habits and change behavior.
But if you want sustainable behavior change,
you gotta look at the fear.
I often, when people ask me about this,
because I think for most people,
the hardest moment of change is actually starting.
We think about the changes we need to make.
You might have an addiction to alcohol,
you might have an addiction to something else,
an attachment like you bring up in the book.
And we recognize it, but then it's like,
we're stuck in concrete and we can't move.
And for me, I remember when I was on this business career
and I wanted to make my own move
into doing what I'm doing now,
becoming an author, like yourself, et cetera.
I was just stuck in this chasm where I felt like I was on one cliff of a mountain.
And then the distance I could see the cliff I wanted to go, but I
couldn't figure out how to get there.
And I think that's a trap so many people fall into.
So if someone were asking you,
like how do you make that first step
when all you can see is a forward ledge
leading to the abyss in front of you,
what do you suggest to them?
Well, the abyss is never as deep as you think it is
because the brain titrates its anxiety for most people.
Some people are biologically vulnerable to more intense anxiety, but I'm a big fan that
just the right amount of anxiety is the catalyst for really positive, productive change.
And too little anxiety is the face of complacency, and too much anxiety is the face of complacency and too much anxiety is the face of chaos. So how do we create
just the right amount of anxiety to push us forward? I think another thing is that people
live in the gap between their real self and their ideal self. And the bigger the gap,
And the bigger the gap, the harder it is to change. And when people's ideal self is aligned with their real self,
what they aspire to be and who they are in the current moment is narrow,
they have less anxiety.
And so for me, I was attached to the attachment to the future.
I was always worrying about what was going to come,
and I had trouble experiencing the present moment and enjoying the present moment.
I was also attached to success, because when you strive for success and it becomes a compulsive
need for achievement, you got a problem. And there are a lot of ambitious people
who have that problem because they define success
from the outside in rather than inside themselves.
And they're constantly chasing awards
and trying to have more and more,
and they don't enjoy their life.
And so they operate with a scarcity mindset
that something is missing in their life,
rather than an abundance mindset where they have everything that they need right now.
Doesn't mean you stop dreaming, and it doesn't mean you stop aspiring to something more,
but you don't get shackled by that. So I was attached to both of those things,
and I had to look at the fear behind each one. And the irony was that I was attached to both of those things and I had to look at the fear behind each one.
And the irony was that I was so attached to the future and so attached to success that
I would get burned out.
And when I got burned out, that didn't feel good.
And so I had these health problems and they gave me opiates and I got addicted to Percocet and Vicodin
because I was attached to pleasure and didn't want to look at the pain. So if you don't
look at the pain, you don't change. And that's the problem because it's uncomfortable.
I want to comment on a few things that you talked about. So first for the audience who's
out there and my own book, passion struck.
One of my chapters is focused on something that Bob, you talked about earlier.
I call it the anxiety optimizer, meaning you've got to optimize how
you're deploying your anxiety.
And there is a certain point where too little in it causes issues,
too much in it causes issues.
So for yourself, you have to figure out what your optimal anxiety level
is to perform at your best.
And then another concept that you touched on when you were talking about
your ideal self compared to who you're showing up with today really reminds
me of the concept of self discrepancy theory, where so many of us lead the
lives we think we should be instead of what
we could be. And this is something that both Hal Hirschfield and Benjamin Hardy have done a lot
of research on in their future self work. And I've had them both on the podcast. So if anyone wants
to listen and go deeper in those areas, those are two great places to go. But I wanna go back to this gap concept
before I go to the chapter on future self.
You write in the book, there's a growing gap
between those who are awake in the world
and those who are asleep.
And I feel that viscerally.
What makes people wake up when they've been living
kind of the lie of safety for too long?
Sometimes that can be self-motivated.
People are always searching and learning.
They meditate.
They take walks in nature.
They're constantly learning.
And so you can learn your way into waking up. A lot of times people
wake up when they have a crisis in their life. They bleed for one reason or
another, psychologically or physically or whatever, and it forces them to get in
touch with the pain in their life, whether it's sadness or worry or anger, for that matter.
And out of that comes an aha moment. You get divorced, you lose a job, something happens
to your kid, and it really forces you to get in touch with these deeper emotions. I think those are really the two major ways that we wake up.
But it's such an important concept.
I write in the last attachment, the attachment to life, that we go through life believing
that we are born and then we die. But in fact, being born, growing, declining, and death happens over and over again in our
lives.
