SOLVED with Mark Manson - How to Manage Your Emotions, Solved
Episode Date: July 1, 2025What are emotions? Why do we feel anything at all? And more importantly — can we actually get better at feeling? In this episode, Drew and I dive headfirst into what might be the hardest question i...n all of psychology: what the actual f**k are emotions? We break down the biology, neuroscience, evolution, culture, and even language that shape how we feel — and why we often don’t understand what the hell is going on inside us. From ancient philosophy to brain scans, this is a deep (and occasionally weird) look into the emotional chaos that makes us human. We unpack everything from the origins of emotional intelligence (spoiler: it might be BS) to the science of emotional regulation, attachment styles, and the sneaky ways your culture wires your emotional defaults. Along the way, we explore why some relationships make you feel like a better person while others drain the life out of you, and how trauma, genetics, and childhood with your ability to keep it together. But this episode isn’t just about understanding emotions — it’s about learning how to work with them. And we give you a full emotional toolkit: a set of evidence-based tools to help you manage your emotions, build better relationships, feel more motivated, and yes — even feel more confident in yourself in the process. 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/emotions 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: 0:04:47 CHAPTER 1: What Are Emotions? 0:49:45 CHAPTER 2: How Culture Influences Our Emotions 1:44:08 CHAPTER 3: Historical and Philosophical Traditions on Emotions 1:59:00 CHAPTER 4: The Four Schools of Emotional Regulation 2:48:25 CHAPTER 5: Brilliant or Bullshit: Emotional Intelligence 2:57:31 CHAPTER 6: Relationships and Emotional Regulation 3:57:24 CHAPTER 7: 80/20 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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Welcome back, everybody, to The Solved Podcast, the last podcast that you will ever need.
Now, if you're new here, my name is Mark Manson.
I'm three-time number one New York Times bestselling author.
And with me is Drew Bernie, a,
Failed neuroscience PhD.
A promising young academic until I came along and ruined his life.
The premise of the show is that we dive deeper, we get more thorough,
we give better advice than any other podcast out there.
See, there's too much of the same shit going on in the personal development space.
There's the same guest showing up on the same shows, saying the same things,
and half of the stuff contradicts each other.
So our goal here at Solved is to take a single topic, go absurdly deep with it, find out everything that is worth knowing about it, and then consolidating it into a single episode that is completely comprehensive and is ideally the last podcast you will ever need to listen to on the topic.
Now, the way this works out is that generally the first half of the episode or so is full of all the information.
It's all the background research, the history, the culture, the different ideas that you need to be aware of to truly understand whatever we.
we're talking about. The back half of the episode is about actionable items, takeaways,
practical advice that you can take and implement into your life today. And then, of course,
Drew and I finish with our own personal takeaways and things that have impacted us as we've
worked through the episode. Now, I understand that this episode is a lot. It's very long. It's very
thorough. There's a lot of advice. And so there is a free downloadable PDF guide that goes along
with the episode. It's over 100 pages. It has all of our sites.
and references. It has all of the summaries and takeaways of everything that we're talking about here.
You can go to Solvedpodcast.com slash Emotions and get that free PDF for this episode and follow along.
And that brings us to the topic of today's episode, Drew, which is Emotions.
This rabbit hole went really deep.
Very deep. Very deep. I'm really excited about this episode because in previous topics that we've done,
generally what we find is that when you dig back through the centuries and dig into, you know, the ancient world,
and religions and different philosophers, you tend to find that there's been a number of people
who have gotten the subject matter right hundreds or even thousands of years ago, whereas
I feel like emotions might be the first topic that I don't think anybody really got it right
until recently.
I really think it took modern science and our understanding of the brain and different
experimentation to really actually parse out what's going on inside of ourselves when we're
feeling emotional. And so I'm really excited to get into that. Now, for the listeners, some of the
things that we're going to learn in this episode, we're going to understand on a very deep level
what emotions are, where do they come from and why they even exist in the first place.
We're going to learn about the interplay between our emotions and our cultural environment.
And so how our emotional reactions are both influenced by the people and experiences around us,
but also cause a lot of the relationships and experiences around us. We'll get into how
trauma affects our ability to regulate our own emotions and what we can do to heal ourselves and
recover.
We're going to cover every major school of thought on emotional regulation, give an overview of all
the major therapies and what their different approaches are to managing your emotions and developing
healthier emotions.
And then we will take the best ones with the most validated scientific evidence and kind of
create a emotional toolkit, which is a concept we'll talk about later as well.
We're going to go super deep into relationships and how in a way you could look at human
relationships as a co-regulation of each other's emotions, which is a fun concept to think
about in a lot of different ways.
But as a result of that co-regulation, relationships, as most of us have experienced, can
make our emotions much worse, but they can also make them a lot better.
We will talk about how to build emotional intelligence or whether there's even such a thing
in the first place.
And finally, we will give you the most effective and useful practices to help you manage your emotions in your everyday life.
This will give you a greater sense of freedom.
It'll give you a greater sense of control in your life.
You'll feel more motivated.
You'll feel more energetic.
And, of course, you'll be sexier too.
And that honestly, Drew, that's what we're all here for.
It's just like, this is all just an elaborate mating dance.
That's the tall order.
Okay.
Okay.
Make us sexy, Drew.
Let's go.
So why don't we start?
Let's get scientific.
You're the science guy at this table.
So why don't we actually dig into like what are the biological and evolutionary and neurological
explanations?
Like what the fuck are emotions?
Like what are they?
Like why do we feel things?
Why do we feel so much stuff?
Like, what is it here for?
Yeah.
Seems like a simple question, right?
What are emotions?
Yeah.
But it's actually a very difficult question to answer, very difficult definition to come up with because there's so many different levels at which you can analyze emotions.
Like you just mentioned, there's a biological level.
There's the evolutionary level.
There's the cognitive level.
There's the what you feel in any moment.
There's all sorts of things.
Social level.
Social, cultural, all of these things.
Past experiences, influence as we're going to see.
So it's actually, there's no.
no agreement among scientists, among philosophers about what the definition of an emotion is.
But there's a few things that they do kind of agree on and we can come up with a functional
definition for our purposes.
Okay, okay.
Bear with me here for a second, but emotions are complex psychological states that involve
a combination of subjective experiences, physiological responses, and then behavioral expressions.
Okay.
That's a rapid response to significant internal or external stimuli or events that happen.
and they guide our behavior decision-making, as you've already pointed out, and also our social
interactions.
So that's a lot here.
But there's kind of four components that I think scientists and even philosophers two point
to when they're trying to come up with these definitions of emotions.
One, there's a subjective side to emotions, right?
The subjective feelings that you have when you have an emotional experience.
The physiological side.
So you might have a tightness in your chest or a warm feeling coming over you or an anxiety that
tingles throughout your limbs or something like that, right?
cognitive interpretations too.
So while all these things are going on, then your brain is like, okay, I feel this certain
tightness in my chest or warmth going through me, whatever it is.
What does that mean?
So we have this cognitive appraisal going on.
And then ultimately what emotions do is they motivate behavior, right?
So those are kind of the four components of it.
Subjective feelings, physiological responses, the cognitions and cognitive interpretations we have
and then the outward behavior that it ultimately motivates.
Okay.
You can understand emotions at any one of those levels.
There's different areas of science that get at each one of those levels, too, as we'll see.
And what we're going to try to do is try to put that all together in one definition of emotions that's useful for us today.
Okay.
Does that make sense?
Sounds good to me.
Okay.
Before we do that, though, too, we need to differentiate a little bit between some terms here.
Okay.
So emotions are different than what scientists call feelings, affect, and mood.
There's these are different things.
Okay.
So the emotion part, what I just went, went over is kind of a coordinated system response, right?
It's a, it's a whole body, whole mind response to things.
But you have feelings too.
Feelings from a scientific perspective anyway are kind of like the internal experiences you have and the vibe that's going on.
It could be that tightness in your chest or just like the overall kind of feeling is, but it's not necessarily an emotion.
You have a mood, which is longer lasting state.
You know, you're in a bad mood or you're in a good mood.
you're in a good mood for the whole day or part of a day or an hour or whatever it is.
It's longer lasting and there's usually no kind of like there's not an internal or external
stimulus that happened.
It's just happening.
Right.
And then you have what they call affect, which is kind of the broader, broader general encompassing
experience of all of kind of your emotion and feeling and mood that you have.
It's the vibe.
Kind of like the vibe.
For the Gen Ziers, it's the vibe.
It's the vibe.
Yeah.
And then for the boomers, it's the energy.
It's the energy.
It's the energy in the room.
What's it for the millennials then?
I don't know.
We're too cynical to have a word for it.
Oh, okay.
An important thing, though, about emotions, too, is that, like you said, they're based on experiences, they're based on our physiology.
They're based on culture.
That produces just this wide, wide array of outcomes and behaviors that we do based on our emotions, right?
And it's very personal for each one of us.
All of us handle our emotions differently.
We express them differently.
They come up in different situations.
You know, if we go through, you and I both go through a breakoff, one of us might just
indulge an ice cream where the other one might go and power lift, right?
That's an emotional response that we have.
Okay, that's all based in emotion.
And it colors our lives, right?
It comes to the variety of our life.
And that's where it all comes.
Like I remember back when I used to coach, I used to notice that.
some people would get very angry, you know, like that was kind of the default response to stress
in their life or disappointment. And some people would get very sad. And it was just like I almost feel
like a lot of us have kind of a default negative emotion that we go to. You know, some people feel
guilty. Some people feel, you know, hopeless, right? It's just like it's almost like we have different
weightings in our brain for like different emotions that we're susceptible to. Right, right. Yeah. And we're
going to get into why that is here in just a little bit. But I mean, they really are. Emotions are
like they're meaningful signals that shape our worldviews and and kind of inform the way we do
react to certain events in our lives. And yeah, you might be more prone to one emotional state
than another. And we'll get into why some of that is for sure. But yeah. One of the big debates,
and I want to get this out there right now, one of the big debates in science for a long time has been
our emotions universal. Okay. There's kind of
of there's two camps and there's a lot of sub camps within them, but the two big camps within
this are, yes, emotions are universal, they're hardwired into our species, they're just part
of human nature, to the extent that even individual emotions are like hardwired.
So there's this concept called the basic emotions theory and actually goes all the way back
to Darwin, but then it was elaborated by Paul Ekman in like the 60s and 70s.
He came up with this theory of basic emotions that we all have these like six basic emotions
of fear, anger, sadness, joy, disgust, and surprise.
And those are hardwired into our species all around the world.
If you go to small tribes who have very little exposure to the outside world, they even
experience these and stuff like that.
We'll get into why they think that is too.
Then there's this other idea that no, actually, and this is more recent, and I think
the science is starting to bear this out a little bit more, that no actually emotions are
constructed.
We construct our emotional experiences.
There's no circuit in the brain, say, for anger.
There's no circuit in the brain for joy.
you know, or anything like that.
It's actually our brains and bodies are constructing emotions on the fly and they're making
predictions about our environment and what's going on, right?
The brain's in this like black box in our heads, right?
And it has to use all of this information from sensory input, from what they call interoceptions,
like what's going on with your organs, your blood sugar, how much of you slept, all that.
And it makes this quick prediction about, okay, this is what I think is going on, this is how we
should behave.
And that all happens kind of in the fly or on the fly.
Rather. Now, that seems like an academic debate. Okay, what do, do emotions, are they, are they
basic? Do we, are we hardwired evolve to feel just these six basic emotions and then culture kind of
fine-tunes them or are we constructing them on the fly? I might be jumping ahead on this,
but like I feel like that actually has profound implications because if they are learned, then we can
unlearn them as well, right? Like, it has implications of like, if you are somebody who struggles
with anger, you can train yourself out of that anger. Yeah. Whereas if it's baked into you, then it just
becomes like, dude, you're always going to be angry, so you might as well learn how to deal with it.
Right. Right. Yeah. So this is, this is Lisa Feldman Barrett. We'll talk about her all throughout
this episode. But she is kind of the torchbearer for this idea of constructed emotion theory.
And that's, that's her argument for sure is that actually, no, if emotions are constructed,
we actually have a lot of agency around how we construct those emotions. Whereas if they are
fundamentally and they are basic, then it's just something that happens to you and you just have to deal
with it like you just said. So that's definitely kind of the debate that's going on. I lean more towards
the constructed emotion side. And here's the thing too is the fact that we have a capacity to feel
emotion is a biological. We've evolved that. Absolutely. Are there six basic emotions that everyone feels
and they're the exact same across the world? I really don't think so. And we'll see that the evidence
doesn't really back that up as well. If you do want to really dive in and get nerdy on this,
go read Lisa Feldman Barrett's book, How Emotions are made. It's a fantastic book. And it's super
nerdy, but it's also like really kind of interesting too. So that's that's kind of where we're at,
though. But yeah, of course, there's a biological basis to emotions. Of course there is. Just note from
the get go, there is something you can do about this. So if you have these big feelings, you don't
know what to do of them or if you get in these emotional ruts and you're not sure about it.
There's something you can do about it. It's, it can be difficult, sure, but it is possible.
Whichever is true, you do have agency.
Yes.
Even if they're baked in, you can learn how to manage them better, how to react to them,
better. And if they're not baked in, if they're constructed, then you can learn how to train them
out of yourself to a certain extent. Absolutely. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. So we want to get into some of these
details like the neuroscience, the brain. What's the brain doing? Talk nerdy to me, Drew. Talk nerdy.
Okay. I don't want to get too bogged down on this. But again, if you do want to see some of these
details, go to our guide that we have put together for this. There's a little bit more detail on this.
go to solvepodcast.com
slash emotions and you can download that.
We'll go over some of the neuroscience behind it, but again, I don't want to get too
in the weeds with it.
I just want to give you a flavor of what we kind of know right now and what the
implications are of that, okay?
There's this kind of outdated idea that you have like some emotional center in your
brain.
Like say you have a module in your brain for anger or module in your brain for happiness
or whatever it is.
That is not how it works.
at all. Not only that, but it's even like brain regions, like let's say the amygdala, okay,
if you know even a little bit about neuroscience, you've heard of the amygdala before,
it's this tiny little structure. There's actually two on either side of your brain,
in the middle, deep inside your brain, and supposedly it's supposed to be like the fear center,
right, or like the anger center or whatever. It's like negative emotion goes through there.
That's not actually accurate. As more and more and more research came out, it was pretty clear
to neuroscientists that actually what the amygdala does is just no doubt.
novel stimuli. That's most likely what it does. It's an ancient part of your brain, sure,
but it's not like it's just firing when you should be angry or just firing when something
upsets you. I always heard it was the fighter flight response. Okay. See, this is what the problem
is that, you know, if you've ever seen a brain scan, you know, and it's saying, oh, we found
this area lights up, quote unquote, lights up when this happens. That is such a reductionist.
Like, you would think looking from the brain scan, you have all of this gray area and then
this like big bright yellow area and that's all that's going on.
Your brain is constantly fired.
All the neurons in your brain are constantly firing all the time.
They're always at work.
All parts of your brain are always working together.
This is a nice moment to dispel that myth that you're only using 10% of your brain at any
given moment, which is bullshit.
Categorically false.
Yes.
But, I mean, there are regions that we know of that do participate in emotional experiences.
