SOLVED with Mark Manson - Comparing Yourself to Others, Solved
Episode Date: November 15, 2025We all compare ourselves to other people—our friends, coworkers, strangers on the internet—and most of the time, it makes us feel like shit. But why do we keep doing it? In this episode of Solve...d, we dig into the uncomfortable truth behind social comparison, how it quietly ruins our self-worth, and why most of what we envy in others is a projection of our own insecurity. We also get into the brutal paradox of success, the toxic loop of chasing status, and how the constant measurement of our lives against others is one of the dumbest things we do as a species. If you’ve ever felt not good enough, or like you’re falling behind, this one’s for you. We also put together a free companion guide for this episode with all the takeaways, references, and tools to help you get your sh*t together once and for all. Download it here: https://solvedpodcast.com/socialcomparison Sign up for my newsletter, Your Next Breakthrough. It will help make you a less awful person: https://markmanson.net/breakthrough Get clarity on what actually matters. Try Purpose, Mark's AI mentor app that learns your patterns, challenges your blind spots, and helps you take action. Get 7 days free at https://www.purpose.app Chapters: 5:29 CHAPTER 1: Evolutionary Roots 20:18 CHAPTER 2: Philosophy and Social Comparison 48:37 CHAPTER 3: The Psychology of Social Comparison 1:22:19 CHAPTER 4: Digital Technology and Social Comparison 1:44:20 CHAPTER 5: The 80/20 of Managing Comparison Follow Mark Mark’s IG: https://www.instagram.com/markmanson Solved IG: https://www.instagram.com/solvedpodcast/ Twitter: https://x.com/markmanson LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/markmanson/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@IAmMarkManson Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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You know, Drew, I think it's very appropriate we're doing this episode today.
Why is that?
A little ironic, actually.
So I came into the office this morning, and for listeners who don't know, the podcasting data situation is a disaster.
Yeah.
It's like, you would actually think for an industry that's exploding and growing so quickly,
there would be a single dashboard somewhere that actually fucking measures who listens to a podcast.
It does it accurately.
But apparently that's a lot to ask.
And so long story short, we came to this realization that our audience was not quite as big as we thought it was.
It's still very big, to be clear.
But, you know, it's not quite as big as we thought.
And it's like instead of being one of the, I don't know, 50 biggest shows in the world were only like one of the 300 biggest shows in the world.
Right.
But it was funny because I felt like I like spent a good five minutes talking you off a ledge.
You did.
You had to do.
I didn't even make this connection.
Yep.
Yep, you got me.
It's such.
By the way, I've been there many times over the years.
But it is such a, it's like such a, it's such a ridiculous situation where it's like in your head you're like, I thought we were as good as these other podcasts that were, you know,
the top 10 and doing all these like winning awards and all this stuff.
And it's like, oh, no, we're just, we're only the tier below.
Yeah.
You know, we're only one of the 300 biggest shows of the world.
And then you get really bummed out about it and you start feeling very insignificant and inadequate.
And just by that one little.
And basically the summary of this story is that being human sucks and it never stops.
The comparisons never stop.
and there's no, there's no into it.
And I think that's why this episode needs to be made is how do we wrestle with that?
How do we cope with this fact?
You know, like I would say one of the single most common questions or problems or emails
that I have gotten throughout my career is essentially boils down to how do I stop worrying
about what other people think?
Or how do I stop comparing myself to the people around me?
And of course, my answer is always, you don't.
You just change the nature of that comparison.
You get better at managing those comparisons.
And I guess we've already established two minutes into this episode that you and I are not immune to this as well.
Right.
So we're all in the same boat, folks.
And we're going to do our best to help us all row back to shore, so to speak.
What say you?
Yeah.
It is ironic.
No, it is ironic that that's how we started the day off today.
But it's a very good example.
And can practice what we preach a little bit here.
Yes, we are going to practice what we preach.
For regular listeners, this is one of the mid-month episodes.
So this is going to be a shorter episode.
You know, only two to three hours.
Like very light listening.
It's a little mini episode for you.
Yeah, just a little.
Yeah, mini episode.
There's only, you know, only like 80 citations in the guide.
So this is an important topic.
It's a very universal topic.
And like I said, it's one that comes up all the time.
You know, we just did our large episode on friendship a couple weeks ago.
And then obviously a huge component of friendship or developing a social life is comparing yourself to others, worrying about your status.
Do people like you?
Are you good enough?
Are you what to do when you're rejected?
So we're going to cover a lot of these topics in this episode.
We're going to get a better understanding of why we seem doomed to compare us.
ourselves to other people, no matter what we do, how to manage those comparisons, how to make
better comparisons.
And then, of course, like, what is the psychological purpose behind these comparisons?
Like, like anything, I think if there's one thing that regular listeners discover with us,
month after month, is that the things that cause us to suffer are actually quietly serving
some sort of hidden psychological purpose.
Yes.
Like we can sit around and talk about how shame fucks up our lives and ruins everything.
But what we learned in that episode is that actually shame serves a very practical purpose.
And it turns out social comparison is no different.
It's no different.
Yeah.
And for those of you who are new to the show, my name is Mark Manson.
I'm three times number one New York Times.
Best-selling author.
Don't you forget it?
You better compare yourself to me.
God damn it.
This is my co-host, producer, lead researcher,
former academic Drew Bernie.
And in the Solved podcast, our goal is to go so deep, be so thorough, over-research everything
so completely that by the time you get to the end of the episode, this area of your life
will be solved.
So just a reminder, every episode of Solved comes with a free PDF companion guide.
We have a full summary of the episode, cover everything that we talk about, give some practical
takeaways and advice.
And of course, show our work, give our citations, references, and follow-up reading
So if you want that, go to solvepodcast.com slash social comparison.
How do we want to start this, Drew?
Maybe with just a pretty simple question, like, why do we measure ourselves against others?
And why does it always kind of have a sting to it?
Or does it always have to have a sting to it, I guess, too?
It's maybe the better question.
Yeah.
You know, we compare ourselves based on every, like we find things.
If there's nothing to compare yourself to you find something, right?
how much money you make, the partner you have, the house you live in, your body like bodies,
we compare our bodies all the time.
Now you follow our accounts or likes, whatever it is on social media.
On the one hand, this can be a very motivating kind of emotional experience, right?
Yeah.
On the other hand, it can be, like I said, a very tormenting.
Tormenting experience as well, right?
What's weird, too, is that even when we improve our situation, maybe we get a new job,
We get a new partner.
We get whatever.
The moment we get that, we look around about what everybody else has at that time, right?
It's really relative.
Like social comparison is always relative.
I remember like my grandma, she was born in the 30s.
And so grew up through the Depression and stuff like that.
She would always say, you know, I guess we were poor when I was young, but nobody knew it because everybody was around us.
And I was going to, you know, like you comparing yourself to everybody, everybody was poor.
We were fine.
You know what I mean?
That's where you get that.
But there is, you know, there's research to show.
You make more money.
Say you're making $70,000 a year.
Sounds great unless, you know, your best friend's making 90, right?
If they're making 50, then you feel a little bit better about yourself.
Yeah.
So this is all kind of relative.
In the 1950s, and we'll get into more of this research too, but there was this guy, Leon
Festinger.
He developed what he called social comparison theory, okay?
Which basically described this whole phenomenon, right?
Like, he described the tendency to compare ourselves to other people in relation to them.
he described what we, some of the terms we're going to use through this upward comparison.
It's like when you're looking up at somebody else who's doing better versus downward comparison,
looking at somebody else who's worse off than you.
Interestingly, each one of the, it doesn't like, if you're comparing upward, you're not always jealous.
Sometimes you're like, oh, it's motivating and inspired.
And sometimes when you're looking down at someone, you're not always like, you don't just feel bad for him.
You feel better about yourself.
Of course.
Maybe too.
Of course.
It could also lead to kind of some stagnation.
I'm more like, well, I'm not as bad off as them, so I don't really have to do anything.
So there's the human mind for you, right?
In a nutshell, it's like we can interpret anything any way we want.
Can ruin anything.
We can ruin anything.
The human mind can absolutely ruin anything.
But, you know, there's other research that does show.
It is important, though, because if you chronically experience kind of these, you're one down all the time.
If you interpret it that way, if you experience it that way, you're always kind of
of ranking lower than other people around you.
I mean, that that's linked to like stress disorders, more stress hormones.
You have more inflammation, even to like biomarkers show that higher risk for things like
depression and anxiety.
Even in clinical context, too, you see this.
So people with like anxiety or depression usually have this very skewed way of comparing
themselves to others in any other situation, usually leading to some sort of like, you know,
either desperation or just you're giving up because you're.
you don't see any point and you can't compete with the people around you, right?
So this is a very, like, incredibly pervasive, incredibly common.
We do it all the time.
We just do it naturally.
Yeah.
Why do we do it that?
Why?
Why?
Like, why do we have to torture ourselves like this so much?
It's really a kind of wild question to even ask because it is so pervasive, right?
Well, like we like to do unsolved.
We like to go all the way back to the beginning.
Right.
Let's go way, way, way back.
Okay.
Hundreds of thousands, if not millions of years, to our ancient ancestors, living on the savannas, living in the forest, hanging out in trees, right?
If you look at like primates societies, baboons and chimps and gorillas and all of that, they're obsessed with status.
Right?
They're obsessed with where they're at in the hierarchy and the pecking order.
There's always these little games going on, right?
The alpha and yeah.
Exactly, exactly.
That's not just kind of like these mind games that like came out of nowhere, right?
There's actually a real evolutionary reason for that.
Mother Nature produced this through natural selection because your social position in these hierarchical societies like this.
It determines your access to like food and to mates and even protection from the group.
Like if you're liked by the group or not, if you're where you're at in the hierarchy is determines whether or not you get protection from an outside predator or something like that.
It makes sense.
There's a strong survival motivation behind all of that, right?
Like if you're in a tribe, let's say you're in a tribe of 20 people and you get twice,
you're able to gather twice as much food as everybody else.
Right.
Like, obviously they should protect you first.
Right.
Yeah.
Makes sense.
Right.
So, yeah, you can see how this would naturally evolve.
There's got to be some machinery there to compare, right?
Yes.
Of some kind.
So that's where, you know, we talked in the friendship episode about Dunbar's number and his social
brain hypothesis.
And just to recap that real quick, if you didn't listen to that,
The social brain hypothesis is that we develop these huge brains so that we can navigate
these social situations.
Yes.
And a huge amount of your brain power, as we'll see, is dedicated to being able to compare.
This person has more than me.
That person doesn't have more than me.
This person's higher in rank than me.
Or lower in rank than me.
Huge, huge parts of your brain are dedicated just to that.
So it's obviously very, very important.
It's not just some like random thing that Mother Nature accidentally did to us, right?
it means that we are just predisposed to this social comparison.
So Dunbar called it the social radar.
It's basically our brains evolved as these like social computers.
They're constantly processing social information, environmental information, and figuring out where we stand.
Because if you think about it, knowing where you stand in the hierarchy, in the pecking order is absolutely also very important to survival.
Like if you don't, if you don't have a good sense, if you over.
underestimate where you're at, if you think you're higher in the pecking order, you're probably
going to challenge like an alpha or an alliance that you shouldn't be doing.
On the flip side, if you underestimate, then you are probably missing out on opportunities
within the social group to either advance or secure more resources or more mates or whatever
it is, right?
And so it's actually really, really important that you can accurately assess where you stand.
And you do that through comparison, right?
But that's why your brain is such a relative comparison machine.
It looks around you, not just like in absolute terms, oh, I better my situation.
But if somebody else around you was doing better, then, I mean, in ancient times, that was a survival mechanism.
It makes a ton of sense, right?
Like if you're not the person who's able to gather twice as much food, you don't want to imagine that you are.
Because then you're going to start demanding special treatment from people and they're going to get pissed off.
And it's going to cause a lot of social disharmony.
The thing that's super interesting about this and a point that I want to make is this all happens on a very unconscious level.
This is extremely innate to our psychology, to our just the way our brain is wired.
It's part of human nature, yeah.
It is involuntary.
And it is very much the basis of how we operate within the world.
I do want to bring up the point that like the notion of equality,
The notion of, I guess, say, a status-free existence or the fact that everybody is on an equal playing field and everybody, every life is just as valuable as every other life.
That is a very modern invention.
That is something that arguably has only existed in the last 2,000 years and really only become popular or predominant in the last couple hundred years.
So this kind of, you know, rainbows and unicorns like, hey, we're all equal.
We're all in this together.
we all deserve the same thing.
I think philosophically that it can be very true,
but that's just not the way we're designed or wired.
Right.
Like, it's just not how we evolved.
And so there is a tension there.
And I just want to point that out because I think a lot of why people struggle with this
is that they're like, well, you know,
why can't we all just get along and be happy and respect each other
and like everybody's different, but everybody's got their own talent?
and like, why can't we just celebrate each other?