And so over time, we develop, we call it resilience, but we develop this capacity to live in cycles.
Could be a work project, could be a relationship,
it could be a belief system or philosophy.
And so it's really important that we recognize,
excuse me,
it's really important that we recognize
that these cycles really matter
and to take perspective about them.
And that helps us as well to be awake.
But the flip side of that is that there's so much pressure to stay asleep.
Because habit, as well as it doesn't feel good always to wake up
because you wake up into some pain
or some conflict in your life and people run away from that. Freud was right. He said we
seek pleasure and we avoid pain. But pain is the primary catalyst for growth.
Yeah, it's a perfect metaphor for the matrix when Neo wakes up and he has to face the
pain and, but it's through that pain that he grows into being the one.
Exactly.
Exactly.
So I want to go into a different story because whatever reason, when I read it,
it reminded me of Jay Shetty.
You tell the story of Amir and he was someone who grew up similar to Jay in a religious life and then left it like Jay for the business world.
And then had to wrestle with a number of excessive grips that he has and his strength is his intellect, but the real work is deeply emotional.
And that feels like a mirror for what I see with so many high achievers. How do we move from intellectual
insight to emotional integration? Because this is something I really struggled with. I
really could out think a lot of my peers. I could out think a lot of people using my intellect and
neuroplasticity. But for me, it was harder to build up that emotional intelligence as I grow more senior in my career.
I do think that men have a particular challenge when it comes to their emotional intelligence.
Traditionally, we're not taught a language of emotions, and women are more in touch with
their emotions oftentimes, not always, but oftentimes because
they've been given more permission to be emotional.
And the flip side is to be vulnerable.
And when you feel strong emotions, you're vulnerable.
Whether you feel intense anger or resentment, you're vulnerable.
When you feel sadness, you're vulnerable. When you feel sadness, you're vulnerable. When you worry and
you're anxious, you're vulnerable. It's not something that men like to do. There's a real
pressure on men to be stoic. There's a whole movement of stoicism for men. And I think it
really gets in the way of their mental well-being, because human beings are imperfect by nature. And we need to
fall in love with our imperfections and laugh at ourselves because we're imperfect. And that gets
to the attachment to perfection. And a lot of business people are attached to perfection,
and it's impossible. And so they're in a straight jacket. And so how do you
live life when you're attached to perfection in a box within a steel bunker? You can't do it.
So I think we have to give ourselves a lot more permission to be human beings and to be imperfect human beings and it's okay. And when you do that, it's an incredible relief because you don't have to be somebody
and you throw out the should in your life and embrace the truth in your life.
And I think that's a really good thing. I'm glad that you brought this up. I had a deep dive into this concept
of effortless perfection that's happening
across college campuses with Susan Cain.
And she had recently gone back
to one of her alma mater's Princeton,
and she just sought across the campus.
And then I was talking to Laurie Santos,
and she found the same thing
going rampant across Yale, which is why she started the course that she did, which has now
become the most popular course in Yale's history. But really, the whole course that she's trying to
teach is how do you change from an attachment to perfection to towards aspiration of wholeness and self-acceptance
like you were just talking about?
And I've heard you on other podcasts
talk about the importance of self-love.
So I thought maybe you could fit that in here
because when I've heard you talk about this,
you do it in such a powerful way.
I think one of the biggest problems that people have is that they don't
love themselves. And I think it's probably the most important quality of character that
you develop. And because if you don't love yourself, you're very vulnerable when things
don't happen the way you want, which happens all the time, happens every day at some level.
And so really falling in love with yourself,
and it's not really about unhealthy narcissism.
It's really about the belief in yourself
that you can get through life on your own
and that it's okay to trip up but
nothing is going to get in the way of
loving yourself
Even if you are flawed and you do something that is imperfect you make a mistake or whatever
Nothing, it's non-negotiable
falling in love with yourself is non-negotiable and
It's non-negotiable. Falling in love with yourself is non-negotiable. And I just think it's really important, and I think it's the source of a lot of
disgruntlement out there. I want to come back to one thing that you said about
perfection. It used to be that midlife crisis
was the time of maximum tumult. Now it's people in their 20s and early 30s. It's the new midlife crisis,
and that generation right now is really stressed. Career conflicts, financial conflicts,
relationship conflicts, you name it. And there's been some research that you may be familiar with that says that people between
17 and I think it's 30 have very high rates of perfectionism.