The amygdala being one of them.
you have this thing in your brain called the insula, which kind of connects your bodily
sensations to the emotions you're having and kind of tries to interpret those. It seems like your prefrontal
cortex, that's the thinking part. Again, we go back to the cognition that we were talking about,
cognitive appraisal. You feel something going on. You're making an assessment of what's the thinking
brain. It's the thinking brain part, right? Other parts to your hippocampus for memories,
they bring in emotional memories. All these parts, sure, sure, they're acting, but really what
neuroscientists have figured out is it's more of a net.
network of different areas of your brain that produce emotional experiences, emotional appraisals.
All the things that we think of an emotion are usually different parts of your brain,
different networks of your brain, scaling up or scaling down whenever they need to.
You have, for example, the salience network.
And this is kind of like a network of brain regions that includes the insula and the amygdala
and other parts that are like, okay, they're telling you pay attention to this emotionally
significant thing. Okay. The default mode network, that's that that's active when you're thinking about
yourself or daydreaming or anything like that. That's kind of a cognitive appraisal part. What does this
emotion mean? It's networks though. It's not just one part of your brain lighting up. Yeah.
And and making you angry or making you happy or or whatever it is. Okay. So just to dispel some of
those myths, that's kind of what I wanted to hopefully clear up right there. What we're finding actually is that
like with Lisa Feldman Barrett's constructed view,
your brain is a prediction machine.
Okay?
It's it works as kind of a statistic.
It's like a statistician, basically.
It works on probabilities.
Again, it's this, it's in this black box.
Your brain can't see or touch or smell or feel anything.
So it's relying on its sensory input.
It's relying on things like what they, again, what they call interoception.
So your blood sugar, how much you've slept.
Yeah.
your heart rate, all of that, it's taking all of that information and it's making a prediction
about how you should act in a given situation. So again, that could be influenced by your past
experiences. It could be influenced by what you, have you ate yet today or not? Your blood sugar, right? It can
be influenced by all of those. Your brain says, okay, we've been in this situation before or a
situation like it. This is what we did before. This is how we should act now. Yeah. That's essentially
instead of it being like, oh, I see a snake and I should be afraid, there's a snake circuit in your brain that makes you afraid.
That's just, that's not how it works.
Yeah, yeah.
Okay.
So when people, when you think of this and like my brain is making me do this, well, it's, yes, yes, it is making you do this, but it's not like this was one little part in your brain like firing up.
I love this model for a few reasons.
One is, I think it just makes sense because, you know, in psychology,
we often run into the problem of like everything kind of interacts with everything.
Right.
Yeah.
Right.
And the way you just described it, right, it's like emotion is part feedback, part prediction of taking all the information about your physical body, about your physical environment, about your social environment, about your conception of yourself.
Yes.
Like all of those things kind of get factored in.
And then the emotions are kind of emergent out of those, all that stuff.
stimuli, right? And it's like, and the emotions are ultimately adaptive to ideally best prepare
you for whatever your brain thinks is coming. Like, that just feels very logical to me. The other
reason I like this, and it was interesting when I was reading Feldman Barrett's work years ago,
I like, I had this like little aha moment when I was reading it. It was like, it suddenly made acting
makes sense to me. Where it's like, because I always wondered. I was like, how do actors like make
themselves cry and like and at the time I was I was when I when I found her stuff I was
working with Will Smith and I I would hang out with him like he I would like watch him shoot
a scene and then he'd come off set and he'd be like a completely different person and then
it's like time to go shoot a scene again and he'd become a completely different person like on
the spot and I remember talking to him about him like how do you do that and it in it the
prediction thing makes sense because it's like if you have a very vivid and powerful
imagination, you can kind of like trick your, I guess, parts of your brain into like thinking
that certain predictions are going to come true.
Right.
So you can like imagine what an environment would be like and then the emotion emerges as a result
as like a byproduct of you imagining that particular situation or environment or self-conception.
So anyway, that was a little bit of a tangent.
I always found like kind of the emotional mastery of.
mastery of acting to be like a really fascinating case study of a lot of this stuff that we're talking
about. Yeah, absolutely. And researchers, I mean, they've often used like actors in their research to
convey different emotions. We'll get to some of the quirks around that. But what's interesting
about that too is like when you see bad acting as well. Yes. Right. Like you're like, oh, you're not
convincing me that you're actually feeling these emotions at all. And that's what it, that's what it comes
sounds too. Right. And it's, and it's probably because bad actors are bad at convincing themselves. Yeah. Yeah. That's a good point. Because that was one of the
things that really stood out about Will is that he is, he is excellent at deluding himself about things. And he, like,
freely admits that that that's just his whole life. He's like able to just conjure up some image of, of something,
of a fantasy or something that he could live in. Right. And he said he's done that all of his life.
Oh, yeah. So he was a kid.
He was, yeah, yeah.
So, you know, fascinating.
Okay, back to a little bit of the more brain stuff, just to wrap it up.
More brains.
More brains.
We need to talk a little bit about the neurotransmitters, too.
So the chemicals in your brain swirling around.
Again, I think there's this misconception out there of like, oh, you know, for example, dopamine.
I'm just like a dopamine fiend or something like that.
Yeah, dopamine's excitement and serotonin is joy.
And yeah.
Right, right.
It's complicated.
Very, very complicated.
These neurotransmitters, for the most part, are pretty diffuse throughout your body and brain.
And it's not like one just turns up all of a sudden and, you know, causes you to feel a certain way.
That's not how it works either.
But they do kind of, they'll modulate emotion quite a bit.
Like dopamine, for example, is actually, people think of it as a pleasure chemical.
It's actually kind of a seeking, you're seeking out pleasure, seeking out reward of some kind.
Okay, that's actually motivating you to behave in a lot of ways.
Whereas like, you know, serotonin is more like the mood stabilization.
You find more common peace and joy out of that.
Then you have things like norapinephrine.
That's like when you're, that's fire, flight, high arousal states.
Then you have like gaba, glutamate.
These are these are excitatory and inhibitory chemicals in your brain.
The point isn't to get bogged down in these.
The point is that these chemicals are present at different very,
levels in different individuals and at different times too, and those can modulate your emotional
experiences as well.
And so just this, all of this brain talk is trying to just set the stage for there's an immense
amount of variability in the brain structures that you have and the chemicals floating around
your brain, the genes that turn these things on and off.
There's a tremendous amount of variability that can affect your emotional experience.
And so just to keep that in mind, like maybe be a little nicer to do.
yourself sometimes when some of these things come up because you might have a different
wiring or a different set of chemicals that are acting on your on your brain at any given time.
So yeah, I don't want to get too bogged down in the brain science, but that's kind of a
quick overview.
Again, check out the guide if you want to nerd out on it a little bit more.
Yeah.
But that's, yeah.
I feel like the neurotransmitter stuff is particularly relevant when you think about like
addiction and compulsion.
Yes.
You know?
So if you think about like something like alcohol addiction or.
or cocaine addiction, opioid addiction.
You know, one way to look at it is that you have a very emotionally dysregulated individual,
whether that's from a history of trauma, whether that's from genetic issues, which we'll talk about later,
whether that's from like a very low evaluation of self, or you're just in a super fucked up environment,
that there's a lot of danger and stress and disorder, and that those substances are kind of
ways to bootstrap positive emotions into yourself in either a situation or an environment or in a
body that you're not well suited to generate those positive emotions yourself. Right. Yeah. 100%.
And that kind of gets us into the genes and environment discussion that we could have about this
actually too. And, you know, look, it's 2025. If you don't know that it's not nature or nurture,
it's both.
Wake the fuck up. That's where we're going with this, okay?
Right. But how that interaction, how that plays out, like something like addiction or any other
kind of behavior that we have studied, it's a combination between your genes and your
environment. Okay. So your genetics, there's good news and bad news, right? Like, so if you're,
one or both of your parents were miserable people or, you know, highly anxious or any of these
things, well, you're probably going to be tend towards more misery and anxiety as well. If they're
happier, same type of thing. Maybe you're going to be a little bit happier and more joyous
throughout your life. It's, you know, there is a component to like, similar to your eye
color or hair color or whatever, there's some, there's a heritability to your emotional life.
Sorry, I want to jump in really quick here because this is, this is a little pet topic of mine.
Yeah. Yeah. That comes up a lot. Like,
And I think the reason this comes up is because in psychology and self-help, like, it is the over-analysis of your parents and their parenting and your childhood.
Like, it's a rabbit hole that people kind of get stuck in after a while.
That's not to say that, like, your childhood and your parents' parenting doesn't matter.
It does.
But there's a whole wealth of fascinating research on twins that were separated at birth.
and it's like absolutely mind-blowing stuff if you get into it.
There's there's a great book by a woman named Judith Harris called No Too Alike.
And it's just this like incredible summary of decades of twin research.
And basically like one of the major conclusions that it comes to, all this research comes to,
is that like a very large percentage, probably a majority of the things that people say like,
oh, my dad was always angry and that's where I learned to be angry.
It's like, no, no, no, you didn't learn to be angry from your angry dad.
It's your dad has a genetic predisposition towards anger, and you have 50% of his genes,
motherfucker.
So, like, nobody taught you anything.
You just were born with the same deck of cards inside of you, right?
So I think a lot of parents have weathered, and again, disclaimer, I know there's shitty parents out there.
I know there's trauma and abuse and all these, like, awful things that happened.
But like, I think a lot of kind of just normal parenting has gotten dragged through the mud over the last few generations because of these narratives of like, you know, well, my mom was anxious all the time.
And now I'm anxious all the time.
And it's like she made me as neurotic as like, well, yeah, she did.
But it's not because she like treated you bad or forced you to do anything.
It's just like she's genetically predisposed to anxiety.
So you are too.
Right.
Right.
Yeah.
The environment does play a role, like you said, absolutely.
And they've shown this all the way from studies in rats,
studies and monkeys and studies all the way up into humans.
There's a gene environment interaction.
Yes.
It's both.
It is both.
And it is close to 50-50.
But it's like, I just want to be clear on this because I think people, the nature and
nurture question is I think almost everybody understands it is both. But I think most people who,
when they say both, they're thinking 80, 20 in this direction or 80, 20 in that direction. And it's like,
no, it is like 50, 50, 55, 45, like, depending on what you're measuring, it's pretty much
always in that range. Right. So it's, it is very significant in both directions. Right. Yeah.
Yeah, I mean, for example, there were these early studies.
I think it was probably in the 90s, something like that.
A researcher named Michael Meaney did this study on rats, right?
He had these rat mothers.
Some of them were really good mothers.
Some of them were bad mothers.
Deadbeat rat mothers.
Deadbeat rat moms, right, versus the good moms.
That would be a good subtitle for this episode.
Deadbeat rat moms.
Solve your emotions, deadbeat rat mom edition.
Deadbeat rat mom.
That's a hell of an insult.
That's a bad name.
Yeah.
That's a bad man.
Yeah, deadbeat rat mom.
So what were we talking about?
These deadbeat rat moms.
The deadbeat rat mom, yeah.
So he would time it so they would have litters on the same days, right?
And then what do is take these litters and you'd swap them.
Okay.
So the deadbeat rat mom's litter would go to the good mom and the good mom would go to the deadbeat rat mom.
Okay.
So they have these litters.
And they would see how they would do all these tests when these rats grew up and stuff like that.
So the Debbie Ratmom kids, if they went over to the good mom, they actually had better stress reactivity and everything.
So there was this environmental component that was protective of their emotional regulation or what we would call emotion anyway in rats, right?
And then the opposite was true to if you sent these the pups, the rat pups from the good mom to the bad mom, they kind of turned out not as great.
But later studies too found out there's this what they call an epigenetic effect.
going on as well. So epigenetics isn't just your genes. It's actually all the, it's the things
that turn your genes on and off. So it's a lot more complicated than just having a gene that you have
this gene and that and that's it. That gene can be turned on and off. The timing of when it can be
turned on and off is that's that's regulated by a whole host of different things. One of those is
your environment. Okay. So we have this idea of epigenetics and they've shown this too in monkeys
as well. And then there's pretty strong evidence in humans. We can't quite do those.
type of studies in humans, but similar to it. And what they find is that, yeah, if you have this
genetic disposition from either an emotional style that seems conducive to your environment versus
one that's not, there is a protective genetic effect. Like your genes can actually override
some bad environments sometimes. Yeah. Right? Your environment can also cause things to, you can
have better outcomes for your emotional experiences versus worse as well. So again, it is probably
somewhere in that like 60, 40 range, 50, 50 range, somewhere in there.
Yeah.
But all of that is to say is that there's, there are environmental things that we can
manipulate and promote that will help with emotional regulation, just like any other
trait that we have.
But there is a genetic basis and there's genetic limits to anything that we do too.
So, yeah, again, it kind of goes back to like accepting that that's just part of the game.
It's just part of what happens is that you have a genetic predisposition, quit beating yourself
up over it, accept it, figure out how to deal with it.
One way I've seen it express sometimes, I don't know how accurate this is, but I think it's
a useful heuristic, at least for me when thinking about this, is that your genetics
sets the range of outcome, and then your environment and experience determines where you
land within that range, right?
So you could be the most talented individual, but if you grow up in a slum with a horrible
childhood, like you're probably going to come in at the bottom of your genetic range in terms
of outcomes, whereas you can be maybe a below average potential person, but if you grow up
in a great environment, you're going to come in at the very top of your range.
So I don't know how scientifically validated that is, but I have seen that be expressed around
ideas like IQ and certain like mental health issues and stuff.
So I don't, yeah.
I think it's a good way to think about it.
It's a good way to conceptualize that relationship.
And I think, I mean, think about this way you said, you know, the genetics at the range.
Yeah.
Like, genetics set our physical ranges.
We know that.
It sets the range of how tall you can be, how short you can be.
Whether, like, we don't have wings so we can't fly, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
But if you have the genes for walking, you have the genes for talking, but if you aren't exposed
to those things at the right time, then you don't develop those skills.
Just like if you with your emotional life too, if you, if you aren't exposed to emotion
regulation strategies at the right time, then later on you're probably going to have
some issues around it. It's fixable though, too. So we'll get into why that is as well. But
yeah, I think that's a good way to think about it. Yeah. I mean, pretty much everything we're going
to land on, you know, foreshadowing a little bit, where we're going to land towards the end of this
episode is that a lot of this stuff that helps you manage the emotions in your life really can
be described as skills. There are things that you can learn and develop and practice and get better at.
And I think like any skill, some people are very talented at them.
Some of them, some people, it comes very easily.
And then some people, it's like you have to put in a little bit more work than the
random person, you know, to get to a decent level.
Yeah.
And I mean, I think the takeaway, though, too, from kind of looking at the genetic origins
of emotional regulation is not to obsess over where those come from.
But rather to say, okay, there's an acceptance to it.
Like I said, this is what I have to deal with.
how do I deal with it? So yeah, it's a skill issue. Yeah. That kind of covers some of the
biological basis except for we could talk a little bit about the evolution of emotions, I think.
Sure. Why do we have emotions to begin with? Why is it part of our nature? Again, this kind of,
this treads the line a little bit between kind of the classical basic emotions view that they're
hardwired versus the more constructionist view. Nobody in either of those camps, though, would
argue that obviously they're an evolutionary adaptation.
Yeah.
Emotions are.
They are an adaptation.
Obviously, then if it's an adaptation, it's helped us survive in the past and pass on our genes.
Yeah.
I do think the evolutionary point is important for a couple reasons.
One is it helps people understand that like emotions aren't destiny.
Like they're not static.
Like if you, if you've been sad and depressed the last few years, you're not going to be sad and depressed forever.
Right.