Again, kind of like a rosy, idealistic picture.
I think it's a great intention, but that's not, like,
hundreds of thousands of years of evolution.
Like, that was not what was most adaptive to the environment.
It's only really been adaptive to the environment in the last century.
Yeah.
I'd take it even one step further.
So there's the psychologist Paul Bloom.
If he's talked to, I've, he's talked about this before, but in tribal societies, even modern ones too, but in the past in particular, tribal societies that do exhibit some form of egalitarianism, their egalitarian, be precisely because they are so obsessed with status.
If somebody's getting a little too big for their bridges or something like that, there's these incredibly powerful mechanisms, group mechanisms that they use to put them back in line.
That's kind of like the other side of it too.
like, oh yeah, you can have an egalitarian society by being obsessed with a status within the group.
Which tracks.
Yeah, 100% tracks.
Yeah.
I mean, it's funny because when you read about, you know, like these hippie communes of like the 60s and 70s are like the communist experiments in this former Soviet Union or Southeast Asia are like powerful enforcement mechanisms.
They are the most status obsessed people.
Yeah.
The most.
Like they are constantly obsessed with status because you have to constantly be.
thinking about status to cut everybody down to the same size.
Yeah.
So it is a little paradoxical in that way.
Yeah, absolutely is.
It goes back to that social brain hypothesis, though, there's so much brain power and energy
we spend on this kind of thing because it's just, in our evolutionary past, it was that
important.
Yeah.
Now, that said, you know, the modern versions of this do cause a lot of kind of internal
torment like we've already talked about.
If you're obsessing over status in groups that you're really not even a part of,
which is kind of what we do a lot of these days.
That's not super healthy.
Or, you know, we channel this into like career aspirations or something where,
and, you know, we've talked about how we're very bad about predicting what's going to make us happy.
But we're running on this software that says you need to achieve and compare yourself.
And, you know, that's where we run into trouble with it.
Yeah.
The other thing I want to bring up the two in this is, you know, we evolved this kind of whole emotional toolkit around this too.
Again, goes to show the social brain hypothesis.
just how much we dedicate, just how much brain space and mind space we dedicate to this.
There's all these emotions that we have around regulating status or comparison.
I kind of group them into three different categories.
You have like the status promotion emotions.
You have status protection and repair emotions.
And then you have status stabilizing and hierarchy ones.
I can just kind of rifle through some of these.
But, you know, emotions like pride, envy, admiration, moral indignation, those are kind of
status promoting emotions that we have.
You think about pride, you know, if you're proud of something, you kind of, you're going to
signal that to other people.
That's an attempt for you to kind of up your status within a group, right?
Envy, even though it's typically thought of as a kind of negative emotion, which it is,
that is kind of serves a similar purpose where you're at least striving.
You're like, that person has this.
I want that.
How do I get that, right?
And there's the flip side of that, maybe the more positive is like admiration.
you admire somebody, right?
It's funny because I feel like there is a
thin line between envy and admiration.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, we'll get into that, I think.
But yeah, yeah, so like status protection,
you have shame, guilt.
You know, we did the shame episode,
embarrassment, humility.
Those are status protection or repair emotions.
You do something that would lower your status
within a group.
If you show those emotions,
it's more likely, oh, people are more likely
to be a little more empathetic to you
and you preserve some status there.
The stabilizing ones are contempt
and gratitude.
If you have contempt for others,
it marks a norm violation within the group
and you're trying to bring them down a peg.
Whereas gratitude,
again,
you're showing admiration for somebody else
in that situation as well.
So that's kind of the foundation,
anyway,
the kind of evolutionary reasons
for why we are so,
so obsessed with comparing.
Or is it,
we just can't help
but compare ourselves to other people, right?
It's interesting,
I'm looking at the status promotion emotions
and the status protection emotions.
Like if you look at the status promotion of emotions,
pride, envy, indignation, moral outrage.
If you think about people who are like kind of chronically experience those emotions,
like it's very, it's very much kind of like a grandiose narcissist.
Yes.
It's like a grandiose narcissist is like proud about everything he does,
extremely envious of anybody who's like performing better and often experiences indignation
and moral outrage.
And then the status protection emotions are, I think, kind of vulnerable narcissists chronically experienced them.
So they're constantly ashamed.
They constantly feel guilty of everything.
They feel a constant sense of embarrassment or that they're marginalized.
Just made that connection.
I'm shooting from the hip on that one.
No, that's a good one.
I really like that.
Yeah, yeah.
No, that's really good.
I think it's absolutely right.
And taken to their extremes, that's what happens, I think.
And so that's a point to keep in mind as well.
You could almost look at those two, they're like, they're kind of like broken status management systems.
Yeah.
You know?
All of that is to say that you can't escape this.
Okay.
This is part of our nature.
We have to learn how to work with it.
I want to set up the whole episode with that.
Comparison isn't necessarily a flaw.
Yes.
Okay.
It's just, it's innate.
We have to deal with it.
We have to learn how, you know, there's a good way to do.
handle it and there's a bad way to handle it. And that's what the rest of this whole episode's going to be about.
Yes. We're actually going to get into all of the benefits of social comparison in this episode as well, which definitely don't get the air time.
No, yeah. Yeah. Absolutely. Yeah. All right, Drew. So given how universal of an experience, social comparison is, how innate it is to our human nature, it is no surprise then that philosophers across the world in all cultures have been wrestling with how to manage.
social comparison.
And this is, I think, this is an interesting subject because it's a case where
East and West differ pretty broadly.
Ed Terbs, like usually what we see is there's quite a bit of overlap between Western
philosophy and Eastern philosophy, or at least like kind of slightly different takes on
the same, on the same conclusion.
In this case, there's a wide diversion, I think.
And I'm going to start with the East, which is Confucian.
Confucianism and Buddhism. So Confucianism, really, from what I can tell, and I'm definitely not as well read on Confucianism as I am on a lot of other philosophies. But from what I can tell, Confucianism really just decided to own it and was like, look, there's a status hierarchy. Some people are better than you and some people are worse than you. And that's okay. You should get along with everybody and you should just do your best to move up and down the hierarchy. You know, Confucianism is very much based on,
a framework of five types of relationships, and four of those relationships involve some sort of hierarchy or status attainment involved, whether that's through your parents or your family or some sort of authority figure.
Right.
The one that didn't was friendship, right?
Correct.
The ideal friendship, though, which doesn't always work that way, but yeah.
And the idea behind this is that ultimately, wherever you are on the hierarchy, you have a role to play.
And it is, you contribute to the overall social harmony.
That it's even if you are scrubbing the floor somewhere, you serve an important purpose
and you need to fulfill that purpose and you need to do your work and be diligent and contribute
to society.
And like that just happens to be your role.
So it's a little bit more fatalistic, I think, than a lot of Western thought.
You know, you often see these videos or you read articles and stuff where I would just call it like kind of anti-Chinese porn.
You know, like sometimes you'll see these these takes that are just like, wow, can you believe how they do it in China?
And it just feels as an American, it just feels so foreign and different.
And like, and also unethical, you know, when you kind of understand the Chinese culture and or if you read it.
a little bit about Chinese culture and understand their history and the history of Confucianism
and just like the kind of the moral order that Chinese and Eastern people see themselves in,
like a lot of those arrangements make a lot more sense.
Another way to think about it is that the Confucianism take is like your individual comparison
like doesn't really matter that much.
Like yes, some people are better than you, but who cares?
You have a role to play and like do your job well and respect your elders and
respect the authorities and do your best, essentially.
Buddhism, on the other hand, really, I think, of all the philosophies, I think Buddhism really
struggles with this the most.
It's Buddhism, obviously, the basis of Buddhism is a non-attachment, and comparison is very
much a form of attachment.
Like, when you compare yourself to another person and you decide, like, wow,
she is such pretty hair.
I wish I had pretty hair.
Or, wow, that guy makes a lot of money.
I wish I made a lot of money.
A Buddhist would say that you are attaching your happiness to some external illusion
and not reality itself, that everything that you compare yourself to is an illusion ultimately.
And so the more you invest yourself into those comparisons and attachments,
the more you're just going to invite more duca or suffering into your life.
Now, the Buddha did preach a concept of mudita, which is basically a sympathetic joy or I guess what we would call like a compassion or a happiness for others.
So the idea is that any time you are socially comparing yourself to somebody else, somebody's doing better than you, somebody has something that you don't, you envy something and others.
That is an opportunity to be happy for that person, which sounds nice.
Right, right, yeah.
But, like, honestly, like, how practical is that?
So those are kind of the two primary Eastern schools of thought.
In the West, I'm going to give you one guess who kind of nailed this first.
You know, just based on literally every episode we've ever done on this whole fucking show.
Was it?
Who do you think nailed this?
Was it Aristotle?
Oh, it was Aristotle.
Once again.
I'm real good.
You know, guys, maybe you should just go read the Nicomache.
and like skip the podcast because it's it's kind of feeling that way at this point.
Aristotle, as usual, nailed it and he nailed it before anybody else did.
So Aristotle in his in his work called The Politics, he declared that humans are what are known as a Zoon Politicon, which is a political animal, which again, he rightly identified that this is just just, just,
an inherent part of our nature, the same way a bird flies and a fish swims, we compare ourselves
to each other.
That's just how humans are.
And to live well, we have to navigate the delicate art of comparing ourselves while living
within a community.
And so for Aristotle, this meant finding a moral or virtuous form of comparison.
So basically Aristotle argued that there are two forms of comparison.
He called Phonos, that's P-H-T-H-O-N-O-S, which essentially translate the envy.
And then there's Zellos, which is emulation.
And this, I think loosely, we could qualify as toxic and healthy comparison.
So the toxic comparison is just pure envy and jealousy and greed.
It's like, you have a thing I want, therefore I hate you until I get it.
Whereas Zalos, or the emulation, is, wow, you, you.
have done a bunch of things that I want to do,
that's really inspiring. Maybe I can
learn from you. Maybe I can act like you.
Maybe I can do things that you've done
so I can experience the same benefits.
Now, in the rhetoric,
Aristotle wrote,
emulation is a good feeling and belongs to good men.
Envy is base and belongs
to bad men. That's
very deep.
That's like,
I could have been Dr. Seuss, I'm pretty sure.
Who wrote that?
But in modern psychology, this is what we would today call in social comparison theory.
This is what would be referred to as a maladaptive form of social comparison versus an adaptive form of social comparison.
So basically, a maladaptive form of social comparison is a form of social comparison that makes you feel worse, that makes you more antisocial, and that decreases your mental health or your ability to achieve something.
Whereas an adaptive form of social comparison is something that inspires you, motivates you.
Maybe it's a role model.
Maybe it's somebody you look up to.
Maybe it's somebody you want to emulate or replicate the great things that they've done.
And I guess this really gets into the unsung aspect of social comparison theory, which is obviously the dark side is something that we experience all the time.
It's what gets talked about all the time.
It's why it gets talked about all the time.
It's why a bazillion people email me and ask like, how do I stop?
comparing myself to others, whereas what goes unsung is the fact that everybody who has inspired
you, everybody who has motivated you, every role model you've had, every person you've looked
up to as a young person, every mentor that you've had, that is also a form of social
comparison. That is also somebody that you have looked at and you have compared yourselves
to them and you have said, I want to be like that. What's fascinating is I think that the root
of what makes social comparison
adaptive versus maladaptive,
it is the perception that you are capable
of replicating what they've done.
So I think a maladaptive
form of social comparison is very zero sum, right?
It's like, okay, you own the Ferrari,
I want to own a Ferrari.
There's only so many Ferraris in the world.
So if you have one, that means I,
there's a less chance I'm going to have one.
So fuck you, I'm going to take your Ferrari.
Whereas an adaptive form of comparison
is, I think, positive sum.
It's like, you've done great things.
That actually is evidence that I can do great things too.
It doesn't diminish the chance that I'm going to do great things.
In fact, the fact that I know you means I'm more likely to do great things.
So I'm so excited that I get to know you and hang out with you and learn from you and all that stuff.
That's a lot harder to put into like a pithy little quote though, right?
Like comparison is a thief of joy.
Yeah.
Right?
That's one of the Roosevelt supposedly said that.
I don't remember which one.
But how do you put the, well, if you're, you know, if you're aiming up at somebody who is, you know, you admire and how do you, there's just no way to put that in a nice little, you know what I'm saying.
It's funny too, because I also think social comparison gets such a bad rap because I think we generally, the maladaptive form of comparison, like the comparison that feels bad, I think it tends to be very conscious.
like we're very aware of it, right, when we feel bad about it.
Whereas all the positive forms of it, I think we do unconsciously.
So if you think of, you know, a mentor in your career or something,
you're probably not thinking consciously of like how you're comparing yourself to them.