And there's something about living that helps you get over it because you realize as you
get older that you can't be perfect all the time.
Life has a way of teaching us these things. And so I think it's a real struggle for young people.
I have two kids in that age bracket. One, I have a daughter who's 21 and a son who just turned 27. And I see the perfectionism more in my daughter, but in my son, I see more of the struggle of
my daughter, but in my son, I see more of the struggle of he's constantly looking at what AI is doing and how it's going to shape his career and how can he do something where it's not going
to impact him. And I keep trying to tell him that it's going to impact all of us. So the best thing
that you can do is become an expert in it. And by becoming an expert in it and starting to use it, you'll find ways
to eventually stay ahead of the curve.
But to me, a lot of things that we've been talking about, I don't think
AI can ever replace things like our emotional state, emotional intelligence,
dealing with attachments are universal themes.
And I think if, if you concentrate on those and you're a younger generation,
you're going to find your path to be able to overcome what AI is bringing our
way, but I'm interested in your thoughts.
I think it's true.
These are human endeavors and the brain is organized to change.
Okay. And the brain is organized to change, okay? It's constantly adapting, looking for threats and looking for opportunities.
But when we hold fear too tightly in our mind, the brain slows down, it gets cloggy, and
it gets too thick, and it doesn't rewire the way we need it to rewire. So the more you hold on to these attachments,
these fears, the harder it is to change. And in a world that's constantly changing, if you're not
evolving, you've got a problem. And that is from the beginning to the end of life. I write about in the book, the attachment to youth.
There's something that happens at every generation that we get enamored by our youthful selves
and we're fearful of aging.
Many people walk around with internalized ageism.
And there's research from Becca Levy, very powerful, that says that if you have a positive attitude toward aging, on average, you will live seven and a half years longer than if you don't.
Wow.
And that is a very powerful thing.
So something happens around whenever we retire,
where we get to choose one of two paths.
One path is full of regret, full of isolation,
full of disconnection, and it leads to premature death.
And the other is a life of openness and transparency
and authenticity and learning and connection.
And that is a much healthier place to live.
And I think we do these paths
at different points in our lives.
We choose to shut down and close off our development
or we embrace it.
And I think you can do that in your 20s,
your 30s and your 80s.
I'm not sure what we were talking about
but I thought it was interesting to say.
Well, I'm glad you brought up the attachment to our youth
because especially as we get older,
a lot of us get locked into actually our past as well.
I know you were talking about one of the things that was an issue for you was an attachment to the future.
But for those who have an attachment to the past, you bring up five emotions that keep us locked there.
Pain, fear, worry, loss, anger.
And you said something in the book that really hit me.
While pain is inevitable, suffering is self-imposed.
You say it's a deliberate choice.
Can you speak to that distinction between pain being inevitable and suffering being
self-imposed and how it's different from just getting over it.
It's a fundamental principle in Buddhism. And the Buddha really said it, that pain is inevitable
and suffering is not. Things happen in life. You fall down and you get a scrape on your knee or you break a finger and that hurts
and you want to do something about it.
But there's an old notion that there are two arrows that hit us.
The first is the pain.
The second arrow is the story we tell ourselves about the pain, which is the suffering. And we create stories or narratives around the pain that just
exacerbates the problem. You have a date and you go out a couple times and then the person loses
interest and suddenly you're telling yourself a story about you have an entire life full of rejection, and it started with your mother rejecting you. Or you get rejected from college in from one
application and then suddenly you have an image that you're going to be a stray cat in an alley
without a career. The attachment to the past is very significant for people, and some people are very vulnerable to their past narratives.
And the only way out of it is to look at it directly, experience the pain of where it comes from,
let it go, recognize that you're an adult, you're not the four-year-old child who experienced the story at the beginning
of your life, and then forgive. Forgive yourself and forgive whoever you're upset at.
I think one of the great rites of passage in our lives is to recognize that our parents
did the best they could at the time in their lives with the
tools that they had. And it wasn't really about you, it was about their inadequacies.
So allow themselves to have those inadequacies and forgive them. And then let them go and
rewrite your story. And I think a lot of people get tripped up in the past.
And I agree with you on that wholeheartedly.
Well, Bob, I wanted to go into a little bit of neuroscience,
especially the neuroscience of letting go.