That sadness and depression is a disregulated adaptation to whatever's going on in your life or to certain things that have happened to you in the past, right?
And the key is not to stop being sad or to stop being depressed.
It's to figure out what that feedback that you're being given constantly is trying to nudge you towards.
And then alter your life or your environment in such a way that that feedback is no longer getting triggered.
I just find that's like a much, not only is it more realistic and scientifically true, but like it's also, I think, more hopeful.
Like when people just recognize like emotions or feedback, they're not destiny.
They're not just this like these things that happen to you that you can't control or adapt to.
And then I think the other reason why this is important is, and I don't think we're going to talk a ton about this, although we could.
The more emotional an experience is, the more meaning we tend to attach to it.
This is kind of comes back to the salience network thing.
Like, if you think about the what feels like the most important moments of your life, they are generally very, very highly emotional experiences.
Part of that is by design, right?
Like you, one of the emotions are partially evolved in us to like point us towards meaningful things.
Yes.
Like the more meaningful something is to our survival or replication, chances are the more emotional
we're going to feel about it.
But I think people often like develop kind of cosmic explanations for certain experiences
in their life.
And they assume that because something feels extremely meaningful, that it actually is very meaningful
when it's actually, and we'll get to this in a little bit here, but a lot of that is just
the narrative that we've kind of wrapped around it.
And again, coming from the self-help world, like, there are a lot of kind of cosmic narratives around certain emotional experiences telling people that it's like, oh, that's your, that's your universe telling your heart that this is your true path and light and like all this shit.
And it's like, okay, like that might be a useful narrative to adopt.
It also might not.
And but whatever it is, it's definitely inflexible and it's inaccurate.
And I tend to come from the school of thought that like generally the more, the better we understand reality, the better the rest of our life gets.
So understanding that like something was very meaningful and impactful in my life was meaningful and impactful is fine, but also understanding that like that is kind of a evolutionary adaptation to something very significant.
I know it sounds like so heartless and soulless and like.
No, no, no.
But it's like, I don't know, there is something peaceful about it.
Yeah, absolutely.
Like, okay, so for example, anxiety, right?
Yeah.
A lot of us, there's a lot of anxiety, everybody's anxious.
We're all anxious.
That's part of our DNA.
It's part of our species, like we're just talking about it, right?
But oftentimes the way we interpret it in the modern world especially is, oh, this is a weakness of some kind.
Yes.
It's actually a survival mechanism.
Absolutely.
That is like, so, yeah, cut yourself some slack here.
It's like, you know, there's hundreds of thousands of generations going back that survived because of their anxiety.
And that's okay.
It's an adaptation.
Yes.
You just need to learn to work with it a little bit better and use it to like manage it and point it in the right direction.
The thing about emotions as well is that like the more you tell yourself an emotion is bad, the more you're going to struggle with it.
Right?
Like the more you decide that you shouldn't be anxious in your life, the more anxiety is going to derail you.
time it pops up. So it's, you know, in subtle art, I called this the backwards law, but it is like
really, there's something paradoxical of like, of like leaning into the discomfort and being accepting
of whether it's anxiety or sadness or depression, like when it emerges, being like, oh,
okay, this is, this is, this is my body trying to take care of me. This is millions of years of
evolution looking out for me in this moment. How am I going to listen to it? What needs to change
of my life, what actions do I need to take to properly adapt to it instead of like just like
resisting it and fighting it.
You know, otherwise you know, well, we'll get into all of the maladaptive ways to deal with
emotions later.
But yeah, sorry, I had to get on my soapbox.
No, no, that was where I was heading with this anyway.
So that's, no, that's great.
Cool.
Before we get into the cultural stuff, which is fascinating stuff, and you're absolutely right,
changes the emotions that we, or the way we experience them a lot.
And we'll get into that.
let's first real quick, though, go over some of the way that your past life experiences
can shape emotions and the way you regulate your emotions for sure.
Obviously, like we've already said, the constructed emotion view is that our past experiences,
our culture around us, those all have like a big influence, actually, on how we not only
regulate our emotions, but even experience them in the first place, right?
But just so for example, trauma, okay, that's like a big one that I think a lot of people, you know, we've heard about it's, it goes around a lot.
Sure.
Okay, sure.
What trauma, like, especially early in life, can do, there are physical changes to the brain that happen when you experience trauma early on.
And for example, kids who grow up around violence or chaos or neglect, right?
They often have these overreactive stress responses, and that can carry into your adult.
adulthood too. And so you're very reactive to things. Basically because you're vigilant all the
time, right? You have this hypervigilant brain at this point and it just makes you very,
very sensitive to anything in your environment that seems off or a little bit dangerous or so your
anxiety is, again, it's a survival mechanism. Yes. Right. That's one big area that they know of
over your past experiences that can shape your emotions all throughout your life. Obviously,
therapy is a good way to handle all of that with a lot of these. We're going to talk about that.
But that's one area in conjunction with that is kind of like economic stress and poverty as well.
If you think about that, if you grew up poor, if you do have financial struggles, that takes up a lot of your brain space.
And so emotional regulation is kind of beside the point at that point. When you're in survival mode, right, emotional regulation is kind of beside the point.
And so you can see why when you grow up in abject poverty, when you grow up around.
or you are subjected to that even throughout your life and adulthood,
that causes you to focus more on just like basic survival needs and just stuff like that,
where it's not, your emotional regulation is not really top priority at that point.
But doesn't that, that causes a little bit of a downward spiral, right?
Because it's like you grow up in poverty, you grow up in economic stress.
You are emotionally dysregulated, which means you're less adaptive to your environment.
You have worse relationships.
You're unable to plan ahead.
You make worse decisions, which.
keeps you in poverty, which keeps you stressed, which keeps you disregulated and it like goes on and on.
Another one that's pertinent to modern society as well is loneliness and social isolation.
Yeah.
Okay.
So that's, you know, been in the kind of zeitgeist for a few years now that people are getting lonely and lonelier.
We live in more secluded areas or more secluded living arrangements anyway, you know, even though we might live in these big cities.
We're living in an apartment.
we don't even know our neighbors, all of that.
Humans are obviously very social animals,
and we need social contact,
whether it's good or bad, actually,
can help with your emotional regulation too.
Actually, there's an argument to be made
that if you are dealing with difficult people,
you're probably better at regulating your emotions
on some level at least, right?
Well, it comes back to, like,
we actually co-regulate with the people around us.
Right, right.
And so if there's nobody around you,
then you're basically not,
you're getting no assistance.
There's almost like an emotion.
safety net of you know having a strong support network around you of people who you can
co-regulate with so it kind of catches you when shit starts to go bad in your life or you
start to veer off the rails but yeah if you don't have those people or if you have a bunch
of dysfunctional fuckups around you they can make the problem worse yes we'll come back to that at
the end of the second we'll definitely come back to that yeah but you're absolutely right there's
this creation of negative emotional feedback loop when you're isolated because you're isolated.
You think, oh, nobody's around.
I'm worthless or whatever it is.
And then you just get into that spiral once again.
Yeah.
Related to that as well, chronic stress.
You know, we live in modern societies anyway, developed societies are usually kind of
this low-grade chronic stress that we live in and we're not really adapted to that.
We're more adapted in our evolutionary past.
We're more adapted to handle things in the moment, get stressed out really quick, and then you come back down and you're fine.
Yeah.
Where we live, you know, sitting in traffic, dealing with difficult coworkers.
Yeah.
I have low grade stress that kind of got that.
Are you referring to anybody specific?
No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
No stress here.
I have a great boss.
Yeah.
That's what I thought.
But that that's obviously going to set kind of an emotional tone that you have, that is going to, you know,
know, change based on your environment, but can also, you know, exposure, like stress hormones
and everything like that obviously affect your brain in ways that are, will change your emotions.
I mean, that's a huge thing when I lived in New York, like, that's a huge thing in New York City
and I think everybody kind of intuitively feels it and understands it out there.
Like you feel like you're in a very slow pressure cooker.
Yeah.
You definitely, like, if you don't get out of the city every three or four months, like, yeah, you start snapping.
Yeah.
You start kind of like losing it over stupid things and losing sleep and feeling anxious all the time and you don't know why.
And then, you know, suddenly you go on a quick weekend vacation out to the countryside or out in the mountains or something and you're just like, ah.
Yeah.
One way to New York.
Have you noticed that the movement out to Los Angeles where it's, you know, is it slower pace out here?
It's definitely slated here.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
There's less intense for sure.
For sure.
I mean,
LA has its own stressors,
but I would say life here in general is like very,
it's very laid back.
I definitely feel more emotionally regulated here.
Yeah.
It's actually funny kind of coming back to the drugs and alcohol thing.
Like everybody in New York drinks.
Yeah.
Everybody parties.
Everybody stays up late.
Everybody's like always doing stuff.
And I think a lot of that is just the dysregulation.
that happens with the ambient stress in the city.
Whereas, you know, you come out here or, you know, I go, like, visit my parents in Texas
where they live, which is pretty far outside the city out in the boonies.
And, yeah, everybody's just kind of chilling out.
Like, you know, life's easy and everybody's relaxed and, you know.
Yeah.
Not a whole lot of stress.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, it's not a surprise.
If you're stressed out, you're going to feel like shit.
I think no shit, right?
But, let's, you know, breaking news, everybody.
You're all I'm going to hear that on this podcast.
Yeah, yeah.
This is what they, this is the hard hitting facts that our listeners come for.
If you're stressed, you're going to feel like shit.
Lastly, okay.
Family dynamics and cultural norms will get more into the cultural stuff.
But definitely, you know, family dynamics outside of even your genetics, though, too.
This can be a huge modulator of your, of your emotional experiences that you have.
early experiences in your family obviously are going to shape how you deal with emotions, how you
express them, how you even experience them as well. One of the big ones is kind of like restraint
versus openness, you know, when you were younger, were you encouraged to express your emotions
or were you encouraged to oppress your emotions? Yeah, yeah. And so we'll get into some more of that,
but that's a huge factor in your experience, in your emotional experience as an adult. It comes
from a lot of those family dynamics and even the ones that are ongoing still too now.
As you know, like one of my favorite, probably my single favorite relationship book is called
Getting Love You Want by Harville-Henbrook.
Oh, fantastic book.
It's such a good book.
Oh, so good.
And he is a wonderful term for this, which he calls it emotional maps.
Yeah.
And he says that your family draws your emotional map for you.
And it's essentially, it's like telling you where to be angry, when and where to be angry, when and where to be happy, when and where to be happy.
when and where to be sad, when and where to be ashamed, when and where to be anxious.
And he said that if your family draws a really terrible emotional map for you, then you're
going to get to adulthood and it's going to lead you to all the wrong places, essentially.
So it's a great metaphor.
It's a fantastic book.
It is a relationship book, but it does talk a lot about the impact that our family and
romantic relationships have on our ability to, like, emotionally regulate everything.
So highly recommended.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
So, okay, to kind of wrap this section up then, we talked about what emotions are.
I hope you have a good idea of that.
I still don't think there's a satisfying single definition of emotions, but we just went
through all the levels that you could kind of evaluate emotional experience through.
The big point I want to drive home about this section, though, is that there's all these
different factors that go into your day-to-day emotional, minute-to-minute emotion.
experiences even too. It's not about the willpower to overcome these emotions. It's not about
suppressing the emotions or getting rid of emotions or whatever. It's it's really it comes down to
the skill issue again. And there's all these factors that go into it. A lot of them that you don't
have a ton of control over some of them you do. And I think throughout this whole episode we want to
tease those things apart. What do you have control over? What don't you? What do you need to just accept
and be okay with versus what can you actually do something about?
So that's kind of, that's what I wanted to just set up there anyway.
Cool.
Yeah.
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So let's talk culture.
Some of this stuff, you went really deep on this stuff.
You went really deep on this stuff.
I'm on it, yeah.
And I found some of it to be pretty mind-blowing.
So where do you want to start with it?
I mean, I knew, I went ham on this.
I went like, I got deep into it.
And it is pretty fascinating.
I mean, I had an idea, you know, just from studying psychology and everything.
Of course, culture influences emotions.
Sure, right.
You would expect that.
Yeah, right.
Like some cultures, you know, are more emotionally expressive than others.
We all kind of know that, right?
I didn't realize just how deep this went, though.
Okay.
And, you know, I think there is still some tendency to think.
think that emotions are this kind of purely individual level. You know, we experience these things
and they're very, very personal, but they're actually very, very inculturated in us. We learn
these before we can even talk or tie our shoes or anything like that, right? One of the concepts
that social psychologists have come up with in this realm is this idea of display rules.
Okay. It's kind of like an emotional dress code. You know, it's just like you wouldn't wear a
swimsuit to a funeral, right? There's kind of a dress code.
For yourself.
Well, yeah.
I don't know.
We're in California.
Who knows?
But that's kind of a like a dress code rule.
It's culture, unspoken rule, you know, that happens.
Same thing.
Same kind of thing happens with emotions as well.
And they call these display rules.
So when is it appropriate to display which emotions and which scenarios, how intensely you display these emotions?
Or even the emotion that you display in any given situation, there's kind of these strategies.
that happen at the cultural level, that can modify or completely change emotions, too.
So you have like intensification.
So how intensely are you socialized to express emotions and get any given situation?
So there's intensification versus deintensification.
Some of emotions in some cultures are more suppressed than they are in others.
Then there's neutralization to, sometimes you're encouraged to just shut off emotion in certain
situations and then the masking, kind of replacing one emotion for another, whether it's for
the sake of social harmony or status or anything like that. Okay, so there's these display rules
kind of come up again and again in culture. So for example, like in some cultures, if you're
angry, they encourage you to smile instead and kind of just cover up that anger. Sure. Right.
Or tone down your excitement to appear modest in some cultures as well. That happens quite a bit.
they've actually reproduced this in the lab as well.
There's this really kind of interesting study where they showed Americans and Japanese
a series of emotionally charged videos.
And they did it under two different circumstances.
Well, first they watched them just alone and they had like a hidden camera or something
like that and they could observe the people watching these videos.
And then they had an observer sit in there where it was very clear that somebody was watching
them, right?
So the Americans, when you showed them these emotionally charged videos, they would react
with pretty big emotions or they were just kind of express themselves in both situations.
Whether somebody was watching them or not, they're like, oh, yeah, that's funny or that's
sad or that's infuriating, whatever it is.
What was interesting, though, the Japanese participants, when they thought they were
alone, they expressed a lot of emotion watching these videos.
But when somebody was watching them, they tried to tamp it all the way down.
Interesting.
Okay, right. And so this kind of gets to display rules, kind of this big category of display rules anyway, of kind of like East West collectivist versus individual cultures, right? Whereas usually in East Asian cultures, you have more of an emphasis on the group and the collective and social harmony. And so emotions, almost any emotion, whether it's good or bad, is kind of seen as a little bit dangerous to the social balance. Whereas, you know, in the United States, it's more like it's free. It's free.
them, baby.
Yeah.
Express yourself, right?
I'm angry, God damn it.
The individual takes a much more center stage in a lot of Western cultures, especially in the
United States.
Yeah.
So that's just that one instance of display rules.
And again, they've reproduced that in the lab, which I thought was kind of interesting.
But this happens all the time.
You'll see it everywhere.
I'm just thinking about, you know, because the culture I know best outside of the U.S.
is Brazil.
Yeah.
And it's funny, Brazilians have this thing where Brazilians are very extroverted.
Yeah.
And it's a very gregarious culture.
People are talking.