You're probably just like so grateful of like, I'm glad this person's helping me.
I'm glad I have somebody to look up to, somebody to reach out to.
Yeah, and it shows up in your motivation, not in your assessment of the whole situation.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, absolutely.
So for Aristotle, ultimately, comparison, social comparison, it's not a moral failure.
It's actually a moral opportunity.
And Aristotle argued that a megalose psychos or a great-souled person is somebody who is mature enough to only compare themselves for the right reasons and in the right ways to basically find something honorable and admirable about each person that they compare themselves to and then use that as insolves.
to basically find something honorable and admirable about each person that they compare themselves to
and then use that as inspiration or motivation to improve themselves.
That was essentially Aristotle's take, which psychology is kind of backed up.
But on the other hand, psychology is also based in Western philosophy, which was basically invented by Aristotle.
Right.
So there is an argument that there's a lot of circularity going on here.
but I guess as Western individuals who have grown up swimming in the water of Western
philosophical thought, it certainly makes sense to me.
And this is certainly like the perspective I've always had on social comparison, that it's
an A, it's inevitable, and B, you can do it well and you can leverage it to improve yourself
and not hurt yourself.
I think there was a little bit in Confucian thought, though, too, of that, right?
There was a conscious choosing of who you surround yourself with.
Right.
So there is some of that as well.
Yeah.
So to be clear, you know, Confucianism, it is, it's big on relationships.
It's big on harmony.
And while it's fatalistic about the hierarchy piece.
Okay.
Yeah.
I think the key difference is that Western thought seems to say you can climb as far as you want on the higher.
Like anybody's capable of climbing that hierarchy.
Whereas I think Confucian thought is a little bit more like, look,
your parents are always going to be your parents and you better fucking respect them and obey them.
And there's nothing you're ever going to do that's going to like surmount that or overcome that.
And similar with like a lot of authority positions.
Like it's just this is the way it works.
Yeah.
You know, get used to it.
I think for a long time that Western thought was kind of like that still too, right?
You remember you back like the great chain of being.
Have you ever heard like of that?
And like ancient Western thought, there was this great chain of being,
which is very similar to the Confucius kind of hierarchy.
Yeah.
Like you,
there's a place for you in society,
and it's against God.
If you don't perform those rules and duties,
your father was a cobbler,
that means you're a cobbler,
and you just keep the great chain going.
I think it's more of a modern invention
of Western thought that is like the climbing, yeah.
I think the seeds were planted definitely,
like Aristotle.
I think,
and not to get on to too much of a diversion.
You know,
we talked about this a little bit
in the procrastination episode,
but like the history of Western philosophy
is really fascinating.
because a lot of this stuff originated with the Greeks and Romans,
went away with the fall of the Roman Empire.
Yeah.
Got kind of buried or overridden.
And in the case of Aristotle was lost to Europe and was preserved by Arabic and Middle Eastern cultures.
And then only re-entered European culture in the 13th century.
Yeah, yeah.
And actually, Thomas Aquinas saved, basically salvaged Aristotle.
Like he was, he was the one who came across Aristotle and was like, this is incredible.
We need to find a way to make this kosher with, you know, the clergy and the Pope.
Okay.
And then that was kind of his great work was like taking Aristotlian thought and then translating it in such a way that the church wouldn't banish it.
Interesting.
Okay.
Like they had banished everything else.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Okay.
That makes sense.
So shout out to Thomas Kindess.
That's my boy.
That's my boy.
You know, saving it.
Save an Aristotle from the clergy.
Yeah.
My man.
So then we get to the Stoics.
The Stoics are super interesting around this because obviously the Stoic case here is just like don't compare yourself to like that's kind of the Stoic line.
Don't compare yourself to others.
Compare yourself to your past self or compare yourself to your ideal self.
It's the ideal.
Yeah.
That line of thought very much originates or was at least popularized by the Stoics.
The irony here is that some of the most popular Stoics were like racked with envy and like insecurity around comparisons, which I think there's an interesting tangent here that we could go on.
But, you know, if you read Seneca's letters, second richest man in Rome, favored by the emperor, you know, part of the aristocracy.
And he's just like completely insecure about his status at all times.
He's worried about is he doing enough?
Is he powerful enough?
Is he being listened to?
It's super fascinating.
And then you get a similar thing with Marcus Aurelius and meditations.
He's incredibly concerned and insecure about his place in history, how he's going to stack up to other emperors and how he's going to be remembered and what his legacy is going to be.
If any of the people in his court or any of his subjects are actually going to appreciate all the things he did for him, I find it fascinating that arguably the two most powerful philosophers, maybe ever, were in some ways the most insecure.
Like they seem the most worried about this, whereas you get somebody like Epictetus who was literally a slave who called comparison the disease of the soul.
So I don't know.
I thought that was interesting.
Very interesting.
Yeah.
And then finally, moving up to modern day, we get the existentialists, which, as you know,
I'm a huge fan of.
Sartre actually wrote quite a bit in Being a Nothingness about, he called it the look.
Simone de Beauvoir, like, actually popularized it more of, like, being othered or becoming
the other or, like, the verb version of being the other.
And basically SART's point about it is that it's our awareness that we're observed that creates, like forces us to create a conception of ourselves in our own mind.
Which I think, I believe this predates, I believe SART predates the developmental psychology's like discovery of theory of mind and everything.
So I think he was correct about this like multiple decades before psychologists eventually caught up and found the same thing.
But it's basically once you become aware that you're being a.
observed by other people, as a form of survival, necessity, you start developing an identity for
yourself.
You start constructing an identity for yourself as a form of self-preservation, as a way of,
like, okay, if other people are seeing me and they have a conception of who I am, quote unquote,
then I need to have a conception of who I am, quote unquote.
I guess the kind of revolutionary insight from Jean-Paul's art and the existentialist in
general is that like everything, okay, yes, you have to compare yourself to others. You have to be aware of the otherness, of your otherness to the people who are observing you. But you still get to decide what that means. You get to decide you, you are naturally going to compare yourself to the people around you. You are naturally going to be envious of people who are more successful of you and maybe a little bit resentful or arrogant towards the people who are less successful of you. That's all going to happen.
But what Sart says is you get to decide if it means anything or not.
You can choose if that actually defines who you are or if you're going to define yourself by some other means.
Yeah.
And there's a lot of religious traditions too that have something around.
A lot of times they'll call it the fall, like in the Bible, the story of Adam and Eve, them becoming self-aware.
Right.
Right?
Yes.
Where you're going to?
No, no, no.
I just got excited because you're 100% right.
Okay.
Yeah.
Yeah.
This happens through not just in Christianity, but it's a lot of different religious
traditions where they have this idea of what they call the fall.
Yes.
Right?
Which is in some way we've become aware, self-aware.
Yes.
Only through relation of, through other people, right?
We only know who we are in relation to other people.
And for so many religions, that's the point at which we fall.
We've fallen from God's grace or from the purity that we once knew before that.
Yeah.
So, yeah, I think that's really.
The blissful ignorance of not knowing the separation.
between self and
Right.
Like out of the eve
when they became
self-aware,
they realized they were
naked and then all sin
flowed out of that.
Right.
Right.
And I think,
I think the exact words
in the Bible are,
are something around that
of like,
of like,
they became aware
that they were being seen
and suddenly became ashamed.
Right.
Right.
Which,
psychologically speaking,
is pretty accurate.
Right.
Right.
Right.
That's one side of it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Because it's,
you know,
as we've talked about,
like we talked about in the shame
episode,
it's like,
it's only as the,
as the conception of separate self emerges in childhood,
that we start processing and understanding all the ways in which we're inadequate or we don't live up.
Right. Or that we must hide ourselves, right?
And so, yeah, it's just super interesting.
Yeah.
I do want to touch on a couple myths before we move on.
These are just common beliefs and assumptions that a lot of people have around social comparison that are not necessarily true.
So the first myth is that there's some level of wisdom or enlightenment or success that you stop comparing yourself to others.
There is no evidence of that.
In fact, I find it very amusing how much pop spirituality and pop self-help.
When you actually look at what they idealize, it's basically just being a psychopath.
Yeah, they're peddling this idea, yeah.
It's basically like, I never care what anybody think.
I only do what I want.
I'm like completely confident in myself at all times.
And, uh,
I'm a self-contained miracle of some sort.
Exactly.
And it's,
and it's like there are no repercussions or tradeoffs to any of my behaviors.
It's like, well,
you know,
yeah,
that's,
that's actually what a psychopath believes.
And,
uh,
things don't turn out well for them.
Generally speaking.
Yeah.
It's funny too because,
I mean,
it's,
this is something that you see,
uh,
you know,
if there is a form of enlightenment, I think what it is is probably more of what like SART describes and being a nothingness, which is like you're aware of the comparison, you feel the comparison, but you don't necessarily identify with comparison. You don't, you choose not to make it meaningful. I know like the Dalai Lama has said stuff around this before. Like it's funny because sometimes you'll see the Dalai Lama get interviewed by like a journalist and they're like, are you ever sad? And he just like laughs at them. He's like, yeah, of course I'm sad. Like all the time.
Right.
Right.
You know, but he's like, sadness is still beautiful in its own way.
And I'm still like, just because you feel something doesn't mean it's true.
It doesn't mean it's meaningful.
It doesn't mean it's permanent.
Like I think, you know, what the Dalai Lama exemplifies is that, yeah, he's very human.
But the thing that's unique about him is his constant awareness of how transitory his humanness is.
Right.
That's the real wisdom.
Right.
Like he feels sad, but he understands like, oh, this isn't going to last.
Right, right.
Don't buy into it too much.
It is funny, though.
Like, I mean, as you know, I was very much in the Buddhism in my 20s,
and I did a lot of retreats and meditated pretty seriously for a while,
read a lot of books.
And one of the things that I think kind of turned me off from it is I noticed that the more I got into it,
the more the Buddhist practice itself turned into another status game.
So what I noticed is that I started becoming a,
catch to how well I could detach from other areas of my life.
Like how much was I meditating, how equanimous was I feeling on a regular basis.
And I noticed it in some of the other students that were like really getting into it as well.
They're like, you know, they started kind of measuring their own self-worth in terms of like how
many retreats were they doing and how much they were working with the teacher and all this stuff.
And I was like, isn't this exactly what we're trying to get away from?
Like, aren't we just kind of signing up for the same race, but just...
Look how little ego I have.
Exactly.
I have less ego than you.
No, I have less ego.
Yeah.
There were just very subtle wisp of envy in comparison showing up, even, you know, in a Zen retreat or in a monster.
That's just how pervasive it is.
I mean, even when you spend your whole life trying to detach from it, you still find little, little nicks and crannies to attach to.
It never completely goes away.
It really never does.
So a second myth is that comparison always harms us.
I think we already covered this.
But one thing that you do see across all of these philosophies and schools of thought is that comparison is always an opportunity for something good.
Right.
Like in Buddhism, it's an opportunity for greater compassion and joy for others.
In Confucianism, it's an opportunity to improve relationships and social harmony, you know, with areas.
Aristotle, it's an opportunity to improve yourself and inspire yourself.
It's not necessarily a bad thing.
And I think it is probably useful to sit and think about all the ways that social comparison has actually been useful for you in your life.
And then the final myth that I think you see pop up quite a bit is that the only way to be free of comparison is to isolate yourself.
And this is a little bit hardcore, but you see this quite a bit of people who, you know, go off grid.
They go out to the countryside.
They get rid of all their devices.
They delete all their online accounts.
I'm not going to participate in society.
Right.
And it's because I don't want to compare myself to everybody else.
Yeah.
Like that comparison disease that I have.
Yeah.
And it's, it's a-
Cuff the cancer out type of thing, yeah.
Yeah.
I think it would be interesting sometimes to meet or talk to a person like that
and, like, see if they struggle, how much they still struggle with it.
You know, it's interesting.
We did a YouTube video with a guy.
So there's a guy, this guy named Brent Underwood.
who he used to work with Ryan Holiday
or still works with Ryan Holiday
a little bit
and he bought a ghost town
out in the middle of the valley in California
and so we drove out there
he's been living out there
for like two or three years now I think
mostly by himself
a few people come in and out of the town
but he's basically in this abandoned ghost town
used to be a silver mine
he owns the whole thing
it's pretty run down
but he's been up there by himself
probably for the majority of the last three years
and we went up there
and shot a YouTube video with him.
And it was,
I actually loved that video.
Like, it was very,
it came out very philosophical
and very kind of meditative.
He's a very interesting,
well-spoken guy.
But it's funny because,
like, one of the first things
he told me when I interviewed him,
he said,
he's like,
anybody watching this
who thinks that like,
running off to the middle of nowhere
is going to solve your problems.
He's like,
let me just tell you it doesn't.
It doesn't at all.