You write that the brain, when stuck in fear,
slows its natural renewal.
Can you walk us through how detaching
actually rewires the brain towards resilience?
Well, there are four steps in detachment that I write about in the book.
And I use a story that I'm happy to share about a professional golfer.
So the first is awareness.
You have to really have an awareness of what's going on inside of you,
your thinking and your emotions, and what's going on inside of you, your thinking and
your emotions, and what's going on outside of you, and how is the outside influencing
your internal emotions. The second step is to really figure out which one of these attachments
is holding you back, and then to discover the fear underneath the attachment. The third step is the aspiration.
What is the picture of the desired state that you're trying to create? So the attachment to
control. A lot of people have the attachment to control, okay? So what's the secret? The secret,
and by the way, control is typically motivated by fear and anxiety.
You're fearful that you're going to lose control in a situation, or you're not going to perform
at the level.
Why do people micromanage?
Because they're fearful that they're not going to perform, their team isn't going to perform,
and how it's going to reflect on them.
And there are probably other reasons why people micromanage. But the solution, the aspiration, is to allow yourself to be vulnerable, to recognize
that you can't do everything. And it's actually the most important job of a leader is to create
other leaders so that it doesn't fall on you all the time, because that's why we micromanage. So the third step is aspiration,
and then the fourth step is action.
What are the behaviors that you're
going to do differently this week or next week
to execute the aspiration?
So there's a four-step process.
We have an assessment that we give that actually
rates all these attachments.
And then we have a book club guide that can take a group, a team, a group of friends through the attachments.
And then finally we have a series of workbooks, short workbooks that take people through each of those stages for each of the attachments.
Most of the time, these conversations have to be had
with other people because that sense of community
and connection is so important.
Bob, I typically do this at the end of the episode,
but since you just brought it up,
if people want to get access to those workbooks
and everything else, where's the best place for them
to go to find it?
I'll give you a soft call.
Thank you. Just go to BobRosen.com.
I put everything there.
And I also am putting some products there
with my previous two books, Grounded and Conscious,
because I think that the combination of being grounded,
which is having physical, emotional, intellectual, social,
vocational, and spiritual health, and being conscious, which is being aware, and being
detached is really about mastering your life.
And I think those are really important.
Bob, I wanted to go big picture on you.
One of the reasons I wanted to have you on the show is because we're living in a
world right now where we're addicted to urgency, we're addicted to noise.
So many people aren't living grounded.
They're not living detached.
They're not living a purpose driven life.
So you're clear that we're not just fighting attachments.
So you're clear that we're not just fighting attachments, we're reacting to massive social pressure,
massive epidemics of loneliness and hopelessness
and division that we're seeing worldwide.
Yes.
How can detachment serve not just individuals,
but culture at large?
Well, first off is that detached does not mean disengage or disconnected.
Quite the opposite.
It means that you get rid of the stuff that is holding you back and holding you down,
the baggage, and it frees up energy to focus on the things that matter, whether it's our health and wellbeing or our communities
or democracy or the environment,
wherever you stand politically, it frees you up for energy.
I think we're in a really tough spot right now.
There's more mistrust, more cynicism, more resentment,
more loneliness in society.
The Gallup poll shows that unhappiness has increased
over the past 15 years around the world.
And some of the most distraught countries are the developed countries in the world.
And the United States is right up there.
So, here's the thing, one of the basic
principles of psychology is the serenity prayer, okay, and for those who don't
know the serenity prayer it's accept the things you cannot, change the things you
can, and have the wisdom to know the difference. The key is to figure out what do you have control over
and then free yourself up to do what is aligned with your higher purpose and
values. But we've spent so much time being upset, sitting in anger and sadness and anxiety, the three major emotions, trying to control what
we have no control over. And that is a real problem. It's a real problem for leaders.
It's a real problem for people across the world. And I think Americans struggle with this more than others because of the first
conversation that we had about our positive psychology. We believe that we can shape our
environment. We believe that we can maneuver and manipulate and influence people to get what we want. And it is at the heart of agency. It's about self-control
and self-mastery and self-efficacy, but there's a downside to it. And I think that one of
the good questions to ask yourself when you're confronted with some kind of dilemma is, what do I have control over and what do I not have
control over? And I don't know how long this is going to last. It's one of the most stressful
times I've seen in workplaces in a very long time.