They're very loud.
They're very excitable.
But it's funny.
I lived down there for a long time before I realized that actually, if you're not extroverted,
if you're not talking a lot and you're not excited, like, people think you're something's
wrong with you.
Yeah.
You think you're, you're like sad or depressed or something.
And so it's like even if you're tired or if you're like not in the mood or if you're like worried
about like thinking about something.
They take it very personally if you're not being talkative.
Yeah.
And yeah, it's super fascinating.
That jives with the research as well.
That's what they find is that if you don't, if you're not what they call, if you're
a nonconformist, an emotional nonconformist in your society, you're usually perceived
as immature or unstable, rude, inappropriate.
Yeah.
When you don't reflect back these display rules of your given society.
And so like when you travel to another country, this can come up a lot and sure you've
have a ton of instances of this too, but if you ever go to another country, you usually
violate some of these display rules without even knowing it. Yeah. It's, that's a powerful
social cue. Uh, for incentive. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. For sure. So, uh, that's just kind of to lay
out the beginning of it. There are these display rules that we all have in all cultures. Um,
they're taught to us from a very young age and they shape not only the way we express emotions,
but the emotions that we feel as well. I have a funny story about,
culturally clashing display rules.
Okay.
So in 2013, my wife and I, we were in Vietnam.
We were doing like a long road trip on a motorbike through Vietnam, which was awesome,
but also like totally unsafe.
Yeah.
And so she and I were riding and we ended up on this like back, back road.
Like it turned into a dirt road and it was super unstable and there was like potholes everywhere.
And we were on this like shitty motorcycle.
And sure enough,
we hit like a big pothole and both of us just went flying, you know, over the handlebars.
Oh, geez, okay.
And I landed on the ground and then she landed on top of me.
And so I broke her fall, fortunately.
Yeah.
She was a little dinged up.
But like, I got this entire, the entire left side of my body basically just got scraped.
Like, all the skin got scraped off.
And so I'm like, my left arm is just covered in blood.
I still have scars here from it.
I was like covered in blood, just scrapes everywhere, just intense amounts of pain.
And we're in the middle of rural Vietnam, like in the middle of nowhere.
And so we start walking.
And the bike is destroyed.
So like we can't drive anywhere.
And so we start walking.
And fortunately, we came across like a van or something.
And somehow, miraculously, the passenger in the van spoke English.
And so we were able to eventually get ourselves to like this tiny town that maybe had 100 people total.
Yeah.
Barely had like electricity, barely had an indoor plumbing.
And they take us to, the guy told us it was a clinic, but later figured out that it was like the local school.
And it was, I think, the only building that had like running water or anything.
So anyway, we get in there.
And this woman who speaks no English starts like cleaning my wounds.
And it hurt so far.
I mean, there was like rocks and growl like embedded into my arm and stuff.
And so she's just like picking it all out.
I'm like screaming in pain because it fucking like it hurts so bad.
And I'm sitting there and I look outside and I start hearing laughter.
And I look outside and there's like dozens of school children watching us.
And they're giggling the entire time.
And I'm like, this is so fucked up.
Like every time, like, every time I scream in vain, like, laughter erupts from the audience, essentially.
And I, but I was like, I was too upset and freaked out to kind of like be offended.
But I was like, wow, that's like super funny.
And even the woman who was like cleaning my arm, she was like giggling.
And I'm like, what's wrong with this place?
Like, what is wrong with these people?
Anyway, long story short, I came to find out that in Vietnamese culture, they laugh when they're uncomfortable.
It's like, it's like a, it's like a.
It's like a way to like hide their discomfort, which is something that we all do a little bit.
Sure.
But apparently there it's like very common and like socially accepted.
It was an awkward, uncomfortable situation.
And so everybody kept laughing when I was screaming to like diffuse the discomfort.
But of course, me coming from Western culture, that's considered like incredibly rude and insensitive.
Right.
So like laugh at somebody's pain.
So anyway, it was super interesting.
It was like very, it was really fascinating.
Yeah. Yeah. In Western cultures, too, like expressing dissatisfaction is kind of seen that there's an authentic.
Yes.
Kind of, you know, that's authentic being, if you're expressing your your dissatisfaction with something, right?
Yeah.
Whereas in more collective cultures, that's a threat to the group.
Right.
Yeah. So, yeah, kind of diffusing their discomfort through laughter, that's a common one.
I mean, I'd do it, you know, even too.
But on the societal scale, you know, when you're taught that, when you're enculturated in that, that becomes.
a whole different animal. It's the water you swim in, right? So you don't even realize that you do it.
Yeah. You think it's universal, but it's actually cultural. And that's, yeah, that's what I want to,
that's what I want to emphasize through all this cultural stuff is that that's, for me anyway,
those were the biggest might like, it was always like, oh my God, this is the water I'm swimming in
and I didn't even realize it. So yeah, keep it, keep that in mind throughout all of this. Yeah.
So not only do, do, are there the display rules, which are when and how you express your emotions,
there's also your your culture actually trains you to want certain feelings too okay there's this
theory in social social psychology called affect evaluation theory a vt for short and the core idea
of of avt is the ideal versus your actual affect okay so actual affect is like what you generally
genuinely feel in your daily life and then there's the ideal affect what the emotions that your
culture prizes and values over other emotions, right? So like in the West, we generally have
what they call high arousal positive emotions. We like excitement. We like, you know,
positivity, energy drinks, you know, like all of that. That's that's the West, right? Yeah. But in a lot
more collectivist cultures, for example, again, East Asia, you have low arousal positive emotions.
So serenity and calm, peace, again, harmony, social balance and harmony within the
group. That's much more prized. And so those emotions get, um, are reinforced more,
um, depending on which culture you're in. And so you just, you will have over time,
you have a propensity to gravitate towards one set of emotions over another just based on
your culture like that. And, um, you know, this manifests in like the leisure activities you do,
like, you know, do like extreme sports in the United States. That's like a big thing, right? Um, but
so are like spa days and stuff like that and treating yourself.
You have music preferences where it's high energy versus low energy.
Your parenting styles too.
This influences all of that.
The thing is you've already kind of mentioned this a little bit, but when you're in a culture,
for example, like in the United States, if we value these high emotional, high arousal,
positive emotional states and you're just not like that, personality-wise, that becomes a problem, right?
Yeah.
Because your personality influences how you actually feel, but your culture determines what you want to feel or determines what you should be feeling.
And then you get into this like, oh, I don't feel that way.
There must be something wrong with me.
And I think we see a lot of that, especially like in the United States where it's, you know, we're supposed to be just positive all the time and look at the bright side and turn challenges into positive interpretations of whatever is going on in your life.
when you don't feel that way
and when you have such a mismatch
that can be very disorienting
for your daily emotional life
and you get to
you start thinking something's wrong with you
I think that's something we
you really have to look out for
and there's this internal friction
that goes on between your actual personality
and the culture around you
yeah I think it also can't be
understated or overstated
whatever stated it is
how much like shifting that environment
can mean, you know, like I, I, what you just said, I felt that when I grew up in Texas,
I felt that way.
Like, Texas is very, it's become politeness, courtesy.
And I, I'm just kind of a cynical, blunt person.
And it's, people would say rude.
Yeah.
When I was growing up, that's what, people constantly told me, they constantly told me I was
rude.
And I'm like, I'm just saying what it is.
Like, how is this rude?
Everyone's thinking it.
I'm just saying.
Exactly.
Like, how is this rude?
But then it was interesting because when I went to school on the East Coast, where everybody
is just rude.
Right.
It was pretty incredible, actually, like the shift, like how much better I felt.
Like, I felt so much more at ease in an environment that, like, kind of valued the same
things I valued and expressed itself in similar ways that I expressed myself.
And I definitely relate to what you just said, like, growing up.
up, I was like, man, what, what's wrong with me?
Like, why do I feel this way all the time?
Yeah.
But yeah, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, there's that there's a fun saying around
therapy, which is like, before you get a therapist, make sure you're not surrounded
by assholes.
And, uh, I think, I think there's like a more, more accurate way to put that.
It's just like, make sure you're in the right cultural environment.
Right.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I mean, you know, in a place like United States, too, where there's lots of different
subcultures and everything like that. I think a part of emotional maturity is kind of finding that
right environment for yourself and seeking out the right environments. And we'll get a little bit more
into that. Seeking out the environments that match your personality more, match what you want. I've
definitely noticed over time where I've, I'm pretty introverted for the most part. And so I try to
just, you know, I build my life around that now. And I have the flexibility to do that. And that's great.
And it's been able to, I've been able to regulate my emotions a lot better in those kind of environments.
But, you know, I see this all the time where you see mismatches of people who just they're, they don't like people, but they're forced to be interact with people all the time.
And it's usually people who have a very different idea of cultural expression of emotions or the way you regulate emotions and interact with people.
So I, but I think that's part of emotional maturity, again, is finding that good fit for yourself.
Yeah.
I mean, you know, what it comes down to is what kind, along with that, what kind of emotional life are you pursuing?
And is that, is it yours or is it like has that been forced upon you?
Like is, are you a little bit more of a subdued kind of even maybe a little bit melancholy or, you know, depressive type person?
But you're surrounded by a bunch of like super positive people who are just trying to be positive all the time and see the good side of everything.
Well, maybe that's not a good emotional match for you.
Yeah.
So that's just something to keep in mind, I guess, through this.
Another thing we see that's very influenced by our culture too when it comes to emotions is this idea of emotional suppression.
I think in the United States, especially and in more individualistic cultures in general, there's this idea that suppressing your emotions is bad, right?
We should get it out.
You should express yourself and you should be authentic in your expression.
What's interesting is they've found some studies that in collectivist cultures, it's actually better for your memory.
mental health in some situations to suppress your emotions.
So, for example, there was one study done during the pandemic where they found that emotional
suppression and collectivist cultures actually led to a lot of more positive mental health
outcomes than it did in individualistic cultures.
Kind of another little instance of this that was pretty interesting, though, the Utku Inuit
culture, actually.
they have this cultural norm around anger.
They really try to suppress it in the group because it's very, very destabilizing in these small groups that are very interdependent on one another.
So they don't just tell people like, okay, don't be angry.
That's not what they do.
They have this whole cultural kind of set of expectations around it.
Like I was just saying, like, you know, choose the environment you want to be in.
They actually set up their kind of social lives and even environments to just avoid situations in which
people get angry with each other.
And then they teach children to reinterpret frustration as more of a misunderstanding, right?
And the emotion is actually shared between the people.
It's not one person getting angry.
It's that there's a conflict here and it's shared between people and we need to understand
people better to do that.
And so they they teach them not just to like stifle their rage, but to reframe it as
something more productive as well.
Interesting.
So there's good ways that culture can actually help you manage your emotions as well.
obviously. This kind of brings us to to one of the most fascinating things I think I found about
culture and emotions, which I'm calling it the paradox of emotional conformity. This just blew my
mind mark. Okay. So let's talk about emotional conformity first. So we've kind of mentioned this
a little bit already, but emotional conformity is when you align your emotional experience,
your expression of emotions, the emotions you experience, the way you talk about emotions,
you align that with societal expectations. So again, in the United States,
States, positive emotions, high arousal, you know, you're expected to kind of like be positive
no matter what, right?
That's emotional conformity, right?
The paradox, though, is that in these individualistic cultures like the United States, like
Western Europe, North America, people that individuals, individualistic societies are actually
more emotionally conformist than collectivist societies.
That's weird.
That's kind of crazy if you think about it.
So what I'm saying is that in individualist societies,
people in societies that emphasize the individual as the core kind of unit,
social unit,
you would think that,
you know,
there's this ideal of authenticity and authentic expression, right?
And there would be more variety in emotional expressions.
But actually,
this is not what they find in the research.
This is a recent study that they found that in these individualistic societies,
people actually display a narrower range of emotions.
Hmm.
Okay, compared to collectivist societies.
And what's really interesting is that they found that in collectivist societies, the focus
is more on behavior.
Yeah.
It's conforming to the behavior in that society.
Yeah, we don't care how you feel as long as you do the right thing.
Exactly.
Yeah.
It's beside the point how you feel.
Yeah.
But as long as you do the right thing in the right situation.
Whereas here, it's like you can do whatever you want as long as you feel the right way.
Exactly.
You want a signal that you're doing well.
in your culture, right?
Yeah.
And so the way you do that in an individualist society where emotions are kind of like
the currency, how you feel is very much central to who you are.
It's reflective of who you are.
Right.
And so you try to display all of these positive emotions and positive, all these positive
emotional experiences in order to signal that, look, I'm doing fine.
I'm doing great in this society.
It's kind of a status thing almost that they've found.
It's almost like a certain amount of conformity is unavoidable.
It's just the society picks and chooses what it's going to conform on.
Right.
Yeah, exactly.
Exactly.
And in individualistic societies, it's these emotional states that they emphasize.
And so it's not like it's not just about feeling good.
It's about showing others that you're in a good place.
Like I said, it's kind of a status signaling in a way.
Which makes sense because if everybody,
is doing their own thing, it's not clear to others whether you're doing well or not.
Right.
Right.
So the only way to signal it that you're doing well is to be super happy and positive and upbeat.
It's your vibe.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, I saw this.
So I went into the greatest grocery source chain of all time, which is Trader Joe's.
And Trader Joe's could be, it's like a microcosm for American emotional life, I think,
if you think about it.
Because all the employees there, they're, like, it's funny because they emphasize, you know, like,
positivity. All of our employees are positive, you know, and it's like they're grocery store employees.
Why do we have to do that? So I'm behind this guy. He's checking out and they're having this
like, like, oh, bro, that's awesome. Bro, sweet. Oh, awesome. Where you go? Oh, man, you're off soon.
And it's just going nuts. And I'm like, what the hell is going on? And then I get up there. And the guy
tries to do the same conversation with me. And I'm just kind of in a shitty mood and I just wasn't having it.
Come on, Drew. And I know I could tell. I was like getting pressured into. Be a bro, Drew.
I should have been like. Be a bro. They were like, come on. Get up here.
get up here with me.
Like, it's awesome.
I'm working at the grocery store.
And I'm like, I'm just buying groceries.
I want to go home, dude.
You know?
But it is, it is, it's like that's the expectation that's been set there.
And what's funny about that is, is like, oh, we have, you know, you're going to Trader Joe's
and they have, like, everybody's wearing like a, like you were saying, something different.
They have a, or like, they have a Hawaiian shirt on or.
It reminds me, remember in the movie office space?
Jennifer Anderson's character works at a restaurant.
And, like, she gets, she gets, like, her apron.
she doesn't have enough colorful pins on her apron.
And so her manager like,
pieces of flare.
Yeah,
but she called it.
He's like,
you need to show up with more flare tomorrow or there's going to be problems.
And it's like just these bullshit little pins on her apron.
Yeah.
Right.
The point though.
I mean,
it is very American.
It is very American.
Yeah.
Like outwardly look however you want,
behave however you want,
but your emotional demeanor should be within this very narrow range.
It's performative positivity.
That's what it is, it's performance.
I'm just, I'm thinking now because, I mean, a huge part of my work is kind of trashing this
performative positivity, this kind of emotional conformity.
It's starting to make sense now, actually.
Because the countries that my books didn't do well in are highly collectivist cultures,
you know, Japan, China, whereas I think the countries it did do very well in are,
are very highly individualistic cultures.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, the freedom to express yourself, it often translates into kind of this pressure,
this pressure to exhibit culturally acceptable versions of what's considered authentic.