Probably makes them worse.
Yeah,
he said some of them,
it makes them worse.
He's like, you know, it helps some of them, but it makes others of them worse.
And I think in this case, you know, cutting yourself off from things, you're not necessarily solving a problem.
You're probably just replacing one problem with another, which is the tradeoff here is the more isolated you become, the more lonely you're going to feel.
And so you pick your poison.
Do you want to feel lonely and isolated, or do you want to struggle with?
insecurity of having to be around others.
Right.
And isn't life grand.
I saw something slightly tangential, but I saw something recently where a guy,
he tried to go out and make his own chicken sandwich from absolute scratch.
Oh, I've seen this.
It's amazing.
It took him six months and $1,500.
Yes, it's amazing.
For a chicken sandwich.
Right?
The point, though, is that we're, as humans, we are very socially interdependent.
And that's, like, part of our nature as well.
That's where this comparison comes.
from.
And so it's not about getting rid of it.
It's learning how to manage it more.
So that's the point we keep hammering on.
I know.
But yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And look, I mean, we're going to talk about digital stuff later.
Yeah, yeah.
Like, there is something to be said if you feel overwhelmed by comparison or if you are, say,
surrounded by assholes, which, you know, one of the, I think the defining characteristics
of an asshole is that they encourage or promote.
unhealthy forms of comparison.
Yeah.
Force them on you, yeah.
Yeah, like it's, if you find yourself in those situations, then sure,
cutting yourself off temporarily or in some areas of life, like can make sense.
Yeah.
But ultimately, like, I mean, as you and I keep coming back to episode after episode,
there is probably nothing in the psychological literature of over 100 years of research and study
and clinical practice more consistently replicated and proven over and over.
again that happiness is relationships, essentially.
Like that's, that is kind of the short version.
If you were to distill all of psychological knowledge down into, you know, a phrase, it would
probably be happiness is good relationship.
Yeah.
Again, you can't know who you are except in relation to other people and that necessitates
comparison.
Well, we're just about to get into that.
Let's get into it.
Let's get into it.
So talking about the psychology of comparison, social comparison, you know, the exact same
achievement can feel like a triumph or a total failure, and it all comes down to who you're
standing next to.
So there's an interesting thing known as the silver medal paradox, which is that basically
when you go survey Olympic athletes who just won a medal, what you consistently find is that
the happiest person is the guy who won the gold medal.
The second happiest person is the person who won the bronze medal, and the least happy
person is the person who won the silver.
Which is kind of sick and twisted, but it makes sense, right?
Obviously, the gold medal winner is thrilled.
The bronze medal winner is thrilled because they got a metal, right?
They were this close to just not even being on the podium, whereas the silver medalist is like, man, if I had just pushed a little harder,
if I didn't fuck up that one turn, if my form was a little bit better, I could have gotten the gold.
Right.
And I think this is illustrative of the problem.
also why and how psychology has just been trying to attack for over a century, like, how do we
compare ourselves better?
How do we make more?
If we're doomed to compare ourselves to others and if we're doomed to constantly be, you know,
dissatisfied with what we have or what we've accomplished, you know, how can we do this
better?
So it starts in the 1890s with a researcher named Norman Triplett.
And he noticed something that is probably pretty obvious to us today, which is that he noticed
that when people cycled together, they tended to ride faster overall as a group. And sure enough,
you see this replicated all over the place. When you do things together with other people,
you tend to do them better, you do them longer, you do them faster, you do them further,
you do them more consistently. And that's simply because we're competitive. We like being,
we like impressing other people. Again, another advantage of social comparison that is largely
unconscious and we largely don't think about. I've noticed this this year myself.
where, you know, for a number of years, when I got in the running, I always ran by myself.
And I really just ran to, like, improve my own times.
I wasn't really training for anything.
I wasn't really doing anything with it.
And then this year, I started signing up for various races and endurance events and stuff with friends and people.
And it's crazy how much more motivation it gives you.
So I'm doing this thing called a high rocks about a month from now.
And it's a crazy endurance thing.
like Google it, it's wild, it's a lot.
I don't even know why I'm doing it.
Actually, I do know why, because two friends of mine signed up for it,
and they like challenged me to do it with them.
And it's funny because it's a thing that if I had been on my own,
I would have rolled my eyes.
Actually, I know I rolled my eyes,
because I remember the first time I heard about it,
I remember looking at it and being like,
why on earth would anybody put themselves through this?
Like, this is the stupidest thing.
And then jump ahead six months.
And here you are.
A couple buddies invite me and I'm like, oh, dude, I'm in.
And like, of course, what's the first thing I think about?
I'm like, I'm going to totally crush them.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I'm going to train.
I'm going to get a plan.
I'm going to, like, fix my nutrition and I'm going to fucking crush these guys.
And it's fun.
Yeah.
It's fun.
It's exciting.
My workouts get more interesting.
I'm more motivated each day.
Like the days I don't want to go workout.
I force myself to go workout.
Why?
Because I'm thinking about, like, yeah, I don't want to show up for the high rocks and be the weakest link.
So, again, there is an unconscious advantage to this, an advantage that largely goes unnoticed.
Another one I found of this too was really interesting is Olympic sprinters.
When the female Olympic sprinters trained with the men, they actually had better times.
Wow.
Which was pretty wild.
That's crazy.
Isn't that wild?
That's so interesting.
Yeah.
So, I mean, again, like a comparative, there's the, I mean, they're highly competitive people.
Yes, of course.
And so they're going to try harder in those situations where there's something.
who's better than them, you know, faster than whatever it is.
But yeah, they found that pretty consistently as well.
That's so interesting.
So then the question of, you know, how do you make sure you leverage this in a positive way and not a negative way?
Because we've all had the experience where, like, competitiveness has kind of turned against us or become unproductive and unnecessarily adversarial.
Definitely, yeah.
And William James, often considered the father of psychology, put together an equation.
put together an equation that tried to analyze this.
And I think it's a nice equation.
He basically said that self-esteem equals success divided by pretensions.
Another way of thinking about that is that your self-esteem is equivalent to what you've achieved or accomplished, divided by your expectation of what you can achieve and accomplish.
So generally speaking, people who have a very low self-esteem, they either have unreasonable expectations,
of what they should be doing,
which you see this a lot.
People, a lot of depressed people or miserable people,
they think they should be able to do everything
and accomplish everything
and be the best at everything.
And they just drive themselves crazy.
And then also, you need to have actually
gotten out and done something that you feel good about.
You feel a little bit of coming back
to the status protective emotions,
something that you feel proud of,
that you're proud to wear on your identity
as a badge or build your identity
around as a badge. Now for William James, he rightly observed that our identity is largely based on
how other people see us. Like, we're very influenced by other people's perceptions of ourselves.
And this can be both a good thing and a bad thing, right? Like, if a lot of people admire you,
then it will cause you to feel good about yourself. And that can be a very healthy thing. Like,
it can create a virtuous cycle, right? Like, it's like, okay, people respect me. They expect a lot
out of me, therefore I should expect a lot out of myself, therefore I become more likely to
do great things. But it can also work against you, right? If you feel like people don't like
you, or they have low expectations of you, or they don't expect much of you, it can cause you
to have low expectations for yourself, and then of course, you're less likely to go do great
things or improve yourself. So James basically saw this, I guess you could call it. I guess you could
it a golden mean, right? You don't want people who inflate your ego too much and cause you to be
delusional, right, tell you that your shit doesn't stink and you're amazing at everything you do.
But at the same time, you know, you don't want the expectation to outweigh the achievement.
But at the same time, you don't want people to diminish you or disrespect you or make you feel
like you have no achievements at all. So there's somewhere in there, there's a happy medium.
So it wasn't until Leon Fessinger in the 1950s with social comparison theory.
He really took what William James discovered and posited and tried to add structure around it and tried to really define like, okay, what is good comparison, what is bad comparison, what is too much of each one.
And this is where we get the upward comparison and the downward comparison, as you mentioned before.
So the upward comparison is when you compare yourself to somebody that you perceive as being superior or better to you in some way.
And there's a healthy and unhealthy form of upward comparison.
So a healthy form of upward comparison would be inspiring, motivating.
You would be able to learn from them.
Maybe they're a role model.
Maybe they're a mentor.
Maybe there's somebody you look up to.
An unhealthy form of upward comparison would be somebody who just is you perceive as being so good and so great and so perfect that it causes you to feel worse about yourself.
What's interesting here is that this gets a little bit back into what we talked about on the resilience episode in terms of self.
efficacy. Yeah. Oh, yeah. So like when it comes to upward comparison, it really seems like the
key ingredient is the perception that this person you're comparing yourself to, that what they have
is attainable for yourself. Right. So if you look at somebody and you've decided that they are so
perfect and so great and there's nothing you can ever do to be like them, then you're going to
feel worse about yourself. But if you look at that person and you think, wow, they did it. I think
I can do it too. Then it's actually going to motivate you and inspire you.
you. And that's super interesting. It's funny too because I also think it's interesting. So there's
something that like it doesn't explicitly get talked about, right? Like, but it's a lot of times
famous figures or public figures and they get talked about as role models. They often get
talked about as role models because of their, their gender, their ethnicity, their race,
their sexual orientation or whatever. What I like about this is that it kind of explains the big deal
around certain role models
or certain people that we celebrate in society, right?
Like if you think about somebody like Barack Obama
or Oprah Winfrey or, you know,
people who have like broken barriers,
often these people, like they're celebrated
because of, you know, their gender,
their race, their ethnicity, their sexual orientation,
things that it's funny that we, as a society,
we all agree that like shouldn't matter,
but then it's like when one of these people
shows up and becomes like super successful,
we decide it matters.
And I think it's because of this
because it's like, okay, when they see that Barack Obama
can do it, then anybody
who grows up like him, looks
like him is black,
they can look at him and be like, okay, well,
if that guy did it, like, that
gives me more confidence that I'm
capable of doing something. Right, yeah.
And it's just funny
that like that's not really explicitly
stated when we celebrate these people,
but the reason it is a big
deal is that it is,
when one of those people breaks through and becomes the first of, you know,
XYZ to become president or be a CEO or be a billionaire,
essentially it is increasing the self-efficacy across that entire population.
Right.
In society.
Yeah, and that was one of the points he made in social comparison theory was that we typically,
if there was no other objective information out there,
we compare ourselves to similar others.
Yes.
He was kind of the first one to really outline that.
define how we did that. So yeah, that's absolutely, that jives is what he found too,
way back in the 50s. Now let's talk about downward comparison. This is something that we also all
do. So it's funny because anytime people complain about comparing themselves to others,
they always complain about the upward comparison. They're like, there's this person that makes
me feel bad. How do I stop comparing myself? Nobody says, oh, there are these people that I feel
much better than.
There are these people
that I love talking shit about.
Yeah.
You put it that way.
There are these people
that I think are fucking idiots
and I kind of enjoy the fact
that they're fucking idiots.
Nobody complains about that.
But meanwhile,
everybody enjoys that.
So downward comparison.
Again, it's inevitable.
Again, I think there's a healthy
and an unhealthy way to do it.
In the case of downward
comparison, I think the healthy way of doing it is seeing how far you've come, being grateful
for what you have, understanding what not to do, right?
I think we've all been there.
We've seen somebody in our life like, fuck up eight ways from Tuesday and be like, okay,
not doing that.
So in those ways, like downward comparison can be very useful.
but I would say downward comparison becomes unhealthy
and really in two cases
is one is if it generates a sense of complacency
of just like I'm the best, I don't need to do shit
like these people suck
like I'm not as bad off as then
you can start resting on your laurels
and get cocky, arrogant, things like that
and then the other thing I'd say is just being malicious
like there is a certain
I hate to say it but it's like there's an instinctual
pleasure that comes with like seeing other people fuck up at things that like you would never
fuck up like seeing people make a mistake that you would never make.
Right, right.
Right.
Yeah.
And you're just like, what an idiot.
Right.
And yeah, that can feel good in small doses and it can feel good for like a short period of
time.
But you want to be careful not to indulge that too much because it, yeah, it just turns
into a dick.
Yeah.
I have a tendency to go out on that rabbit hole sometimes.
So yeah.
Oh, yeah.
We all do.
We all do.
It's funny.
My wife and I, for many years, we don't do it anymore.
We finally grew up enough.
We finally matured enough to the point where we stopped doing this.
But my wife and I, for many years, we always had one hate follow.
And it was purely like, it was, we each, there was somebody that we, we each, there was somebody
that we would follow on social media.
And it was always somebody in our life,
somebody we knew.
Oh, okay.
And it was somebody that we knew
who, like,
we thought was so cringe and embarrassing,
but, like, they didn't realize it.
And, like, we kind of enjoyed
how cringe and embarrassing they were.
Because at least I'm not this bad.
Exactly, exactly.