COVID gave us the experience of living a more holistic life despite COVID, and the flexibility of working at
home. And now organizations are basically saying, we're going to perform better than we've ever
performed, and AI is accelerating that movement. And also people are saying, I want you back at work.
And there's a real disconnect there.
And we've got to figure out how to solve it.
And I don't have the answers for that, but it's a real problem.
Yeah, it certainly is.
Because once you get accustomed to not being there at work
and finding that you can do the same job,
it's so difficult to want to put the anxiety on your life of doing the
commute and everything else.
But I, one thing I have found is I certainly don't collaborate or have
the strong bonds that I did when I was there collectively in a room with
people, then I do over a medium like this.
So I think it's gotta be a mixture of both.
But if you're just demanding that everyone come back
full time, that's so difficult for so many people
to do now because they've created their new story
in a world now that doesn't exist that they can thrive in.
So I completely agree with you.
I agree with that. So I completely agree with you. I agree with that. I agree with that.
So I want to go to some reflection here.
You write that, in life we wake up to find a story
has hijacked our mind.
What story do you hope people start writing
after reading your book?
I think the story is that we are programmed to be unhappy by the attachments that we develop over our lives.
They're very resistant belief systems that are very difficult to change.
It's not a superficial behavior. It's a whole philosophy, an elaborate belief system. I call it a cancer
that suddenly hijacks our mind, and we carry them around with us all the time.
So I think it's really important to take a look at that. Right now in my life, I'm 70 years old, and I chose
to write a book for the masses because I want to help people become a little bigger and
a little better than I found them. I want people to be happy and joyous. We have so much in our lives,
but so many of us walk around with a scarcity mindset.
The cup is half empty and it's constantly draining out rather than
an abundance mindset as I mentioned,
that you have everything that you need right now and just enjoy the present moment.
Doesn't mean you don't dream. My husband
and I, we have a game that we play at dinner parties. We ask people, do you live in the
past, the present, or the future? And the people who typically live in the past are
sad, they're depressives. And the people who live in the future are typically warriors.
And the people who live in the present are the happiest.
However, a lot of people live on the two edges and they say, but I'd rather live in the present
moment, but I'm stuck.
The future hijacks me or the past hijacks me and I'm not living in the present moment.
And I think that's so important to do.
So I want people to just come away and be freer, to reach higher in their potential and to have more
joy in their lives. And that's really the reason why I wrote the book.
Bob, it was such an honor to have you today. Thank you so much for going into death in this book.
And we covered just a small aspect of it.
I tried to tease out some stories so the listener could hear what they would
get if they read the whole book, where I think you have like 30 of these
stories in there, plus a lot of your personal stories, including ones where
you reflect back on exposing to your parents that you were gay and how
that impacted your life and created detachment. So lots of both personal and stories that
people can relate to. Thank you so much for joining us today.
Thank you, John. You asked great questions today. So thank you for that.
Thank you so much, Bob.
And that's a wrap on today's episode. And if you're anything like me, that conversation Thank you so much, Bob. yourself. To help you start that process, I've created a free takeaway guide with reflection prompts,
detachment exercises, and next steps for building sustainable change.
You can find it at theignitedlife.net along with last week's Ruin's Workbook.
If you want to bring these ideas to your team or event, I speak on behavioral change, purpose-driven
leadership, and unlocking peak performance through alignment.
You can learn more and book me at johnromiles.com slash speaking and make sure you subscribe
to our YouTube channel at John R.R. Miles full length episodes and exclusive extras.
Coming this Thursday in episode 632, I'm joined by Karen Salmanson, bestselling author and
transformation expert.
We'll explore how micro acts of courage can create macro shifts in your life,
and why sometimes the smallest choices spark the biggest change.
We all tend to procrastinate until something is really due,
and until we know there's a deadline looming, and death is the ultimate deadline.
And in some ways, I wonder if death is the universe's sassy way to get us to stop procrastinating.
Because imagine if we lived forever.
We'd be like, you know what?
I'll tell her I love her in a millennium.
Or I'll finish writing this book maybe
in a couple centuries from now.
So when you realize that time is limited,
it puts a fire under your tush to really do things.
And really, instead of like fear of failure, you have fear of regret that you didn't do it. It switches things up. Until then
remember change doesn't start with the strategy. It starts with the story you're
willing to release. Live boldly, lead fully, stay passion-struck. Music