And so that authenticity becomes the new norm.
Yeah.
Right.
And so now it's not that you're actually trying to be authentically expressive.
It's that you're just trying to fit in.
fit in with that norm, which is quote-unquote authenticity. And the paradox of it is that turns into
conformity. It's insane to think about. But that's what they're finding. Because I bet if you went to
these people who are conforming, like in their sentiment, most of them are probably not aware of it.
I would say when people conform behaviorally, like they're not super aware of like what they're doing
or why. 100%. Yeah. But yeah, it's probably the same emotionally as well. Like they probably really
think that they're like amped. I mean, I imagine you know a bunch of people.
like this. I know a bunch of people who are like every time you see them, you're like, how
the thing's going? Like, oh, they're great. Everything's, oh, life's awesome, but it's so busy.
And it's like, meanwhile, they're like the dog in the burning house. They're like, this is fine.
You know, like it just. Yeah. And nothing ever changes. Like, it's just everything's awesome all the
time. Anyway. No, that, that, 100%. When you're like in a place like the United States, you ask
somebody, how's it going? The proper response is good, fine, great. Those are your options.
Yes. Right. But like I know some Norwegians. I have some Norwegian friends that I met and you ask him,
oh, hey, how's it going? It's like, well, my back hurts and my girlfriend broke up with me.
How do you think it's going? Right? Like, there'll be a lot more blunt with you about it.
Yeah. And but in, yeah, again, so that goes back to the emotional conformity. This is your,
this is how I expect you respond and you should respond that way. And if you launch into something like,
all things are going terrible and blah, then people are like, whoa, dude. Like I was just, you know,
being polite here. Yeah.
Where we think that, oh, that's politeness, but actually what it is is it's just a call for you to conform to the social expectation that you have.
Yeah.
Pretty fascinating shit.
Yeah.
It's just crazy, crazy stuff.
Yeah, a lot of what this creates, though, too, is what they call emotional labor, right?
So if you aren't feeling like you want to have a good conversation with the cashier at the grocery store.
Yeah.
And yet you're kind of, you feel pressured to do that.
like you were just saying, a lot of people aren't aware that they're doing this.
So if you ever leave a situation like that and you kind of just feel exhausted, that's probably like an indication that, hey, you're performing some emotional labor here, right?
And getting over it.
But they also, they found there was this one study where they interviewed customer service people and they interviewed them in individualistic versus more collectivist cultures.
And the more performative people had to be in individualist cultures, the more burnout they experienced, the higher turnover rates and all of that.
But the more conformist they had to be in collectivist cultures during these customer service jobs where they had to deal with these difficult customers and all of that.
They actually felt better about it because it's like they're contributing to the cultural norm, which is social harmony and helping other people out.
So that's pretty crazy too, that it even goes down to that level.
Yeah.
That kind of gets us a little bit into language as well.
And this is pretty fascinating, and there's a whole, whole, like, branch of psychology that
looks at this, and we're just going to touch on some of it here.
But language obviously has a huge role in shaping our emotional lives and the way we express,
obviously expressing your emotions verbally is one way to express your emotions, having the words
for the emotions that you need.
Yeah, I would say like conceptualizing them when you experience them.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
they can even though, as we'll see here in just a minute, they can even kind of help you create
emotions or at least modify them in different ways. So just to give you kind of the, a salient
example, I think, you know, a common example is the word schadenfreude in German, right?
Taking pleasure in someone else's failures or their misfortune, I guess, right? That's a pretty
common one. Most people know that. We don't have a word, a specific word for that in English.
We just use Schadenfreude now.
We actually just took it from the journey.
I just call it joy.
You just call it joy.
I just call it.
Because you love seeing other people suffer.
It's just,
I just call it joy on a Tuesday afternoon.
Okay.
Well,
it's typically towards somebody that you don't like.
But if you're,
yeah,
there's that.
The Japanese also have a word called,
I think it's,
I think it's AMA.
Is that,
isn't that right?
It's this feeling you get
when you are comfortably
dependent on someone else.
So I think of like,
a child and their parent. That's kind of like the feeling, but this can happen between adults
as well. Right. And in Japanese culture, it's a desirable state to have. Whereas like,
you know, in more individualist cultures, we might think, oh, like, that's, there's a positive
connotation of that. That's crazy. We would pathologize it probably. We would pathologize it
more. Whereas they have a word for it and there's a positive connotation for that word. And so it's
experienced more and in more positive settings in those cultures. I've got one for you. Saladagi
in Portuguese.
Okay.
Which is the pleasure of missing something or someone of like, it's kind of, it's similar
to nostalgia, but it's like there's almost like a romantic tinge to it.
There's like almost this like, this like enjoyment of the lack of something of that you like
love or care about.
Interesting.
Okay.
And so, okay, that's interesting because I don't feel like I've.
been able to process that.
I know the feeling you're talking about.
Yeah.
But I haven't been able to process that up until just like these last few years when I'm like,
oh, I miss this person.
And I kind of like, oh, that's kind of nice to miss that.
You kind of enjoy missing them.
I kind of need to miss you sometimes.
Right.
Right.
I've said that to some people.
I need to miss you sometimes.
So it's funny.
It's like it's actually, you know, because in English we think of missing something
or somebody is like a negative experience.
Right.
But in Brazilian and Portuguese culture, it's actually like a very like powerful romantic kind
of like subtly positive thing.
Okay, okay.
Interesting.
Yeah, I have a lot of salvagee for my, my grandmother, you know, or whatever.
Right.
Interesting.
Okay.
Well, I mean, but you also have so, if you have certain words for certain emotions,
you're, you typically can experience those emotions more easily.
But also if you don't have a word for it, there's this one instance I've come across
anyway, it's in Tahitian culture.
So in Tahiti, they actually don't have a word for sadness.
They describe it more as like a physical ailment, basically, like an illness.
Interesting.
You feel tired or like maybe you have some pain somewhere in your body or something like that.
They see it more as like a physical affliction than they do an emotional one.
So they don't even really have a word for sadness or to describe that.
And so I don't know.
That's just interesting to me because having a specific word can enhance your recognition of an emotion but also or can just completely blind.
you to it as well.
Yeah.
Not having a word.
I mean, we'll get into this later when we talk about like physiology, but it makes
me wonder, you know, one of the things you and I have talked about on the previous
podcast, like, not episode, but like the old podcast that we used to do, is kind of the concept
creep of different words.
You know, it's like the definition of anxiety has expanded over the years to include more
and more experiences.
The definition of trauma is expanded over the years to include more and more experiences.
And so it makes me wonder, actually, if.
what a lot of things that are today labeled as anxiety or depression, you know, 20, 30, 40 years ago,
people would have just said like, oh, I'm, I'm just tired or I'm exhausted or I'm like,
I need a break or I need a vacation.
Whereas like today we kind of pathologize it a little bit.
Right.
Yeah.
And that changes our emotional experience.
Right.
Just like you're saying.
Yeah.
Exactly.
That modulates it.
That emphasizes it or de emphasizes it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It has far reaching consequences for that.
And I think part of what you're getting at here, too, is.
Going back to Lisa Feldman Barrett, she has this idea, this paper she put out about conceptual, it's called conceptual act theory.
Okay.
Where these words, they don't just label feelings, but they actually play a part in creating the feeling.
The basic emotion theory, let's step back just a second here.
One of the reasons, what there's like, there are hundreds of studies, if not more, that kind of support it, okay?
That supported in a way.
The early studies and then this paradigm that they developed that was used later on throughout all of these studies was basically you would show somebody a picture of a face that was making an emotional expression of some kind.
So just like you're saying, like a baby, if a baby's crying and screaming, well, the baby's upset.
Right, right.
What they would do, they would show them these pictures of, they'd usually get actors to do an emotion.
And then they would show people these pictures and they would give them these lists,
this list of emotions to say which one is this, right?
Pick it out.
And what they found is that, yeah, people, you know, 80 some percent of the time they would
choose the same word.
Like 80 some percent of people agree that this was what it was.
And that was kind of some evidence for the basic emotion of, say, fear.
Like this, you have an emotion with somebody wide-eyed and like kind of aghast.
And yeah, that's fear, right?
What people like Lisa Feldman-Barratt found, though, is when you didn't give them that word,
you did not give them the option that just told them said,
what is this emotion.
There was very little agreement actually between people when they make it up themselves.
Okay.
So the word,
the language in giving them the word is priming them.
It's giving them a social context and contextual cues about what's going on.
Because it's not just the face.
Yeah.
It's the context of what's going on.
She has in her book,
you see this of it's a woman.
It's a very close up shot of a woman.
And it looks like she's just in agony because,
well, she says, look at this woman who's in agony here.
And then you flip the page over and it's actually Serena Williams after she beat her sister,
Venus.
She's excited.
Yeah.
But and then your your mind flips in that instance once you've learned that.
And you're like, oh, okay.
So it's the context around it.
And language plays this huge role in the context.
There's so when they go out to these tribes and they do these basic emotion test on them,
they show them these different emotions, emotional faces and get them to tell them what they think it is.
when you give them a list of words like that
and translate it into their own language
or sometimes what they had to do too
is they had to explain to them
what this emotion meant in their own language
because they didn't have a word for it
then they would all kind of conform to that
they would conform to that idea
because you've primed them
to think that this is what this means
and so language is a huge
plays a huge role in that
this gets into also the idea
of emotional granularity as well
which is if you have more
precise words or words that kind of distinguish between subtle differences and emotions,
you can experience these emotions differently as well. So somebody who has high emotional
granularity has a lot of different emotion words that they use to describe how they're feeling
versus someone who's just like, I feel bad, I feel good. I feel angry. I feel happy. That's it.
Yeah. Right. So language plays a huge, huge role in that. If we're able to label something,
label an emotion or label an experience around an emotion that influences not only how we experience
that emotion, but how we perceive that emotion in others as well.
So yeah.
I wonder if some of that explains like why talk therapy works, you know, simply because
you are taking like this ephemeral abstracts experience happening inside people's bodies
and brains and forcing them to put label.
around it and define it and like differentiate it from like other experiences that they've had.
And there's like, I guess that that like moderates the intensity of that feeling or like I guess
it's like when you're not able to define something internally, then you feel powerless to it.
But then it's simply in the act of talking about it or writing it down, your brain is like
defining it and structuring it for yourself.
and then once it's defined and structured,
you feel like you can handle it.
Yeah, 100%.
Yeah.
Like, we'll take a kind of stereotypical therapy situation.
Say you just have some ill-filling towards your parents, right?
Just you don't know really what it is,
and you sit down with a therapist,
and you kind of work through that,
and you find out, oh, I actually resent my parents.
I harbor resentment for my parents for X, Y, and Z, right?
For something they did or something,
the way they approached things or whatever it was.
Now that gives you more of a framework to, okay, I can go in and I can handle this or I can address that resentment itself, not just some bad feeling I have that I want to avoid them.
So, yeah, I think you're right.
Yeah.
The language around it is very important for meaning making.
Yes.
That's what it is.
But again, that's just one component of experiencing emotion is the meaning part, the cognitive part that we have.
There's all these other contextual cues that go into it that language can influence definitely.
But yeah, I think that's a huge part of therapy is putting words to emotions.
And just like with little kids too when they're upset, we're like, use your words.
Yeah, yeah.
That's that cliche.
Use your words because we need to delineate what's actually going on here so we can address what's going on here.
Yeah.
Again, the emotional granularity thing I think is pretty important.
If you're somebody who does struggle with just even knowing how you feel, I know I definitely struggle with that for a long time.
I just like sometimes I just like I felt I just felt like shit.
I just feel bad and I didn't know why and I didn't I wasn't really inquisitive about it.
But if you kind of dig into that and start putting emotions, okay, do I feel anxious?
Do I feel depressed?
Do I feel upset?
Do I feel angry?
Just even like going through that and and labeling how you actually feel can actually give you a lot of clarity and ability to address emotions as they come up.
Yeah.
And we've actually, there's a tool for that.
There's this giant wheel that we've included in the PDF guide.
And it starts in the center of the wheel, it starts with kind of those six fundamental emotions.
And then it's like as you get out, further out, it like divides all those up into like subtler and subtler and more specific sub emotions.
I know in therapy, sometimes they'll just, they'll hand that either that wheel or a similar wheel and just have the person look through all of the names of emotions.
There's probably like a hundred of them on it and just say like which one of these resonates, which one of these.
Which one of these like feels similar, sounds similar to what you're feeling at the moment.
And, you know, you go through all these different, you know, there's like despair and sadness and hopelessness and despondency and disgust.
And it's like you eventually stumble upon the right word that's like, ah, that's it.
That's what I'm feeling.
Right.
Yeah, it's kind of like a color wheel too.
Yeah, it is.
Like if, you know.
It's very pretty.
So yeah.
Somebody.
We only put the pretty ones in the, in the PD.
It's aesthetically pleasing.
Yes.
Yes.
Solpodcast.com slash emotions for a very pretty PDF guide.
But I mean, it is like designers, they can tell you the difference between, you know, the four types of blue that are sitting in front of them.
Exactly.
I'm just like, that's blue.
Yes.
I don't know.
Like I can't distinguish between and through.
But if you have the words for it, you can distinguish between these colors, just like you can distinguish between all these different emotions as well and then better address them.
Just like a designer can better use color if they have a.
a framework for it basically, which language is a huge framework for emotional processing.
That could get us into then what researchers call emotional complexity.
Okay.
I think you'll really like this.
This is when you feel more than one emotion at a single time.
For sure.
This is fascinating stuff too, right?
Yeah.
So especially as like Westerners who, you know, we praise, we place reason and logic and
a rationale above everything else.
We want things to be very clean cut.
You're feeling one thing at a time and that's it.
And we want to go through them sequentially and logically and it needs to be clean.
Sort them out.
Yeah.
Anybody who's paying even a modicum of attention to this knows that that's just not how emotional life works.
You could be feeling two opposite emotions at the very same time.
And this is actually culturally influenced as well.
So in more collectiveist cultures, there's what they call dialectical thinking, okay,
which is basically an acknowledgement, not even an acknowledgement, but an expectation that two opposing
things or two different things can be true at the same time.
They expect that.
That's just part of life.
The yin and the yang exist together, right?
Lightness and darkness are two sides of the same coin.
Whereas in more individualistic cultures, again, we want to see it as more clear cut and just one
thing at a time. It's not out of the question in cultures that emphasize dialectical thinking
that you can't feel grateful and resentful towards your parents, like the example I was just
using. That's just to be expected. You're going to be grateful about some things resentful,
and you're going to feel those things at the same time. Loving, you could love someone but feel
trapped in the relationship at the same time. That's probably a very common one. I think a lot of people
feel. For sure. That's probably a silly one. People can actually wrap their heads around. Being
proud of your work, but also being insecure about it. I would even argue that the more
successive you have, the more insecure you get about it. And that's, again, that's kind of this
weird contradiction. But in cultures that emphasize this dialectical thinking, that's just to be
expected. Right. And to me, that's a better way of kind of navigating your emotions. In a culture
like the United States and other individualist cultures, you find that when you don't feel a clean
emotion, you think there's something wrong there too. Or like going back to the job, then you can be
proud of your work but insecure about it. You think something's wrong there. No, that's just how it is.