It's just this, like, very, like,
kind of mean girls' form of satisfaction
that comes with it.
Yeah.
Yeah, I'm happy to report that, like,
we both kind of got grossed out by ourselves
and stopped doing it.
that many years ago.
That's such a thing though, everybody,
that's so cringe.
I hear that all the time now.
But it's like, there's part of you and enjoys it.
Oh, they're absolutely.
Part of you enjoys it.
I see how it's reinforcing for sure, yeah.
Yeah.
No, I definitely, it's funny.
I have not hate followed anybody in many years, but.
My, how you've grown.
I've become quite virtuous, Jay.
If you haven't noticed,
I am one of Aristotle's megalosikos.
Yeah.
Yeah.
No ego.
You may bask.
Look how egoless you are.
Yes.
There's a halo appearing on the screen right now as people watch this.
I see it.
Yeah.
It's worth noting that Fessinger's model was descriptive, not prescriptive.
Basically, he's describing how we compare ourselves to others.
He's not saying how we should compare ourselves to others.
Because, I mean, let's be honest.
We make all four of these comparisons.
All of us do.
Both healthy and unhealthy upward and downward comparisons.
So basically William James kind of explained the foundation of how social comparison works.
Fessinger explained the mechanics of how it works.
And it really isn't into like the late 20th, early 21st century that we start getting prescriptive.
Like, okay, how do we actually do this better?
Or what are ways that we can kind of steer ourselves towards better comparisons?
And you want to guess what the primary finding is, what it comes back to?
interpretation?
What are we going to do?
Yeah.
Values.
Oh, yes, of course.
Comes back to values, as it almost always does.
Values all the way down.
Values all the way down.
Values and boundaries, it turns out.
So Abraham Tessers in the late 80s came up with the self-evaluation maintenance model.
Oh, yeah.
Which basically what he discovered, and this makes a lot of sense,
is that we tend to evaluate people based on things that we care.
about, right? So let's say you go and win a golf tournament. I don't give two shits about golf,
so I'm going to be happy for you. Super proud of me. It doesn't threaten my ego, it doesn't
challenge my identity, it doesn't, there's no scarcity involved. Whereas let's say I care very,
like, let's say I've been practicing my ass off on my golf swing and I'll like care really
deeply about it. And then you just kind of casually go win a golf tournament, that's likely
to spark a lot of envy because golf is something.
that I have chosen to measure myself by
and to build my identity on
and then you go and do the thing that I care about
and you do it better than I do
with seeming the less effort.
So yeah, fuck you.
And you see this kind of play out
in all sorts of different dimensions.
You know, one of the ways that I wrote an article
many, many years ago,
I think it was even before you started working with me,
it was called, we judge others how we judge ourselves.
And it's basically whatever the yardstick
that you have internalized for yourself,
the ruler that you use to measure your own success
or a virtue as a human being,
that is what you will instinctively apply to others.
And then when people drastically outpace you on that yardstick,
you will feel threatened, you'll feel envious,
you will feel butt hurt,
and you will be kind of a dick about it.
Yeah, and everything's a yardstick, right?
Yeah.
It could be money, it could be how much ego you don't have.
It could be anything.
Anything.
And it looks, whatever.
Anything.
Yeah.
And again, like, coming back to this, it makes sense that this is, like, largely rooted in values.
Because if you go back to the values episode, one of the things that we hammer on over and over and over is that you have to value something.
It is impossible to value nothing.
Right.
Not valuing anything is a form of value.
So, which I guess is what the Buddhist monks find, right?
It's like they're attempting to value nothing, which then becomes the new value that they measure themselves and the other monks buy.
and it becomes competitive and they're like,
oh, fuck that guy, he's meditating longer than I am.
Values all the way down, man.
That's what it is, yeah.
So the point here is that there are,
there are probably better and worse values.
They're better and worse yardsticks
to measure ourselves by, right?
And this kind of gets into, you know,
without going too deep into the values episode,
but like, you know, there are external
and internal status indicators for ourselves, right?
Like, I can choose to measure myself
by my success in golf tournaments,
which is probably a bad way to measure myself.
It's not something I have total control over.
It's an external and arbitrary metric.
It's very competitive.
Whereas I can choose to measure myself by something much more internal,
something I can fully control,
like say my honesty or my integrity or how I treat people
or how good of a friend I am.
That's probably a much better way to measure myself.
and treat myself, and as a result,
I'm going to draw better comparisons
between myself and others, right?
Kind of the simplest way that I've distilled this before
is I've often written that, you know,
the trick isn't to stop comparing yourself to others,
it's to compare yourself to better people for better reasons.
And ultimately, a certain amount of this
is just it's emotional awareness,
it's self-awareness, it's understanding
what are you choosing to make important to yourself?
Because whatever you choose to make important to yourself,
understand that that is going to become the basis of comparison that you make towards others.
And again, in the values episode, we went on at length about how important and crucial it is to choose your values and know your values and live out your values and practice your values.
This is just another form of that.
If I like, okay, when you sit down and decide what matters in your life more than anything else, what do you care about?
Understand that a side effect of that or a downstream effect of that is that this is going to become the way that you compare yourself to others.
This is going to become the yardstick that you measure yourself by, that you measure other people by,
and it's going to largely dictate and define the sorts of people that you want to surround yourself with
and the sort of people that you're going to look up to.
Yeah.
Choose wisely.
Choose wisely.
Yeah.
That kind of wraps up the psychological section.
I do know that there is some interesting neuroscience that goes along with this, but you are the neuroscientist at this table.
So I will shut the fuck up and hand it over to you.
Yeah.
A lot of the neuroscience anyway, it kind of wraps this all up in a kind of interesting way, I think.
I put some finer points on a few of the details that you've mentioned already.
Back in the 2000s, there was kind of this foundational study.
You know, I mentioned that example about if I make $70,000, I'm happy or if you only
make 50, but if you make 90, there's a social comparison there and I'm not as happy.
That bears out in the lab, actually.
Okay.
So they did this study where they put people in an fMRI.
They had them do some task.
It doesn't matter what it is because they would give them money if they performed it well, right?
And not only did they show them how much money they gained for it, they showed them how much money other people got.
Another person who was doing the same thing, how much they got.
We got the same amount.
You were both happy.
It was all great.
But sometimes they would say, okay, this person gets $40 and you only get $20.
Yeah.
Then there was a particular spot in the brain.
The ventral stratatum doesn't matter.
It's involved in reward.
It fires more when you get a higher reward or the same reward as somebody else and then less if you don't.
Yeah.
There's a brain mechanism right there.
It's just your brain feels rewards in a relative manner.
Yeah.
It's a comparison machine.
It's not absolutely.
Yeah.
And the happiness research on income shows this as well.
Same thing.
Exactly same thing.
It's better to be the richest person in a poor neighborhood than the poorest person in a rich
neighborhood.
Goes back to what I was talking about like my grandma, you know, just like, we were poor, but
we didn't know we were poor.
Yeah.
Right?
Because everybody around this was poor.
That was kind of the entryway into this social comparison in social neuroscience.
there's, you have distinct neural machinery for comparison why it feels good and why it feels bad to.
Downward comparisons, like I did better than this other person, that it's naturally rewarding,
just on a just on a normal basis it is.
Where upward comparisons are usually like, you know, there's a pinch of like pain with that,
but not necessarily.
There's some nuance to that that I'll get into in a second.
when we outperform others,
reward circuits tend to light up.
And when we are outperformed, like social pain tends to light up.
So there's completely different systems for these two.
It's not just one system.
So one system gets activated over the other.
Okay.
Basically, they kind of gleaned from all of this,
and this is given to the late 2000-2010s.
They glean from all this is that another person's success or failure.
It's meaningful to you, but that could be,
It can be motivating or it can be demotivating.
Yeah.
All right.
This brings me to, there's kind of like a fork in the road.
And this is what we've kind of already talked about this, but there's like a neural basis for it, right?
I'm going to use the emotions of envy and admiration here, but they could be similar emotions or what Aristotle called envy and emulation as well, right?
So in envy, your brain kind of has, it assesses the reward versus the, uh, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the.
the pain, but there's also like a threat component to it as well.
So when you envy somebody, there's like, it's, it feels threatening to you, right?
You're like, that person's doing better than me.
I feel threatened.
I need to do something about it, right?
But there's usually, there's a negative connotation to that, right?
This occurs in areas like the anterior insula, the anterior cingulate cortex.
Basically, these are the ones that processes social pain.
Okay.
Okay.
Whereas if you have something more like admiration or what Aristotle called emulation,
another part of your brain does that as well.
So there's like this fork in the road where somehow your brain, you know, this,
something comes up and then your brain either assesses it as a threat or as, okay,
we're going to go into growth mode now, basically, right?
Which is pretty interesting.
Like there's actual neural machinery that does this.
It's fascinating.
Yeah, it's really, really interesting.
So essentially that when your brain is kind of in this admiration mode,
it's actually, it goes searching for possibilities rather than the inad.
So like I think our task is to find that fork in the road, right?
Is to find that fork in the road where we can decide, where we can reinterpret that,
whether it's CBT or any other methods that we're going to talk about later, is to find
that fork in the road and try to push it towards that more admiration and inspiration and
upward spiral that we can find.
Okay.
Now the neuroscientists two have found there's kind of four different things that can influence
this, and we've already mentioned a couple of them actually, whether we take that envy path or
whether we take the admiration path. One of them you mentioned already was attainability,
so like in self-efficacy. Do I actually see myself as being able to do this? Okay.
If another person's success, if it feels like it's within reach, then it's usually inspiring.
And so this is where all this stuff comes in about like, be careful who you admire.
Who's the target of your admiration, right?
another one is self-security or self-esteem too.
So people with stronger self-esteem, they show less of that kind of envy path, which
makes a lot of sense, right?
It's funny because I just see that, especially if you take William James' definition,
like I just see that as another form of self-efficacy because it's like a person of self-esteem
has built up a resume of doing things in their life.
And so that's just given them more self-advocacy and belief of like, oh, yeah, I could do that.
Yeah, yeah, no, for sure.
And related to that too is the closeness of the target.
This goes back to Fessinger again.
So he said if there's no objective information, we look to people who are similar to us.
So it's usually your peers.
If you're comparing yourself to your peers and people who are immediately around you,
that's usually a better, you have a better chance of going down that admiration path.
Right.
You do the envy path.
Okay.
And then last is a comparison when it's framed.
It's the framing of it, basically.
So if you see this comparison as a chance to learn or chance to grow rather than it's just that mind switch really is, do I see this comparison?
Do I see this person achieving this thing that I either envy or admire?
Is this a chance for me to grow or is it a chance for me to show how lucky they are or, you know, shit on them in some way?
So those are kind of the four things that neuroscientists and psychologists together have kind of come together and found that we can kind of nudge ourselves towards.
towards the admiration route.
More recently, and you've mentioned this already as well too,
you've hinted at it anyway,
there's this thing what they call temporal comparison.
And you've talked about this a lot, actually, before.
Especially you find yourself very competitive.
You're a competitive person,
but the person you like to compete with the most is yourself.
Of course.
Right?
And we actually do this all the time.
I think people, we think of social comparison.
We're thinking of comparison in general, we're comparing ourselves to others.
We actually do this all the time.
All of us do this all the time.
We're comparing ourselves.
A lot of us, though, what happens is we're beating up our past self and saying, look what
you did to me, basically.
Maybe not in those exact words, but we're all doing this all the time.
But if we can shift that to a, I'm better than I was yesterday or last year or whatever
it is, that again is another method that psychologists and neuroscientists have
found that that's actually a lot healthier and more adaptive and leads to more motivation.
Yeah.
Towards your goals and your values.
I think so this is this is this is the cliche that originated with the stoics of like don't compare yourself to others.
Compare yourself to who you were yesterday or last year or whatever.
It's funny because I feel like this is becoming culturally normalized and encouraged.
Yes.
It's and I think I have a little theory around this.
I think a lot of it has to do with like.
data and video games.
So, I mean, we're going to get into how.
Yeah, the gameification.
The digital world has affected our psychology and our social comparison.
But I think this would actually be the positive side of the digitization of culture and society.
Is that like you actually have a record of how you were a year ago.
You can go back and look what you were doing a year ago, right?
You could see how stupid you were or the dumb thing you posted two years ago or, you know,
what you bench pressed and squatted last summer.
You know,
and you can see how far you've come.
I remember it was interesting because, you know,
I went through all of school writing papers,
not knowing that I was a good writer.
And I think a lot of that had to do
with just how arbitrary the grading was with each teacher.
You know, some teachers gave me great grades
and some teachers gave me horrible grades.
And I never really understood why I kind of just like took it at face value.
And when I started writing,
online, two things happened. One was I could actually go look back at things I wrote a year ago,
two years ago, three years ago. And what I, after I wrote for a few years, what I consistently found
was like, the further back I went, the more I cringed. The more I was like, holy shit.
What was this guy thinking? And while that in that moment, it felt really bad. It just like,
it's such a gratifying feeling to see like,
wow, look how far I've come.
Just in three years of writing blog posts, right?
And then the other thing is that you actually get the data on it, right?
Like you see, you're like, oh, okay.
You know, in 2010, I'm like, okay,
a normal blog post for me gets 30 comments.
Well, wow, I go back and I look at 2008,
and it's like three comments.
Wow, that's come along.
Like, clearly a lot more people like my writing than they used to.
And I think you see this with video games as well.
as an avid gamer
like most
video games
like will track your skill
and performance
over time
they'll give you ratings
they'll give you badges
medals
so you can actually
see your progression
through games
and like how much better
you are at certain games
over time
so and then that doesn't even get into
like you know apps
like Duolingo and Strava
like you know
all the gamification
that's being built into
you know education
and different like
health and fitness apps
and things like that.
You know, even something as simple, like,
I don't know about you,
but like the first 10 years that I worked out,
I just went to the gym and just like lifted.
Yeah, I just went.
I just like, oh, like, ah, 30 pounds sounds okay.
And like I just pick it up and start doing a lift.
It really wasn't until I was probably 30
that I actually started writing down my workouts
and then like trying to improve on each lift
and tracking my progress across things.
And so, yeah, it is,
It is, I think it's, it's a fantastic thing.
I think it makes everybody more effective
when you're able to track progress like this.
And I do think it has been enabled with kind of the information revolution.
So before I know we're about to get into kind of the disaster of social comparison
in the digital age.
But before we get there, I just want to.
There's a silver lining there too.
Yeah, yeah.
I want to stand on my soap.
box and say like, wait, there's something really good that's happened.
Yeah.
Yeah.
No, absolutely.
I mean, it's going to be personality based, I think, too.
I think some people are just more externally focused than internally focused.
And so I think it depends a little bit on your personality.
If you are one of those people who does get motivation from external sources, I don't think
it's such a bad thing.
I know that's probably a lot of people don't agree with that.
But again, if you leverage it correctly, if you leverage it right and do it in a healthy way
and take that admiration path that we were talking about,
then that's great.
You can use both, you can do both.
You're going to do it anyway.
You're going to measure yourself against your past self no matter what,
and you're going to measure yourself against other people no matter what.
So it's a matter of, yeah, finding the right balance there in the right situation.
Yeah.
Would you say it's accurate to kind of summarize this entire section with the way to compare best
is to compare in a way to learn and improve?
and to compare poorly is when you compare to judge and condemn.
Yeah, I think so.
Yeah.
Like, I think there's...
Passing a verdict.
Yeah.
It's funny because it's, like, this didn't occur to me when, you know, during the research
phase of this episode, but like now that we're sitting here talking about it for a couple hours,
the thing that keeps coming to mind is like the growth and fixed mindset.
Like, it's, when I look at like unhealthy comparison, it just feels very fixed.
It's like, oh, man, I'm such a loser.
she's amazing.
I'm never going to be like that.
There's nothing I can do.
Like that feels like a very unhealthy comparison.
Or she's such a loser.
I'm amazing.
There's nothing she's ever going to do to change that.
Whereas like the healthy form of comparison
seems to be like, oh wow, that's really impressive.
Like I wonder what I could learn from her.
Right there.
There's curiosity.
Yeah.
There's curiosity that comes with it.
Yeah, I like that.
Like instead of just knee jerk jumping to a conclusion
about why someone,
was able to achieve something the way they did or whatever it is.
There's a curiosity around it.
Yeah.
Oh, how do they do that?
Oh, how do they think about that?
How do they go about it?
I don't know.
You can take it too far and be like, what do they eat for breakfast?
I was like, you know.
What's their morning routine?
What's their morning routine?
Which you and I are both not big fans of like, what's your morning routine questions.
But there's a curiosity there.
Get curious, you know, about what's going on with this in this situation.
I like that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
All right. Well, without further ado, let's get into the digital Armageddon.
The digital landscape.
Online world.
When you connect the, when you connect the world, it seems to be okay.
You think it's going well? You think this is going well? You think this is going well?
Drew Bernie, the I'm fine dog in the burning house.
Well, you know what? I'm not really on social media. So for me, it's going all right.
But I hear there are some things about the digital world these days.
that, huh? One of those. And we tend to think that actually, yeah, social comparison is probably
one of those things. Although I think it might be changing a little bit. I want to get your
opinion on that here in a little bit. But yeah. So let's talk about what social comparison
at scale does to us, particularly on the online scale, right? So, you know, we've kind of
already covered, obviously our evolutionary past is that we grew up in these, or we developed
in these small-scale societies.
And we talk about the social brain hypothesis from Dunbar, right?
Yeah.
We talked about this more in the friendship episode, but just to recap real quick, he had
this idea of the concentric circles, right?
You could have up to about five really close, intimate friends, about 15 or so good
friends, 50 people, you're like, yeah, I associate with these people, and then you know
about 150 people that you'd have a relationship with.
Yeah.
Anything beyond that gets a little hairy, right?
Well, obviously, digital technologies kind of scramble that up big time, right?
But the, those boundaries that we used to have around those, around those concentric circles are really, really blurred now.
And I think we've had a really rough time in the last 20 years trying to navigate that, right?
So comparison in this world, it's no longer just like, it's no longer occasional.
It's no longer just limited to the people around you, right?
It's now scaled up.
It's constant.
It's global.
And it's highly curated, too, which is another thing to think about, right?
So what I want to do is I want to get into.
to some of kind of the mechanisms.
I want to add an adjective to that.
Okay.
It's permanent, which we will come back to this.
We will come back to this.
Okay. Yeah. Yeah, that's a good one.
That's a really good one.
We will, yes, we will touch on it.
Okay.
Yeah, so what I want to do then is get into some of the mechanisms and some of kind of
just the consequences, just kind of describe the problem of what's actually going on and
maybe talk about some of the nuances in there.
And maybe talk about where we're headed a little bit with it too.
And then we'll get into some of the more prescriptive stuff.
you can maybe like live as a modern person still and not be a total Luddite like me.
Okay.
Yeah.
Okay.
Old man Bernie, throwing out the wisdom coming down from the mountain top.
I'm not a Luddite, by the way.
I'm very pro technology.
I just, I think we need to use it in the right way and that's what we're going to get into here.
Right.
Basically though, you know, psychologists have for a while now, they've called it, we live in what
they call a leaderboard society, right?
And what they mean by that is like social, especially social media platforms really mimic
this like scorecard, the scoreboard, it's very public, it's very out there, it's right in front
your face, and it's constant because we're constantly logged on now, right?
Things like likes, followers, shares, endorsements, all of these things.
It's very clear, like, where you stand in this pecking order that's online.
This causes all sorts of problems, obviously.
For one, they, it causes what they call amplification effects, okay?
The frequency and volume with which you are comparing yourself to others, if you're online,
is just your brain can't handle it, right?
Again, you're used to being around people, for 99.999% of our history, we've been around
small groups, a small group of people that we know intimately, and we occasionally compare ourselves
to them.
We might compare ourselves quite a bit, but it's not on the scale that we see now, right?
you now compare yourself not just with like five, 10, 15, 20 people, it's literally thousands of people, right?
Then you have like all these little algorithmic nudges that we all know about, you know, what's the algorithm doing?
What's the algorithm feeding you?
What's the algorithm pushing you towards or nudging you towards?
So you have, which is typically content that is forcing you to compare yourself.
It's forcing you to be morally indignant like we talked about.
It's forcing outrage.
And yeah, it's forcing that comparison on you when you didn't really even necessarily
ask for it.
But it's just one big comparison machine.
I mean, how else do social media platforms get you to buy things?
Anything that's ad-based, right?
Right.
You're going to, it's going to sit there.
It's going to provide you with some sort of social comparison and then offer you a solution
at some point.
Yeah, I mean, marketing in a nutshell is like weaponizing feelings of inadequacy.
So.
And social media over the last, you know, 10 to 15 years has really perfected that.
Yeah.
I mean, it's the biggest ad engine in human history.
Yeah.
I used it when I was on Instagram too, there was a period about 20, I want to say 2018,
2019 where just shit was showing up at my house because I was buying the, like I was
falling prey to these Instagram ads.
And it was just the dumbest shit too.
And I'm like, oh my God, how do they do this?
Well, it's through a lot of social comparison, especially something like Instagram,
which is all about social comparison, right?
Highly curated.
Right.
virality and visibility too
so when when hierarchies are calibrated like in real time
like when you're in a group a small group
it's it takes time to
to climb up the social ladder if you will
it takes time it takes positioning it takes intimate knowledge
with people online you like something can just go viral
right away and then all of a sudden that just shakes up
the whole the whole ecosystem that you're in maybe maybe you go viral
And like all your friends are like, oh, look at Mr. Big Britches here or something like that.
Or maybe you go viral for the wrong reasons too.
That's another consequence of all of this as well.
I would say, though, too, one of the biggest things is kind of a context shift that modern digital technologies provide.
You go back to the similarity principle that that have brought up a couple times about that Fessinger came up within a social comparison theory.
when we lack objective measures of how to measure ourselves,
we compare ourselves to similar people.
Your brain doesn't know the difference that when you're scrolling online,
I know this sounds weird,
but your brain does not know the difference between your peers
and your non-peers on that.
So if you're following celebrities or you're following somebody
who's doing the craziest things,
or the people who do like the wildest,
first of all, they're curated in a certain way to make you think
that they're one way or not.
your brain just doesn't it can't it can't distinguish between who's your who your peer network is and who you're seeing on a screen so that's how dumb our brains are i guess to a certain extent um so this it's like it's constant upward comparison that we're subjected to right um and usually not the good kind yeah uh it or it's very easy to not because you're just sitting there you're not active in any sort of way you're seeing other people be active in a socially upward way and
and you're not part of it.
So it's very easy to be like,
well,
I'm not like that.
Yeah.
Right.
It can construct kind of a,
it can lead to,
it can enable a constructive rivalry with others.
But I think you have to be very,
very conscious about curating your feeds and all that.
Yeah.
I will say this.
I do think the feeds are getting better at matching your interests.
This is kind of where I wanted to go with you.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It is interesting.
I do feel like things are shifting
over the last couple years.
They're getting better in some ways,
but definitely not in all ways.
Like,
worse than others, I think.
But I do think one of the things
that they are getting better at
is adapting to each individual user's interests.
Like, everything you're describing
about, like, the constant comparison
with, like, strangers and just this massive
sea or, like,
this, like, globalized comparison
to all these people around.
the planet that I have nothing to do with.
I definitely feel less of that these days.
Yeah, I used to.
Yeah.
But I do feel much more pure comparison.
Oh, interesting.
So, and I think that's because my algorithms on each platform have become very narrowly
focused on the things that I really care about that I'm really interested in.
So whether it's video games, podcasting, writing books, personal development, growth, psychology.
you know, it's, that's pretty much like those things I just listed, music, those things I listed
are probably like 80, 90% of all of my feeds across all platforms. And so now I am being compared
to people for things that I do care about. Yeah. And I think that's both good and bad. Sure,
you know, on the one hand, it's, I do find more inspiration than I used to, right? Like there is,
there is like really cool stuff that I'm exposed to that I'm like, oh my God, it's so cool. I found
this person and I'm going to learn a bunch of things. But on the other,
hand, because I'm now primarily being exposed to people who are doing the same things I'm doing,
it is easier to judge myself for stuff.
Like, I don't know.
I think back to, you know, what Instagram used to be, say, six or eight years ago.
It was just, like, beautiful vacation photos, beautiful people, like crazy, amazing feats,
stunts, all this stuff.
I never really cared about that.
Like, sure, maybe if you look at it enough time.
you're like, wow, my life's kind of lame and boring.
But like, I don't know.
I don't think that had like a lasting effect.
Whereas I think now because it is so curated and we're so locked into,
oh, these are all the people who are doing the things that I care about,
but they're doing them way better than I am, I think that starts to run the risk of like,
oh, man, I'm such a loser.
Yeah, where do you even start?
Yeah.
Where do you think it's going then too?
Because, you know, there's a lot of data coming out right now that like Gen Z,
They're not as on social media as much
They're playing video games instead
There's always a social component to those that they use
And so and you've said before
The social media is way more media than it is social now
That's a big difference from you know
Early social media it was it was your peers
Yeah, to a certain extent and then you might throw a celebrity or two on there
But now it seems like it's people and far flung places that you have nothing to do with and celebrities and
Yeah
The 1% of people who make the content
Yeah.
So it's interesting.
One of the things, you know, I had a long conversation with Jonathan Hight last year,
who's wrote The Anxious Generation.