You think that you shouldn't be insecure or you think that you shouldn't feel trapped in the relationship
with the person you love or you shouldn't love the person that you feel trapped by. We do seem to have
a really hard time holding those two polar opposites at the same time. It was funny. I got very curious
about this and I asked myself, I was like, if that's true, if say East Asian cultures are
better at holding two opposing sentiments at the same time, I wonder if they deal with cognitive
dissonance differently or if they're better at managing it.
For those listening in the last episode about procrastination, we talked a lot about cognitive
dissonance, which is when your beliefs or expectations are contradicted by reality
and the experience of basically believing too contradictory things are true at the same time
is like untenable in most people and and they like freak out and eventually just pick one thing to go with.
So I looked it up and it was it was fascinating.
It kind of tracks to what we've been talking about.
So people in East Asian cultures, they don't feel any less cognitive dissonance.
They just feel cognitive dissonance about different things.
Oh, okay.
And so similarly in that Westerners tend to conform more emotionally but less behaviorally,
Westerners tend to feel more cognitive dissonance around their emotions and expectations and less around their behaviors, whereas people in East Asian cultures feel more cognitive dissonance around the social expectations and their behaviors socially and less around their emotions.
So basically people in those cultures are more comfortable experiencing, say, love and resentment at the same time, but they're way less comfortable, say, you know, doing, being.
nice to somebody today and then being mean to them tomorrow.
Like that they can't handle that they did both of those things.
Whereas a Westerner is like, well, yeah, I was happy yesterday and I was pissed today.
So, yeah, there's no problem with that.
But, you know, it's it's the emotion, the simultaneous emotion in the Westerner that drives them nuts.
Whereas in the East Asian culture, it's the contradictory behavior that drives them nuts.
Okay.
I didn't find that.
So that's interesting.
Yeah.
It's fascinating.
Yeah. You're right though, because like in the Western mind, we want that more, more the clarity, more the conciseness. Like we start to get more like, why can't I make up my mind? Like when you feel that pull emotionally, you're like, oh my God, I can't make up my mind or I'm not over this thing that happened yet or, you know, why does it hurt something in the past still hurt when I'm doing so well? And like you just get, we don't navigate that as well emotionally. But that's interesting from the behavioral.
side where yeah it's like because I think in the west there's we kind of have this expectation that
you should be the same person oh all the time right like it's like right so it's like if I'm happy
if I'm happy with my wife today I should be happy with her all the time you tend to project that
all the way out of the future I should be happy with her if we're with friends I should be happy with her
if we're visiting her family I should be happy with her if we're at a work function or if we're
hanging out on a Friday night whereas I think in and
in East Asian cultures, it's more, there's more of a contextual understanding of like,
you know, you're going to feel different things in different places and like that's totally
normal, but your behavior should be consistent.
Interesting.
Okay.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think, I do think, though, as Westerners, we should probably lean more towards a little bit
of that dialectical thinking.
Yeah.
Just from an emotional standpoint anyway.
And there's a lot of data that supports that.
Yes.
The ability to hold multiple, the complexity of emotions in your mind at the same time is like a sign of good emotional maturity.
Right. Resilience.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You can just navigate a lot more complex situations a lot better that leads into the resilience.
You're more flexible.
You see nuance too.
I've also seen as well like in the East Asian cultures and other collectivist cultures that this dialectical thinking also leads to like kind of just a better understanding of opposing views.
as well. Because again, you're behaviorally, you want more social harmony. And so emotionally,
you are more open to differing views or somebody who disagrees with you. Even if you, like,
you don't, you don't agree with them, but you're still, you're like, okay, I can see where you're
coming from. As long as they're doing the right thing. As long as they're doing the right thing,
as long as they're performing the right behavior. Yeah. Yeah, for sure, for sure. So last thing I want
to talk about when it comes to culture and emotions. I could go on and on and on about that.
And I went ham on this mark.
I spent way too much time because I just found it fascinating.
But kind of the last idea is that your emotions are actually a type of social currency.
Okay.
So again, we kind of have this idea that emotions are personal, that they're just happening within us and that, you know, they're just, they happen on a moment to moment basis.
But actually what's going on is your emotions are signaling to the people around you, you know, are you part of this in group or out group?
The vibe you have like we already talked about, right?
Maybe that manifests in behavior in more collectivist cultures.
Are you part of our in-group or out-group?
Are you going to be a part of the social harmony that's created or not?
When you see somebody being sad, what they're actually doing is they're probably trying
to invite some empathy or some support from someone, right?
Anger is usually you're demanding recognition or accountability from somebody else.
Laughter, for example, that you're trying to create a sense of ease like we talked about earlier
with the Vietnamese kids laughing at your pain.
Well, they were actually trying to create a sense of calm and ease amongst themselves
and inviting more of a closeness, a social closeness to each other.
So emotions can be spent like that, like a currency.
And to be aware of that, I think, is a really important thing where you're going about
because some people don't value the same emotions that you do and you're trying to spend them.
And that's where a lot of conflict comes as well.
I think this makes sense when you, again, when you think of relationships as co-regulation of emotion, right?
So if you're around somebody who is like very well emotionally regulated and generally is in a good mood all the time, that is valuable.
Because their positive vibe and good mood and adaptability is co-regulates your emotions as well.
And so when you think of somebody who's very charismatic or magnetic, I think that's a lot of what's going on, is that they're just exuding such positive emotions that they are co-regulating the people around them.
And so that becomes a valuable currency.
And you're willing to like make sacrifices to be close to that person, to spend time with that person, they hang out with that person.
It's it's, you have incentives to be around them like a social currency.
inversely you have kind of emotional vampires who seem to suck all of the emotions from the people around them constantly and they're this bottomless pit of sympathy and misery and rejection and pity and as a result you feel like you're going broke by being around them and so you just want to get away as much as possible.
I had not heard this term social currency before before we prepared for this episode but I really like it.
It's one of those things that like just intuitively makes sense to me, not just with the
co-regulation thing, but like you see it show up in organizational behavior quite a bit.
It was funny.
I actually, I was having a conversation with a friend like a week ago and his wife works at like
a really one of the biggest corporations in the world.
And this corporation is like currently going through a ton of layoffs.
And so we were just kind of talking about like who's getting laid off at that company and
who's not and how it's kind of like his wife is observing that it's actually kind of funny,
are getting the boot and which ones are being asked this day. And he was telling a story. He said
that she has this guy on her team who's literally been at this company for like 20 years and not a
single person can explain what he does. Like nobody knows. He shows up to a meeting like once or
twice a week. He seems to always be like, you know, on Reddit or like watching YouTube videos.
Like nobody knows what he's doing. He's been in the same position for 12 years. He's like,
he's just chilling. But everybody loves him. Yeah. He's like.
He's totally the culture guy.
Like everybody, he brings donuts and coffee in the morning and he like invites people to parties.
And he's like always got cool stuff going on.
And he's really funny.
And he like, you know, he like brings the energy and the meetings up.
And we were just talking about how it's funny, how it's like this company, which is now gone through multiple rounds of layoffs in the last five years.
And it's like this dude does nothing.
Yet he's still there.
And he's still there.
He's still there.
Because obviously he's obviously.
bringing something. So a question for you. Did your friend, who's wife works for this big
corporation, are the layoffs related in any way to AI? Oh, for sure. Okay. Okay. Which actually
would, which would make sense why this guy, right, because you can't automate. I was just going to
say, you can't automate a good vibe. Maybe that's what we all have to, like, that's our new skill set.
Like they need to start teaching college courses with, yeah, social currency of emotion. Pro pro career
tip for everybody listening. Start bringing donuts and coffee to work. I think you're right. I don't know if this is just me now, too, but like I've gone pretty hard on like the content that I consume now online is a lot of comedians. And I think they've been having a moment, but they've been having a moment for several years now. Yeah. Especially across social media. And it's because of that, like, there's social currency around making people laugh and make people feel good. Yeah. There's literal currency involved here too. You pay to go see this person.
Tell jokes.
Absolutely.
It's insane, right?
But that makes a lot of sense when you consider it in the context of social currency.
So I don't know.
Maybe that's why we all need to be just court gestures going forward.
And that's going to be our job.
Court gesture, super supportive friend, hype man.
And then also, like, I think what you said to a calming presence, you know, you could probably describe, you know, what a
really good therapist does. A really good therapist, it's like 10% intellectual, 90% emotional.
Like really what a good therapist is doing is like co-regulating with you extremely well.
Yeah. Like listening well, sympathizing well. And then like just knowing some of the questions
to ask and, and, you know, where to poke and prod. But like most of it is just being very
emotionally present and attuned and calm. Like being a calming presence.
probably goes way further than like, you know, what school they went to or what certification
they have.
100%. No, absolutely.
That's, yeah, I think that's the definition of a good therapist for sure.
So, yeah.
Well, okay, that wraps up my culture deep dive here.
I went real hard on it.
I think the big takeaway here, though, is just that you need to step back and look at this,
how powerful of an influence culture is on your emotional experience, just the way you perceive
emotions, the way you express your emotions, the emotions you have in the first place, they're all
very, very dependent on the culture that you grew up in, the culture that you're in currently,
and the ones you choose to be in going forward.
Yeah, and culture is fractal, right?
Like your family has a culture, your community as a culture, your country as a culture,
your, in the smaller you get, the more modifiable it becomes.
Right.
Right.
Like you can control your exposure to your family to a certain extent.
You can control the friends you hang out with.
You can control the work environment you're in.
You can control the city you live in.
You can even, you know, if you want to get a little crazy, you can control the country you live in.
So it is modifiable and it is the water we swim in so we tend to not notice it or think about it or overestimate how universal it is.
So speaking of the water that we're all swimming in, I think it's worth taking a moment and kind of digging into the
historical context of the cultures that we come from and how they've approached emotions
throughout history, just so that when we do move into the actual practical takeaways and,
you know, toolkit, so to speak, in the next section, we'll have a little bit more grounding
of kind of where we all came from, where all this came from. So in the West, we've already
talked about how there's been this sense that, A, people are seen as,
atomized individuals. It's, you know, you are you and I am I and we're responsible for
ourselves and ultimately our ability to control ourselves is kind of morally incumbent
upon us. Like that was, we covered that in the procrastination episode about how throughout
Western history, it's if you couldn't control your own actions, if basically if you succumb
to your emotional impulses, you were shamed and judged and seen as a bad,
person. All that stuff, as we covered in that episode, really went back to Plato. Plato had this
analogy of a chariot and two horses. He really framed the human psyche in terms of having your
kind of animalistic urges and then your emotional impulses and then your rational thinking self
was the chariot writer who it was their responsibility to guide and control the horses and make
sure that they were running in the right direction. It's essentially the thinking
brain is in the driver's seat and it's their job to force the feeling brain to come along with
it.
Now, that point of view never really got challenged or changed up until recently.
You see, Aristotle was correct in that he saw it as more of a skill issue, but he still
ultimately saw reason and wisdom as the core virtue that all other virtues stemmed from.
The Stoics really picked up where Plato left off.
They saw living a good life is basically being able to detach from your emotions and act out rationally despite whatever you might be feeling or whatever impulses, cravings you might have.
And this continued on through Christendom.
And I think it's, you know, talking through all of the examples, all the research to cultural research that we went through in the last few sections, you see two themes show up over and over again.
One is the individualism, which comes from the platonic idea of the soul.
We are each a unique soul that lives on in eternity.
And it's the fundamental, immutable unit of an individual.
And then you have this idea of rationality dominating the emotions.
That a high functioning, valuable human in the world is able to control what they feel,
act despite what they feel, suppress what they feel, you know, behavior.
as a reasonable individual.
And the result of this is that it generates a culture that sees negative emotion or emotional
discomfort as weakness.
It sees people who can't control their urges and their desires as morally failing in some
way.
And again, that's very much what the procrastination episode was about.
On the eastern side, you know, Buddhism was all about witnessing your emotions without
necessarily investing in them.
And I would say out of all the ancient traditions, the Buddhists probably got this the most right in that, and we're going to come back to mindfulness techniques later because they are incredibly useful.
It's basically what the Buddhists understood is that just because you feel something doesn't necessarily mean, A, it's true.
B, you have to act on it and C, it means anything.
They seem to really kind of be the only tradition that like really nailed that.
and while they definitely recommended a lot of practices to help people realize that,
there wasn't a whole lot of where to go next after that.
You know, Buddhism does have the Four Noble Truths and the Eightfold Path,
and it's got all these kind of rules or principles of like these are the right things you should be doing.
And there is a concept in Buddhism called Opeka, which means like equanimity or like harmony among all the aspects of the self.
But the, let's just say the how to is like beyond the mindfulness practice isn't really there.
Hinduism really focuses on the idea of acting according to the Dharma or like a higher purpose.
You know, we'll come back to this a little bit later, but it's, it is one thing that shows up,
and I feel like this shows up at some point in every single episode, is that part of what makes
any sort of struggle, emotional or otherwise, more bearable.
is when you feel as though that struggle is moving you towards something or it's for some sort of
worthy cause or higher purpose than yourself.
And then, of course, Confucianism, we've talked quite a bit about it.
Confucianism is where you really see this concept of social harmony through something
called Lee, which is collective rituals.
And Confucianism really based the understanding of self, not in the actual individual.
but in the contribution and the harmony of the group.
And as a result, you see in a lot of the Eastern cultures that they tend to be better at the dialectical thinking, the managing, you know, the internal contradictions.
But at the same time, you do get more emotional suppression.
You do get more behavioral conformity.
Ultimately, the flaw, I think, of all the ancient terms.
traditions is that they all place the thinking brain in the driver's seat. All of them see the
thinking rational mind as kind of the one that should be in charge. I think this is the tricky
thing about managing your emotions is like that intuitively feels very true. Like your thinking brain
is like we've all had this experience a million times of like watching yourself do something
stupid as you're doing it and you're like, there's a part of your brain that's like, wait,
no.
It's just not loud enough.
Yeah, it's like, come back.
No, don't do it.
And like we've all been there.
And I think, you know, so it's not surprising to me that across human cultures, like, people
would assume, like, okay, we just need to make that voice stronger.
And counterintuitively, like, that's not actually the case.
that voice has a place and it is important, but like, it's not a matter of just getting that voice to scream louder and louder.
It's, and that actually ends up backfiring in most cases.
Why do you think, though, that these ancient traditions, why do you think they all kind of converged on that?
What is it about like, because to me, I think there probably was some social utility in that, right?
There was some value in that.
Because when you don't have modern technology, especially modern communication technology,
and you just have the people around you and that's your entertainment, that's what your whole life is, right?
I think you kind of do need to keep a lid on emotions a lot, right?
And so there probably is a place for rationality in those ancient traditions that kind of,
I don't want to say it was a social control, but there was a social regulation mechanism, right?
Probably. I mean, the stakes for anything were higher, you know, so if you get upset and, you know, steal your neighbor's cow, like his family could starve to death.
Right. So it's like any, any sort of impulsive action like that, the stakes were pretty high. It is a little bit paradoxical, though, because if you actually read accounts of medieval or ancient cultures, like people had absolutely.
no self-control.
It was like
the story of history
basically.
It is completely impulsive.
Like, you know,
Stephen Pinker wrote this
great book called
The Better Angels of Our Nature
and like the whole
first hundred pages of that book
is just going through
how violent most of human history was.
Like, brutally violent,
impulsively violent,
like just completely irrationally violent
and across cultures,
like all over the place.
So in many ways,
it was, I guess
emotionality was a much bigger problem back then.
The consequences were much higher.
The stakes were much higher.
And it was, there were social, like serious social consequences.
And so I do think that it was just like, I don't know.