He's like really been spearheading this whole area of like social media,
digital life, mobile phones, mental health, especially in young people.
I mean, overall, I'm like very sympathetic to his cause and I agree with him on a lot of points.
But it is funny.
I remember talking to him.
I remember like going through all of his research and then and then having the conversation
with him and I couldn't help but feel like, man, you are, there's a lag here.
Like, the social media world changes so fast.
Right.
The reality today is completely different than it was in 2023 or 2022.
And, but most of the research that's coming out today was done in 23 or 22.
And then most of the research that he wrote about, first of all, he wrote it last year, but he
wrote it like two, three years ago.
Yeah.
And then the research that he wrote his book based on came out two, three years before that.
So he's working off.
of like the 2020 version of social media, which was completely different.
Yeah.
Completely different algorithms, different use cases, different audiences.
TikTok had like maybe 10% of the users that it has today at the time.
So it is so different.
It is becoming more media than it is becoming social.
And I actually think from a mental health perspective, that's a good thing.
Because I think when you get on an app, if you were consuming content and your perception of it is that
It's a celebrity.
It's not like a real person.
It's not a peer.
It's not somebody that you can actually compare yourself to.
I think that's relatively innocuous for your like self-esteem and mental health.
Like for instance, when we were kids growing up, like, I never went and saw Mission Impossible and was like, man, I'm such a loser.
Right.
Yeah.
Like, I can't scale a cliff with one hand tied behind my back.
I'm like, I'm so lame.
Nobody's ever going to like me.
No, it was when, like, if you look at where all the negative mental health effects are
happening, they generally happen with young people. And young people primarily use social media,
not as a form of media, but as a form of socializing. They use it to keep in touch with kids at
school. They're on Snapchat. They're on WhatsApp. They're posting TikToks to each other. And that's
where you see a lot of these negative effects. When you get into the older generations, people like
us, who kind of just get on and passively scroll, like I basically use Instagram the same way I
used to use television. Like I used to come home from school. I turn on the TV. And
and I would just kind of passively leave it on
and not really think about it
and it would just kill time
or like help me relax or whatever.
I use Instagram the exact same way these days.
And I definitely don't feel that comparison
or pressure the way I used to say with Facebook 10 years ago.
And Facebook 10 years ago or 15 years ago at this point,
it was all my friends, all my friends' friends
and all my peer group, all the people I went to college with,
all the people, you know, people in the same industry as me.
And so when I saw them doing cool shit, I was like, oh, man, Becky from English class is living in Switzerland.
Like, ah, I'm so jealous, you know?
It was like, that stuff actually hit and hurt a little bit.
Whereas, like, now I get on Instagram and it's like, I don't know, some guy's dog parachuting out of a flying van or something.
I'm like, whatever.
Right.
This is fun for five seconds.
Swipe to the next thing.
Goes back to what we were talking about
is you get
You will negatively
evaluate somebody else
who's in the same
domain as you value
or are operating.
We measure others
by the way we measure ourselves.
Right.
And so when we're more exposed
to people
who are either in the same peer group
or, sorry,
I'm like totally hijacking your section here.
No, I wanted to ask you about this
because when I was going
through the research for this,
I'm like, yeah,
We've been talking about this for a decade, you know?
Like we, and a lot of the research I found was from about a decade ago.
It's funny because, okay, so we did two or three episodes on this on the old subtle art podcast a few years ago.
We did, I did the Jonathan Haidt episode last year with him, which I really enjoyed.
He and I had a great conversation.
And it's funny because this is actually one of the things I told him is I was like, I was like, dude, my whole business is on social media.
I'm like, it is different.
It's completely every two years.
There's a huge.
It's all different.
Yeah.
It's all different.
And he was like actually really curious about that.
He was like, oh, how is it changed?
Like I explained to him, I'm like, dude, the 4U feed, most of this research was done when the 4U feed didn't exist.
Right, right?
Before TikTok, yeah.
And this is what we're talking about, right?
The 4U feed changed all of this, right?
Like now you're actually, the majority of the content on most social platforms is people you've never heard of.
And that you'll never see.
And so there is, I think, a separation.
I think with the 4U feed, you're actually less likely to make social comparison.
But because it is in the same domain that you're in, you know, it changes the nature of the comparison and you start now it's not just like a random anonymous person in some part of the world like doing something cool that you're like, oh man, I'll never do that now it's like, oh, this is a thing I really care about like I'm a guitar player and like I can't tell you how many times
some fucking 18 year old shows up on my feed and he is a god. He's an absolute god. I'm like too good guitar players. I'm like too.
It's happening these days.
And every time I see one of them, I'm like, I'm so glad I quit music.
Yeah.
I'll finish up my hijack here.
And then I'll hand it back to you.
So my theory with this, and I have no data to back this up, but this is kind of where I'm, my head's at with the social stuff these days.
Like I said, I think you're mostly seeing the deleterious effect with the younger generation.
Younger generation primarily uses it to socialize.
They're not, you know, high schoolers aren't getting on and, you know,
scrolling through people's Europe vacations and, you know, cool television clips from South Korea or whatever.
Like, young people are spending most of their time sending TikToks to each other,
following each other, sending Snapchats to each other.
And I do think the social media as a form of social communication,
I actually think the initial intention of social media,
which was to connect everybody digitally,
is actually what fucks us up.
And because that's when you're getting everybody's highlight reel.
So it's like, let's say you're in a WhatsApp group
with everybody from your high school.
Everything that's getting posted is everybody's best moment or worst moment.
So you're only being exposed to all of your peers
at their absolute best or their absolute worst.
And those are the people that you actually do care about.
Those are the people that you actually are basing your self-esteem on,
not some random dude in Switzerland or whatever.
Yeah.
And because you're being exposed to the extremes of their experience,
you are going to get a very skewed and fucked up perception.
On top of that, there is the permanence aspect.
And this was the big thing that Jonathan Haidt brings up that I think is huge
and completely understudied and underappreciated.
And still a problem.
Yeah, a massive problem.
Has been a problem and still a problem.
Massive problem.
So when you and I were in high school, if we went up to a girl at a dance and like awkwardly
asked her out and got shot down, we would be really embarrassed for, you know, maybe 20 minutes.
We would be embarrassed.
You know, maybe there's like four or five other kids in the vicinity.
Yeah, and they like, they're like, ooh, Drew got shot down.
You know, like it's embarrassing in front of them.
maybe some people talk a little bit of shit at school the next Monday.
But then that's it.
It's gone.
A week later, nobody remembers, nobody cares.
You go on, you ask the next girl.
And you learn a very important fact of life, which is that rejection doesn't matter.
It doesn't matter.
It sucks, but it's like nobody to remembers, none of it matters.
Today, if you get rejected and it's being filmed, which it often is, that gets posted to
the school WhatsApp group or it gets posted on the school.
somebody's TikTok, it gets sent around the school, everybody's commenting, everybody's
trashing you, and then it's fucking there forever.
Yeah.
Sophomore year, junior year, senior year, people are still, people can bring, anytime somebody
wants to rag on you, anytime somebody wants to diminish you, shit on you, it gets brought
back up.
And so what do, what do young people do?
They become risk-averse.
They stop taking chances.
They stop asking each other out.
They stop going to parties.
They stop doing drugs.
They stay at home.
They play video games together.
Yeah.
Yeah. And they get off social media.
Yeah. They're not using this. They're starting to. They're starting to. Yeah.
Or like you were saying, it's going more private than to, you know, whatever it is, WhatsApp groups or whatever, because the risk is so high.
Same thing like, you know, all these like VR glasses that are coming out that have cameras on them.
Yeah. And so you don't know that. Like now, think about that. If those become so ubiquitous within just a few years, nobody's even going to want to leave their house at some point.
Dude, I like...
And forget the privacy concerns.
I didn't realize how little people care about privacy, but forget all of that.
Just like the risk of going viral for the wrong reasons.
That, so, okay, I agree.
I don't think people actually care about privacy.
I think people care about that.
Yeah, yeah.
And it's like, I have yet to meet somebody who's like wearing the meta glasses like in a social situation.
But if and when I do, I'm going to be like, dude, take that shit off.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Don't do that.
But I think everybody senses that so nobody wears them, right?
Because it's like everybody knows because it completely changes the dynamic.
If I have any inkling that I'm being recorded, I'm going to completely censor myself and change how I present myself, especially if I'm around people I don't know, right?
It's also like, why are you recording this?
It's interesting.
So there's an AI product.
It got massive funding, like raised tens of millions of dollars.
It's called friend.com.
And it's super fascinating.
So basically what it is is it's a wearable.
It's like a necklace that you put on.
It records everything.
It records like everything you listen to,
everybody you talk to,
where you go,
everything.
And then basically the idea is that it collects all the data on your life,
on your day,
whatever.
And then anytime you're lonely,
you can just talk to it.
And it's an AI.
And it like,
it can be your friend.
And this company like ran a massive
promotional campaign like billboards all over LA,
New York like just Times Square
all this like crazy
production quality stuff being posted
going viral. And it's funny if you go to the app
store, A, like nobody's downloading it
and B, like it has like a two star rating
because people are just like fuck this.
Like do you really want to ruin the last thing
that we have?
which is like face-the-face in-person spaces.
Yeah.
Like it's already, everything else has already been ruined, right?
The last sanctuary we have is when we're in a room together alone with no devices.
So like now you want to ruin that too?
They're going to try to figure out a way.
They'll find a way.
They'll find a way.
Yeah.
Yeah.
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So, okay, where do you think that's going in terms of social comparison if we all, if AI does take over the world?
Right.
I mean, if we do, there are some people out there who think actually what we're about to do is go back to a time where we do converse more face to face and we do, we live much more like our ancestors did only with a lot more technology and a lot more safety.
Yeah.
Do you think that's, do you think that's around the corner or at least in the future at some point?
It's basically going to come down to two things.
Do you have enough impulse control slash lack of social anxiety?
to force yourself out of the house
into these communities,
into these events,
into these environments,
to build a healthy social life,
uh,
to maintain your sanity and your happiness.
And I think that's going to become much more important.
It's going to become much more reinforced and encouraged.
And,
um,
and I think it's,
it's even going to become more of a status symbol.
If you actually have places to go
in person full of people who you like and respect,
and like and respect you, like, it's going to be a bit of a status symbol.
Then I think there's going to be a portion of the population that just like succumbs to the dopamine
madness and doesn't have the impulse control, has too much social anxiety.
And it's, I think there's going to be a very clear delineation between the two because it's like both are spirals.
One is an upward spiral.
One's a downward spiral, right?
It's like the more sucked in and compulsive you get with all the dopamine madness, the more socially anxious you're going to become, the more distracted you're going to become, the more.
more focus you're going to lack.
And the harder it's going to be to get out of it.
Similarly, it's like the more you get out of the house,
the more social life you have,
the more relationships you have,
the more confidence and self-esteem
you're going to have to go out and do it more.
So that's kind of my take.
Like I could keep going,
but we're going to get way off topic.
No, no, no, I feel I've felt the tug to,
and let me see if I can bring this back.
I've felt the tug too,
because even though like I'm not really,
on a lot of social media.
I got YouTube.
I like to, you know, YouTube shorts.
They're pretty addictive.
It's like TikTok, you know.
And I think it was one or two weeks ago.
I had some friends.
They were like, hey, we're going to this.
There's like a little concert.
Actually, it's at like somebody's house who's kind of built like a backyard that's like a big compound
for concerts and stuff like that.
And it's small concerts, but still.
And I felt the talk because I was like, oh, I kind of just want to stay home and scroll.
And when I scroll, what I'm doing,
especially like on
YouTube shorts and stuff
it's it's other podcasters
okay it's a lot of podcastsers
I should I want to do something like that
yeah oh that's a really good way
to present something or either
whatever it is that I do with that
or it's like yeah things I'm really into
and
and there is that like dopamine chase
that you have I forced myself
I got out and I was like I was kind of dreading it
almost and so I get it
like I'm not I'm not in it like
younger people right you're pretty
you, you're pretty limited.
Yeah, you're pretty limited
in your digital diet.
No, I mean, Fernando and I talk about this quite a bit.
Like, we both feel it.
Like, it is that feeling you just described
of like, oh, do I have to get up
and go to this thing?
Yeah.
Like, we're noticing that we're feeling that
very consistently.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
With social events.
Like, it's almost every single day.
We're like, do we have to go to this dinner?
Or like, oh, yeah, we agreed to do this party,
didn't we?
And then you go?
Nine times out of ten, we're like, oh my God, I'm so glad we went.
That's, luckily, like, lately I've had a few of this in the last few months.
Like a wedding party I went to, I went to that concert, a couple other things, a couple dinners that I went to where there was that tug and I get there and I'm like, oh my God, I'm so glad I came to this.
And I got away from my phone and look at this and I had a great time and I connected with people and it was awesome.
And I think people are going to see that at some point.
But well, then it's funny because then it's like we go back home and then like two days later, it's the exact same thing.
Yeah.
It's like, ah, should we cancel?
Like, do you really want to go?
Like, uh, it should make up a reason not to.
But it's, it's, it's, well, there is a, there is a comparison to element here too, right?
Because you're comparing that experience that you might go and do this and it's like,
ah, it's going to be like, you know, parking's going to suck.
There might be some assholes there.
Right.
There's going to be, you know, all this.
I can compare that or I can sit here and I can know that I'm going to get some dopamine
hits.
Yeah.
I know that I'm going to get some, some, some feedback loops that are just going to keep me hooked.
Yeah.
know what that experience is like.
Yes.
And I think, especially with like a social comparison, that's, you, you have to think about
that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It is a big part of it is, I think, just the, the anxiety or the insecurity around, you
know, like, okay, first of all, I don't know half the people who are going to be there.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And then maybe in a lot of cases, too, it's like some of the people, like, I don't know about
you, but like, there's very few people in my life that I have, like, very, very, um,
I universally feel good about.
Like, most people that I know, I'm like, I really like them.
But like there's, you know, there's a little thing that bugs me or like, yeah, I hate it when she does that.
And it's funny because it's in those moments you're like, uh, like those things kind of get amplified in your head.
Yep.
And you're like, yeah, that guy.
Yeah.
So it's, it's a.
Yeah, I wasn't an awkward group hug when I went to that concert.
So yeah, that was a little weird.
I'm sorry.
You had to endure such a thing.
That was the only only awkward.
moment.
You should try
live in an L.A.
Okay.
This guy was very drunk.
Anything else we want to hit on?
I feel like we just threw half of this section.
We kind of did.
I mean,
they're,
you know,
prescriptive stuff.
I don't know if we want to get too far into that.
Like I,
since I have pulled back from so much social media,
I definitely have noticed.
Here's the thing about though, too,
is that I'm,
I'm,
I'm a person who is very much
prone to social comparison.
Okay.
And I noticed that more and more,
I mean,
we all are,
as we've been harping on this whole time.
I,
I've just noticed that I don't,
there's certain areas of my life
where I just don't have as much of that anymore.
I don't have as much of,
a comparison mindset or,
yeah,
anymore.
It's usually around,
a lot of it's around,
like, the people I hang out with,
it's like,
oh, is this person cool?
Is this person not cool?
How is this person going to affect
my social standing or anything like that?
I,
maybe that's just getting older too, I don't know.
Yeah.
Or, you know, just things that I have, like the, like, material possessions.
I don't see a whole lot of that anymore because I'm not inundated with really highly targeted ads as much, you know?
So, I mean, I think if you are, like, taking a break is good, sure.
You know, I know that's the standard advice.
But, yeah, I don't know.
It's just going to be really interesting to see where this goes and how we're supposed.
post navigate it. I don't know. You got any advice on that? I mean, you're on social media a lot.
The other side of it, though, too, is that recently, like, I logged on to a social media network
that I forgot that I even had an account not too long ago. I was like, like, I forget what this
is even like. Yeah. I thought some really cool stuff on there. I was like, oh, this is awesome.
Again, I think the highly tailored. The benefits of social media are largely unconscious and the,
the costs are very conscious. So I think a lot of it goes under the radar. Like, I've exposed,
I've been exposed to tons of incredible musicians and bands that I love through social media.
That is the biggest thing that I missed from social media is I don't find as new music as red.
I've discovered tons of great books.
I've heard a bunch of interesting interviews.
I've learned so much about business through social media and YouTube.
So, I mean, it's, again, there's like, there are a lot of benefits that kind of go unsung.
I will say one last thing, and this kind of ties into the.
4U feed thing, right? So it's like, I do think the for you feed has kind of killed the problem
of that global comparison and localized it a little bit more again. But the problem is, is that
that localization is not accurate. It's not reflective of reality in a lot of cases. So I think
what has happened since the 4U feed is that, okay, each person is getting served a narrow band
of content based on the topics that they care about or they're interested in. The problem is,
is that it's kind of like the criticism of the news media.
It's not that they're not factually correct.
It's that they're only presenting you certain facts to like shape and mold your perception
of an issue.
The exact same thing is happening on social media, but it's happening to each one of us
individually.
So it's, it's, and this, it is true politically, but it doesn't have to just be true
politically.
Like you could be getting served things about nutrition and health that are, because it's
very much based on your preferences.
and your viewpoints,
you are developing a distorted perception of reality,
and therefore you are drawing social comparisons
based on something that is not actually accurate or reflective
of the thing you actually care about.
And so I see this happen a lot.
Do you remember like a year or two ago,
a bunch of journalists we're talking about the vibe session?
Yeah.
Or a bunch of economists we're talking about the vibe session,
which is basically like the economy was doing great,
but when you surveyed people, they thought it was doing horribly.
And it was very interesting because they pointed out that generally speaking, like, consumer surveys have been historically accurate predictors of recessions and how well the economy is doing, except for in the last three or four years.
And I personally think it's the for you feed because the people who are currently down on their luck, you know, lost a job or things aren't going super well or like inflation hit them hard or whatever.
they are being curated content and information that reflects that reality back to them.
And so they are erroneously developing a perception that the whole world is experiencing this.
Because everybody on their feet is showing up is complaining about inflation too.
And everybody else has lost their job that they're watching.
And they're getting served all this content from people who are complaining about the economic situation.
Meanwhile, like the actual data is showing that things were fine.
And so it's, I think that's like a microcosm of the issue.
And you can run that through.
There's tons of political issues that it, like we're literally to a point where
that people on different sides of a political issue like literally don't agree on the facts.
Right.
Like there's just, there are like different facts for each side.
Right.
And you don't really like, you don't really know what to make of it.
Yeah.
And I don't, like I said, it's going to be crazy going forward.
It's just going to be.
Like one different.
I think that you just pointed out from the like new media, so social media you're saying is
there's no more media than social now.
Using it, if you're using it like TV used to be or whatever, there wasn't, that wasn't
the case.
There was kind of one narrative that everybody, you just kind of had, right?
I mean, yes, as cable television got more channels and like all of that, sure, there was,
there was dissemination of different opinions, but it's, now it's like everybody's got their
individual little universe almost.
And I guess one thing that does flow from that is that.
that you do have some power over the curation
of who you are comparing yourself to
in that ecosystem to.
If it's more distributed, you can kind of,
now you can go find your little pocket.
Your little niche.
Everybody can have their own little universe.
Yeah.
There's trade-offs there again too, like you're saying.
But you can, you can curate,
if you're conscious, more conscious and intentional about it,
you can curate who you're comparing yourself to.
And you can and should also,
it's the same way you can and should curate
people in your life, right?
Like, to bring this full circle into, you know, how to compare yourself to better people
for better reasons, part of it is simply surrounding yourself by better people.
By people you admire, by people that you want to emulate, that people that make you a better
person.
You know, ultimately, Aristotle, as usual, had it right.
You know, it's like this machinery is part of your brain, so you might as well leverage it.
And the way you leverage that is to find people.
you admire and you want to emulate and who make you a better person.
I guess that's the 80-20.
Do you think there's another 80-20?
I think we did kind of cover all of it right there.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, you know, like, sure, you could argue, oh, compare yourself with yourself,
your past self.
You can argue all of those things, all the things we went over, sure.
If those resonate with you, go for it.
But at the end of the day, I think it is just a matter of intentionality.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think you can and should compare yourself to your past self, but I don't think you can only compare yourself.
It's impossible. Yeah. No. You will always be compared. That's part of your nature. And you're going to do both.
You know, again, being aware of any comparisons you're making that make you feel bad, like that's probably an area that you should set a boundary in your life.
Either expose yourself to those people less or take yourself out of those situations to a certain extent.
hidden costs of social comparison of comparing ourselves well.
I will say this,
a lot of toxic relationships thrive on unhealthy social comparison.
Right.
Right.
Like if you look at kind of what's at the core of a toxic relationship,
it's often, you know, an insecure individual who is measuring themselves,
comparing themselves in an unhealthy way to somebody else.
Yes.
So I feel like, you know, I guess that's not a cost.
I guess, you know, when you set boundaries with unhealthy people in your life, there's often fallout in drama.
So I guess maybe that's a cause.
But is there a cost to comparing yourself more health, like more healthfully?
I try. I've racked my brain.
And I, because if we start with a premise that it's going to happen no matter what.
Yeah.
Like, unless you can completely get rid of it, which I don't think you can.
I don't think you want to, first of all.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Because then you're, you have no identity at that point, I think.
Yeah.
So, yeah, I don't know.
I think this is one of those where it's like, just get good at it.
Yeah.
You know?
It's a skill issue.
It is a 100% of skill issue.
It's a skill issue.
Yeah.
It's not about, it's not an understanding issue.
It's a skill issue.
Right.
Any takeaways for you personally?
Yeah.
Okay.
So what I mentioned this earlier, I kind of, I let the cat out of the bag already.
But the curiosity thing, I think is what really resonated with me in this and doing
research around this.
It's not that, like, there is that fork in the road you can take.
And that fork in the road is curiosity.
Yeah.
When you see something and you are envious of someone else, get curious about it.
Yeah.
What is it about them that led them to this place that you want to get to?
What is it about the decisions they made?
What is it about their character?
What is it about the way they see the world?
Yeah.
Like get curious about those kinds of things.
But then also get curious about like the thing that you're comparing yourself to.
Like the specific thing.
Right.
It's because they're successful in some area or they've accomplished something in some area that you want to.
Dig down underneath that.
get real curious because there's probably a value underneath that. Yeah, it's interesting as you're
saying that, it's like, have you ever had the experience of, you know, maybe you see something
online and it really bothers you? And then you like, stop and ask yourself, you're like, why does
this bother me? Yes. Oh, yeah. I've had that happen so many times. I'm like, what is this?
Like, what is it about this that pisses me off? Like, I don't understand. Like, why do I care
what this person's doing? Right. Right. Yeah, that's super interesting. I would say, too, like,
for me, the big aha here was like the connection of, um, of the values piece. It's funny too,
because I mean, it's one of those things that it makes sense and it feels obvious in hindsight,
but, um, I definitely, I feel like this is something that I've always been very good at. Like,
I, I, I've always been very good at not comparing myself to people I don't really give a shit about.
Right. And then I also feel like the people I do compare myself to, it's, it's like in a very
healthy way. It's because I admire them or I want to get better. And yeah, I think it's really
at the heart of that is an understanding of what you want and what you care about and what's
worth caring about. I think if you don't have clarity around the values piece, then that's when
you fall into just like becoming a validation junkie. Right. That's when you're grabbing values
from all around you. That's when you, that's when you just start adopting the values of the
people around you, right? It's like, well, I don't know what I care about. So I'm just going to do
what other people want. Right. So I'll just care about what they, what they care about.
Right. Because that'll make, that'll make me feel liked and appreciated and whatever.
So I think ultimately, you know, like one of the pieces of advice that I've often given at talks is
like, you know, the best way to stop worrying about what other people think about you is to have
something more important than what other people think about you. Right.
Right? Like I remember I was giving a talk in Australia and a young woman got up and asked this question.
And she was like, yeah, I just care so much. And I'm like very sensitive and I worry about all these things.
And like she gave me some scenario. I think she was like a university student. She gave me like some scenario that like kept her awake at night.
And I was like, okay. It's like let's do a thought experiment. You know, that that situation that you just described that you were embarrassed in and like you wanted to do.
die with embarrassment. It's like, okay, let's imagine your mother had terminal cancer. And the only
cure requires you to go through that embarrassing experience. How willing would you be to go through
that experience? Sign me up, right? Exactly. It's like, do it in a heartbeat. And I just think it's
like, that's an extreme example that illustrates a principle, which is that if you have something
going on in your life that feels so important to you and that you care about very deeply and you like,
It needs to matter more than other people's approval,
then you will no longer be dictated by other people's approval.
Just one more thing on the values thing too,
when you're clarifying that value.
Like if you admire somebody, why do I admire them?
Or why do I ambious of them, whatever it is?
A lot of times the value isn't the thing that you actually think it is, right?
Like, for instance, for a long time, I was like,
I want to make a whole bunch of money, right?
And I want to be super, super successful.
And I look at that.
And there's some people who want to do that because they want the validation of others.
Or they want to feel loved.
Me, I was like, I just want the freedom that these people have.
I look at that.
And I'm like, these people can do whatever the hell they want.
That's amazing, right?
And so there's probably like there's that underlying value is usually one step further than you think.
Yeah, it's one layer deeper.
Yeah.
Well, that's it for this episode, everybody.
As always, check out the PDF guide, softpodcast.com, slash social comparison.
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Yeah, Drew never sleeps.
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