I imagine there was just this constant state of like, guys, get a hold of yourselves.
You know, like fucking get it together, man.
Whereas like in the modern world, I think we definitely do have a more executive function.
we are a lot more self-aware, in some cases, maybe too self-aware.
And so I think, and our emotional impulses and our drives and stuff, like, the stakes are lower, right?
It's like, if my biggest failure emotionally this week is, like, I eat way too much ice cream, you know, like, first of all, that's not unusual for me this week.
Like that's that is probably the worst thing that can happen to me if I'm too emotional one week
Maybe I get into a stupid fight with my wife or you know maybe I like say something mean to
To a friend
But like nobody's gonna die and and and and like nobody's gonna starve and like nobody's gonna get burned at the stake
Because of something I said so I think it's it's our emotional failings really just affect us
Personally more than ever before yeah and
And for that reason, I think maybe we've, we've had enough distance from it to, like,
actually sit back.
And because I think just throughout most human history, people are on damage control.
Yeah, I totally agree with that.
Yeah.
So it was more of an aspiration, I think, really throughout history.
Yeah.
This is what we should be striving for.
And it is super counterintuitive.
Right.
Like the idea that that voice in your head, like the more you shout at yourself to get it
together, the worst you're going to feel about yourself and the harder is going to be to get it
together.
Like, that's almost, that's like a luxury problem.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Like, it's, it's, you don't even have the space to think about that when like half of your kids are
dying before the age of three.
Right.
Basically, what we, what this arrives at is you get to the 19th and early 20th century and
pretty much like across most cultures, you end up with these like, as you said, display
rules in the culture are these standards of conduct of behavior essentially built around three
things.
Suppression, right?
So you just bottle it up, brush it under the rug, pretend it's not there.
Vinting or emotional dumping, which is kind of this hydra-like, sometimes I see it referred
to as like the hydraulic theory of emotion, which is this idea that if you've been suppressing
a bunch of anger, one way to relieve it is to just let it out the same way you would like let
you know, a bunch of steam out of a valve.
And then once it comes out, like, the pressure will drop.
Turns out that's not true.
Yeah.
Turns out venting anger just leads to more anger.
Like, there's no steam inside of you that needs to be let out.
It's just there's like, if you tell yourself that a behavior is healthy, you're just going to be, like, more likely to do more of that behavior in the future.
And then, of course, there's, like, numbing and avoidance, right?
So drinking, overwork, doom scrolling, etc., etc.
These are generally the most, like the default adaptive strategies that we all develop.
And a lot of it depends on where we come from, right?
Like some people's, like I grew up in a household where you did not talk about problems.
It was like, everything's okay, pretend like houses on fire.
It's like, this is fine, you know, it's, you know, it's like, it's like, it's, like, it's,
Like the world could be collapsing and everybody's like pretending like nothing's happening.
Whereas like somebody like my wife's family, it's just fucking sirens and car alarms 24-7, people screaming at each other.
Like everything's a problem.
Everything is drama.
That's not really healthy either.
And then of course you have families where there's a lot of avoidance.
There's a lot of numbing.
There's a lot of drinking and drugs and smoking and all sorts of stuff going on.
So none of these are good.
I also think that this is probably become more of a question in society the last 50 years because we're more and more we're living in a world where like our environment is manipulating how we feel, right?
So if you think of like not even social media, but like mass media, right, news media, newspaper headlines.
And then you get into all the social media stuff and the internet stuff.
You think about stuff like hustle culture and, you know, productivity hacking.
and, you know, obsessing over, you know, the career ladder and all these things.
We talked about toxic positivity.
Like there's a real kind of therapy culture that's emerged out of self-help where
people have this unrealistic expectation that they're supposed to feel good all the time
and that if they're not, like, something's wrong.
And then, of course, there is the classic, you know, there's still that underlying narrative
that being emotional, especially if you're a man, being emotional, revealing vulnerable emotions makes you weak.
It means something's wrong.
It means there's a flaw going on.
And so I think there's just been a lot more intellectual investigation into this, and rightfully so, because it is, I think it's just affecting the modern individual in a completely different way than it affected the ancient individual.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
in mass media, like you said, it's gotten so good at emotional manipulation that we don't even
notice it most of the time. So yeah, I think there is just a much more of an intellectual curiosity
around it for that, those kind of reasons anyway. Yeah. Yeah. All right. So now we have like a pretty
full understanding of what emotions are, why they matter, how they interact with us personally,
with society at large, with our culture,
we have a decent understanding of where they came from,
what affects them, what improves them.
So now we want to talk about building that emotional toolkit.
How do we develop the skills
to better manage the emotions in our life?
And so what I want to do is I'm going to go through
four schools of thought around emotional regulation
or emotional mastery,
the heart, the head,
the soul and the body.
And we're just going to pick and choose
the most evidence-based and validated stuff
from each one. We'll talk about
where each school thought came from,
what they contributed, what sort of ideas they had,
and then also what we can take away from them.
I'd also like to mention that we have
a online community that works through
all these episodes together as a group.
It's called Momentum.
So if you're listening to this episode
and you're like, my God, these two guys are so handsome.
I would love to work on this in my own life.
I would love to take all of the stuff that they're saying
and apply it to my own life.
We have broken that down for listeners.
We have broken everything down into a 30-day challenge.
You can take it one day at a time.
Every day includes one small exercise.
You have a whole community of people
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I think last month we had over 1,000 people
working on the procrastination track together.
It's becoming a really, really amazing experience.
So if you want to check that out, go to www.
Find Momentum.com, and you can get set up there.
So we got four schools of thought.
I'm going to start with the heart.
And this is simply because chronologically, it came first.
And as with seemingly everything, it starts with Freud.
It's always Freud.
You know, Freud was the pioneer.
the genius historical figure that it figured out that much of our behavior is driven by the unconscious.
I mean, you could probably argue that he was the first one to suggest that the feeling brain is driving the car and the thinking brain is just trying to figure out where they are on the map.
This was completely unconventional at the time.
It was seen as absurd.
It was very contrarian.
But really the other incredible thing that he figured out is talk therapy, as we discussed earlier.
Freud really figured out that if you can get people to verbalize their inner world, their inner sentiments,
those whips of feelings and impulses, that they start to lose their control over them.
That for some reason, verbalizing all this stuff, it's.
starts to give the thinking brain a little bit more leverage, and it starts to build a bridge
of communication between the two sides and bring more clarity into one's life. And it helps people
to not feel so dominated by their emotions, but rather feel collaborative with their emotions.
The problem is that Freud took a good concept way too far, right? So I sympathize because I think
it's easy to understand like why he thought this way. But basically he looked at it and he said,
okay, well, if you get people to start verbalizing, you know, all of the feelings and thoughts
that they've been suppressing for a long time, it has this real healing impact on them. There's
something kind of magical about it. So what if we dig deeper? What if we dig, you know, really
into like the unconscious stuff that like they're not even, they're really not aware of, right? Like,
let's start digging into dreams.
Let's start digging into fantasies.
Let's start digging into like free association between concepts and stories.
And that's where you start getting into all Freud's weird shit, right?
That's where you start getting into, you know, the different complexes and, you know,
some, a lot of the mythology that young and Joseph Campbell carried the torch on, like came out of that.
But it's like Freud ended up in some very strange and awkward places that like haven't really held up over time simply because it depends.
It turns out that a large portion of the feeling brain is just a free association machine.
It just like it just throws concepts together and sees what happens and it like doesn't necessarily mean anything.
Right.
It's just stuff.
I'll tell the story real quick.
Sure.
because I just heard this about Freud and it illustrates how he would get something right
and then his interpretation would be so wrong.
And it's, I don't know, it's tangentially related, I guess, to emotions.
But Freud thought that one of the great civilization, civilizing forces in human evolutionary history
was fire, right?
We'd sit around a fire and that helped to civilize us because we had to share food.
we had to look at each other at night, you know, too.
And so he's like, you know, that's a monumental shift in human evolution was fire.
But the reason for the civilizing that he gave anyway was because men had to really fight the urge not to piss on the fire.
That was what civilized men was when we were sitting around.
We had to realize that we couldn't pee on the fire anymore.
Oh.
Right.
So it's like he was right directionally like, oh, fire actually probably was a big civilizing force in our evolution because we had to,
learn how to get along around a fire, but it wasn't because men couldn't control themselves
and not piss on it.
I just thought that was, I just learned about that story.
They thought that was funny.
That's so Freud.
Yeah, it's very Freud.
That is so Freud.
It involves penises.
Of course.
Yeah.
Of course.
So, yeah.
Yeah, it's, it's, so what's interesting about Freud's discovery is that not only is it verbalizing
those unconscious emotions makes them conscious and then they lose their power over you,
he had a nephew named Edward Bernays
who took some of the ideas of the early psychoanalysts
and ran with them to really discover and understand
that it also works the other way,
that you can use language to kind of manipulate people unconsciously,
that you can throw certain words out
and people will unconsciously start wanting something
or start feeling a certain way
without being aware of the language that has manipulated them.
And just a fascinating twist of history, Edward Bernays went on to essentially found the fields of publicity and marketing.
He was like the original massive New York marketer who was hired for millions of dollars by all these firms to like associate things like cigarettes with libido and to generate commercials that made housewives feel like, you know, baking goods made them better mothers.
And it's like all this marketing talk that goes on now around like brand and sentiment and all the free association that people make, you know, between like Coca-Cola and childhood and McDonald's and, you know, toys and all this stuff, all started with Edward Bernays and then led back to Uncle Siggy, as he called them.
So psychoanalysis was kind of the early, earliest or first form of therapy of generally there's like a class of therapy known as psychodynamic therapy, which is,
Essentially just therapy that addresses your emotions directly.
So it's like any sort of deep emotional problem that has been ongoing in your life.
And you just really need to unpack all these feelings.
You use the example earlier of like somebody who like just feels bad around their parents and like doesn't understand why.
This is the sort of therapy that tends to do really well with those sorts of problems.
It's like the psychodynamic school is like let's sit down.
Let's talk about how you feel.
And then we're going to talk more about how you feel.
and then we're going to talk more about how you feel,
and we're just going to keep digging and digging and digging
until you're able to start making sense of some of this stuff.
Psychoanalysis really kind of went out of fashion for a while,
and rightfully so,
because it started to get associated with a lot of strange stuff,
and I think it overreached quite a bit.
And so in the mid-20th century, people kind of abandoned it.
But around the 1980s and 90s, you know,
people like Leslie Greenberg came back and started revisited,
idolizing it and kind of making it more practical and useful and really trying to help people
get a handle on not only understanding their own emotions, but also like learning how to direct
those emotions in a useful way.
But in terms of the emotional toolkit that we want to build, the skill sets that we want to
work on for ourselves, I'd say the biggest thing that we want to take away from this school
of thought, the psychodynamic school of thought, is,
is that verbalization, right?
And it can be with a therapist, it can be with a friend,
it can be through journaling,
it can be through anything.
But it's like that consistent practice
of speaking out the emotions that you're feeling,
finding some sort of logical container to hold them,
it really does have this incredible healing effect,
or at least it alleviates some of the burden
that often comes along with a lot of the emotions
that we carry around.
and we feel less weighted down by them, less controlled by them.
The second school thought is the head.
And this is the cognitive behavioral approaches.
And this really started out in the 1950s with Aaron Beck.
It's interesting because by this point, psychoanalysis had kind of played out.
Like, it's kind of like you said, everybody agreed, like, the basis of this stuff is true.
Like, there is, like, we are very much driven by our subconscious design.
and emotions. And it is very important to develop an awareness around those things. But like,
come on, dude. Kissing on the fire. Seriously. Is this really what's going to like fix people's
depression? You know? And Aaron Beck was sitting around and he was thinking of like how there
had to be a better way. He saw it in terms of a triangle. And that is basically your thoughts,
your feelings and behaviors all interact with each other. Your behaviors will drive your
feelings and your thoughts. Your thoughts will drive your feelings and your behaviors and your feelings
will drive your thoughts and behaviors. And so he looked at that and he was like, for a person to change and
improve, all three of those have to improve. You can't just learn more and then expect your life to
improve. You know, it's like you can read as many books as you want about diets, but until you
stop, until you behave differently, you're never going to lose weight or have a six-back.
You can't just change how you feel.
You could go out and do a bunch of heroin or lie to become delusional and tell yourself that you're like the queen of Monaco.
But like until your thoughts and your behaviors change, like nothing's really changed.
And then even your behaviors, you can go out into the world and you can do different things.
But if you still feel awful about yourself and you still think awful things about yourself, then like what's the point?
Has anything really changed?
So like really deep personal change comes through all three of those things at the same time.
Now Beck really believed that each of those things could be an entry point into the other two.
If you can get somebody to feel differently, which is the psychodynamic approach,
you get them to feel differently, then they'll behave differently and then they'll start thinking differently or vice versa.
They'll start thinking differently and then maybe they'll behave differently.
Beck looked at it and he said, you know, probably the simplest entry point is actually
through the thoughts. It's actually through looking at the narratives and stories that people say
about themselves and their experiences and looking at how those things could be rewritten or
reframed in a way that's a little bit more healthy and a little bit more reasonable and it like
makes the desired behaviors more likely to happen and makes the the feelings, the bad feelings
less likely to happen. And so this is where you start to get like cognitive reappraisal as it's
become known. And like a simple version is, you know, somebody says, wow, I'm such a, like, I'm failing at this.
I tried this thing three times and I failed all three times. Like, God, I'm such a loser.
Whereas you can go back and rewrite that script and say, I'm learning three times. I've done the thing
three times. I failed three times. But each time I learn something different, therefore I'm getting better.
And that simple cognitive reappraisal
of the same exact experience
can result in different feelings
and then ideally ultimately
results in different behaviors.
Now CBT has this like whole
structure that
they've built out over the decades
around these cognitive reappraisals.
One of the things that they do that is super useful
is pointing stuff out called cognitive distortions
which are basically fucked up
and inaccurate stories
that we all tend to tell ourselves.
Like they're like patterns that
seem to emerge a lot.
So one of them is like catastrophization.
It's like when something small goes wrong, assuming that it's the end of the world or that like,
oh my God, I embarrassed myself once.
So like nobody's ever going to like me ever again.
They're basically irrational stories that are over indexed on our negative feelings and that
don't actually reflect reality.
And so learning and understanding the cognitive distortions can be really useful to understand
like where our stories can get screwed up and where we can kind of reappraise them and find better ones.
There's this whole school of cognitive behavioral approaches.
I personally think it emerged as the most successful simply because of its consistency and it's
how systematic it was.
Like it really is a framework that is easily teachable and transferable from therapist to
therapist. And it's the sort of thing that like two completely different therapists can kind of
run through it and it and get very similar results, which is something that's not true about
psychodynamic therapy. Psychodynamic therapy is so emotional laden that like so much of it
depends on the therapist particular like emotional abilities or ability to sympathize or
recognize certain tendencies or ask the right questions. Or CBT, it's like, I'm, I don't know. I'm
I don't want to call it cookie cutter, but like, it is a system and a framework that, like, you can run through with anybody theoretically.
Right.
There was another framework around this time that came out called Rational Emotive Behavioral Therapy, R-E-B-T from Albert Ellis.
He had a little framework called the ABC framework.
So you have the A is the activating event.
It's the thing that happens to you.
B is your belief about that event.
and then C is the emotional consequences,
how you end up feeling about that event.
And his point was that you can kind of train yourself
to have a relatively large gap
between those three steps, right?
Like, a thing can happen to you
and you don't necessarily have to have a belief about it.
You don't have to decide anything about it necessarily.
And then even if you do have a belief about it,
you don't necessarily have to decide
whether it's good or bad or upsetting or horrible.
Every time I see REBT, it reminds me of this, I guess it's a Chinese proverb.
I don't know.
It's like one of these little anecdotes that you see all these places and it's like,
seems very profound and everything.
But I always think of it because I really like it.
So there's like a Chinese farmer.
He's super poor, like dirt, dirt poor.
And he only owns one horse.
And one day the horse becomes untied and like walks away.
And so his only horse is gone.
And the son is like, oh my God, dad, this is a disaster.
our only horse
like we're so screwed
and the father looks at him and he says
good luck, bad luck,
I don't know.
So the son goes looking for the horse
and eventually finds the horse
and he finds the horse
and he finds the horse in like half a dozen other horses
and he manages to bring all the horses back
and so now they have seven horses on the farm
and he goes to his dad
he's like I can't believe it. Look at this
we have seven horses now like we're so rich
and his dad goes good luck
bad look
who knows
and then sure enough
the boy is training the horses
and trying to like tame them and everything
and one of the horses is like really wild
and he's like bucking around and everything
and he throws the kid off the horse
and he breaks his leg
and the kid is like oh my god this is horrible
I can't work now
his dad says well good luck bad look
who knows and then the army comes
an army is conscripting for a war
and they come and they look at the sun
and they say well it's too bad his leg is
broken. Otherwise, he could be a good soldier. And the son's like, oh my God, dad, I can't believe it. I
don't have to go to war now. Dad says, good luck, bad luck. Who knows? Anyway, the story goes on and on and on.
And the point is, is that like, you don't have to necessarily ascribe what is good or bad.
Like, deciding what is good or bad, it's a decision you're making, however subtle it is,
without noticing. And I think the cognitive reappraisal piece is the thing that the Stoics got
at that I think is accurate. I don't love the way they describe it, but I do think it is what they got at
is that, like, you can kind of rewrite the narrative around, you know, what happens to you in a way
that is adaptive and promotes, you know, good behavior or self-belief. Seneca has this great
quote where he says, you know, it's the, we suffer more in imagination than reality. And I, like,
I've always taken that quote to mean that most of what we are upset about,
about is not the thing that happened. It is the story and all the meeting that we like ascribe to the
thing that happened. And so this whole school of thought is still super relevant, incredibly useful.
I think CBT kind of has the highest batting average in terms of therapeutic modalities go.
It's particularly useful for anxiety and in light depression, which everybody has anxiety
and light depression these days. So I think that's why it's become so popular as well.
And I think this is another tool for the toolkit, right?
Is this cognitive reappraisal?
Is this development of the ability to look at something that's happened to you and then ask yourself, you know, if you're upset about it, ask yourself like, well, is that true?
What else could it be?
You know, what would this mean if it wasn't true?
What if this was actually a good thing that was happening to me?
What would that mean?
What would need to be true for that to be true?
And it's just, it's a useful exercise.
And it's a useful skill that I think we should all have in our toolkit.
But this brings us to our third school thought, which is the soul.
CBT was taking off, R-E-B-T, psychodynamic therapy was still around.
You get to the 80s and 90s, you have all these different modalities of therapy.
Therapy's starting to become mainstream.
It's starting to become a, it's not just for crazy people anymore.
And something really interesting started to happen around this time as well, which is Eastern
spirituality and religion.
arrived in the Western world.
So there are a couple therapeutic modalities that emerge kind of in this later period.
It's sometimes called like the third wave of therapy.
The first wave is kind of this psychoanalysis and psychodynamic school.
The second one is the cognitive behavioral school.
And this is the third wave starts integrating some of these mindfulness practices
and more kind of eastern sensibility into the work.
And the first one is one called DBT, which is dialectical behavioral therapy.
Now, we just had a whole conversation about thinking dialectically, and that's very much
what dialectical behavioral therapy is based on.
It's basically CBT plus sitting with contradictions and paradoxes and getting comfortable with
them, right?
Very zen, yes.
Super zen.
So dialectical therapy is all about holding two opposites in your mind at the same time.
It's the dialectical thinking.
And as I said earlier, like it turns out that there's a very good.
There's a lot of great data showing that this is very healthy for people.
So just to give you an example is that you should both accept yourself as you are and you should want to get better.
That is a seeming paradoxical thing, but both of those two things are true and they are in tension with one another.
Another one is you want to be vulnerable and open to experiences, but you also want to protect yourself and be safe.
both of those two things are true.
You want to cultivate an independent identity, do things for yourself, but you also want to have interdependence and rely on others as well because that makes a nice healthy life.
So it actually kind of gets back into the value stuff that we talked about in the values episode about how everything is a tradeoff.
It's not about a good value versus a bad value.
It's about having two good values that are actually kind of contradictory or intention.
with one another and then managing that trade-off.
Like understanding that the more you assert your individualism, the more that's going to
strain your relationships or your sense of community in your life and being okay with that,
right?
The more you emotionally open yourself up and be vulnerable, the more you're going to open
yourself to being hurt by people.
So it's that kind of realism and paradox that I think by default, people tend to
to avoid.
Like, we don't like thinking about those things.
We tend to be like, I want to be independent and I want to have good relationships or, or I
want to accept myself and I want to change all the time, right?
Like, it's, it's hard for us to, to weigh both of those things simultaneously.
And then a little bit later, we get to my personal favorite modality of therapy,
which is acceptance and commitment therapy, ACT.
and ACT is, and the idea is that A, you accept all of your experiences as they are, all of your
emotions, everything that happens, it's like the first step is acceptance and becoming okay with it.
And then the second thing is like realistically looking at your options and how you can, you know,
approach different, the each problem in your life and finding some higher value or purpose to commit to
that makes that problem feel worthwhile.
And I mean,
ACT is like,
the overlap of ACT in my work is like
very, very large.
It might be the thickest Venn diagram
of any psychological modality
in terms of like the stuff that I write.
It is the combination of like
Eastern mindfulness and spiritual awareness
and then like Western existentialist thought
of like find the thing that matters
and then be willing to suffer for it.
make a commitment to it. Ultimately, the truth, the profound truth that these mindfulness-based
techniques or meditation or just Eastern spirituality in general, like the really profound truth
that that school brings with it is that emotions are visitors. They are not enemies. They are not
permanent. They are not, you're not broken. There's nothing wrong with you. Like emotions are just,
they're like the weather.
They come, they go.
Sometimes they're good.
Sometimes they're bad.
They don't necessarily mean anything.
You get to decide what they mean,
and you get to decide how to act in response to them.
Do you think that's specifically that there?
Is that one of the biggest benefits of meditation
when it's done successfully, I think,
is you notice the thoughts and emotions that come and go,
and then you notice them go.
You notice them come in,
you notice them go out and you see that impermanence.
Do you think you've meditated a lot more than I have, I guess.
So what is the benefit there?
Absolutely.
So before I was aware of like rational mode of behavioral therapy,
I remember my Zen master back in Boston describing it as a widening gap.
He was like, you know, the more you meditate.
So it's like if you take somebody who has basically no self-awareness, right,
They instinctively respond to whatever happens to them.
You know, it's like a person with zero self-awareness is going to be like, well,
it's not my fault.
I punched the wall.
Like, I stub my toe, right?
It's just like impulse reaction, impulse reaction, impulse reaction, impulse reaction.
And generally, like, what happens, the more we develop an understanding of ourselves and our feelings and our internal world,
a small gap starts to open up between impulse and action, right?
And it's like, impulse happens.
You're like, okay, this annoying thing happened.
Oh, I really want to punch that wall.
And then it's like, if the gap gets wide enough, you can stop yourself.
Right.
You're like, oh, wait, no, don't do that.
Right.
And I remember my Zen master saying he was like the one of the benefits of meditation is he used to call it widening the gap.
He was like, watch the gap get wider to the point where it's like something happens to you.
And eventually the gap is so wide that you're just like you can just play in the empty space in between
You can sit there you can be the the Chinese farmer you can be like is this a good thing? Is it a bad thing? Should I decide?
Does it mean anything? Does it mean anything? Yeah, you know? Am I going to do something about it? You know, it's like you're just playing in that gap and
You know, when I did come across RABT and and I saw that I was like oh yeah
The ABC's the yeah yeah. That's like exactly
Like a lot of the
I think a lot of this stuff
is getting at that at that
Right like they're just getting at it at different angles
So like mindfulness is really
Developing the the
Internal perception
The self-awareness to like see the gap
emerge between stimulus and response
Or see the entry point to the
You know thought-feeling behavior triangle
Okay
And I think you know
the cognitive reappraisal is really only becomes possible
when that gap gets wide enough to do it.
And then I think, you know,
the psychodynamic stuff,
the talk therapy is also widens that gap
because it's like the more aware you become of those emotions,
the more you talk through them,
the more you re-experience them,
the less of a hold that they have on you,
the less triggering they are,
and the more that gap widens
and the more you're able to do cognitive re-appraisal,
The more you're like able to kind of look at your own mind and try to understand everything.
So like all of these things are synergistic.
And again, it's like why we're going to hammer on the toolkit metaphor, no pun intended.
Because it's like none of these things by the self are going to solve your emotional issues.
But the same way like a hammer is not going to fix your house or a screwdriver is not going to fix your house.
But when you have like a hammer, a screwdriver, a saw, a wrench, you know, the full toolbox.
then it's like, okay, now I can fix anything, you know?
Yeah.
Yeah, and I think too that it's just like a, it just seems to me that's a big part of just
emotional maturity is widening that, is learning how to widen that gap.
Correct.
I mean, that's been my experience anyway, where things I've seen in my past where I've been
super reactive and now, okay, now I do stop and that gap is widened up and I can't
look at the middle part before reacting to it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And it's funny, you know, we haven't used that term yet, emotional maturity.
because really what that is is just somebody who is emotionally skillful.
Right.
Emotional maturity.
You know, it's like somebody who has perspective on themselves and on the world and isn't hijacked by their emotions constantly.
But it's funny because, like, I don't think maturity is the right word.
Okay.
I think skill is the right word.
I think these things are skills.
And I think when you look at somebody who's immature, it's somebody who hasn't learned the skills.
The same way somebody who hasn't, like, learned how to, like, I don't know.
manage their finances or, you know, hold down a job we would describe as immature, you know,
a person who can't control their anger or, you know, is anxious and inappropriate times,
is or blames everybody else for their problems. Like, you know, it's like, I think these are all
just skill issues. Okay. Yeah. Yeah. We don't need to add the extra judgment of maturity in there.
Yeah, the maturity thing, it inserts that morality. Okay. You know, okay. You know, of like,
you can't control yourself. You're like a child, you know.
Which might be true.
Yeah, there's some parallel there, but we can do without the judgment.
I get that.
Yeah, yeah.
Okay.
That brings us to the last school thought, which is the most recent, which is kind of funny
because you would think this would be maybe the most ancient.
But anyway, the body, somatic approaches.
It's funny, the mind-body stuff, you know, the mind and body are not separate.
Even though neuroscience has known that, psychologists have known that for multiple decades now,
it feels like we're just now actually getting to the point of doing some really frontier research
on how those interactions actually happen.
And it's funny because this is all the kind of touchy-feely woo-woo stuff that I grew up hearing
about that I was like, that's ridiculous.
You know, stuff like how gut health affects your emotions and how like supplementation
can like help you feel better in the morning and how like anxiety can be able to
The vitamin deficiency.
Turns out there's a lot of truth to that shit.
And it's still, like, we're still discovering a lot of this stuff, particularly around
the gut health stuff.
But, like, it is, it's a real thing.
And so this is the section where I annoy everybody listening by saying that one of the most
effective ways to manage your emotions is diet, exercise, and getting good, plenty of sleep
at night.
Sorry.
I'm sorry, everybody.
I'm sorry.
Yeah.
But it really is.
I mean, and it's crazy, too, because in many ways, this is the simplest lever, right?
Sleep especially.
Sleep is like, if there's a single thing that can impact your emotional stability on a day-to-day basis,
the number one thing is probably sleep.
Like, if you're underslept, you're going to get emotionally hijacked so much quicker.
That gap between impulse and reaction is going to shrink to nothing.
You're going to make terrible decisions.
You're going to be cranky.
You're going to be impulsive.
You know, everything else we're talking about is kind of just window-dress.
If you're not taking care of yourself and getting enough sleep.
There was an interesting meta-analysis about a year ago.
It looked at every intervention imaginable on mild depression
and everything from all of these therapeutic modalities that we've talked about
to antidepressants to, you know, all sorts of different behaviors.
And the number one thing was dancing.
Dancing?
Dancing.
You mean just like dancing improved depression?
Really?
Dancing.
Dancing.
Okay.
Physical movement.
Like scored higher than antidepressants.
Yeah.
Scored higher than CBT.
Literally just fucking dancing.
There's something in me that just wants to say bullshit.
Like yeah.
So I get it.
Like that's what we're up against here.
Yeah.
I, yeah.
It's like it's physical movement.
Right.
Okay.
But yeah, when you put it that way, yeah.
It's physical movement, and then when you break down...
Drew, you just need to dance.
You just need to dance, too.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Dance party. I mean, it probably would improve your mood, but not 100% agree.
After a workout, I feel great, sure.
Yeah, but when you break down, so physical movement was number one.
And then when you broke down, when you like zoomed in, when you double-clicked on physical
movement and you, like, looked at all of the different movements, dancing was number one.
Okay.
Exercise was number two.
walking was like number three and like all of them shot at a higher percentage than all the popular
interventions yeah all the CBTs and the RABTs and the antidepressants and all that stuff I guess
the way I've always looked at it though too is like those aren't going they're not going to like
solve say depression or they're not going to you know fix your emotions but they're going to
prepare you a lot better to handle your emotions right is I yeah they set the stage for you to be able
to do it okay we've talked to
about two things, right? One is, A, emotions are a full body experience. They're not just
happening in your mind. They're happening in your body. And B, they are a biological feedback mechanism
to promote adaptive behavior. And so the goal of emotions is not to get rid of them or get more of
them. The goal is to simply adapt to them as effectively as possible. It makes sense that if your
emotions are a biological feedback mechanism that happen across your body, across systems, across the
nervous system and the cardiovascular system and all the systems, then it makes sense that maintaining
those systems, those physical systems, is going to make you more adaptive to your emotions,
right? Like if your cardiovascular system is all fucked up and your nervous system is all fucked up
and your digestive system is all fucked up.
And then a bunch of anxiety shows up,
you're probably not going to get the right signals
and then you're not going to react to those signals.
And then like it's just going to be, it's going to make,
and then your inability to react to those signals
are going to cause like all sorts of cognitive,
you know, narratives and stuff
that promote even more anxiety
and like you just get caught lost in this spiral.
So it's like obnoxiously simple,
but it's, I would say it's equally as important.
Makes a lot of sense, too.
I mean, but Lisa Velman-Berra in her book,
how emotions are made, which we've referenced several times now,
she talks about the body budget and how that influences emotions
and how constructed emotions are a part of that.
So your body has a budget for the limited resources that has the energy,
glucose, whatever.
And if it's not running efficiently and you haven't slept well,
you haven't, your body's not moving well,
you have digestive issues, whatever it is,
that all goes into your emotional experience
It's because your body is budgeting resources for those things
instead of you being able to handle an emotional experience.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I don't know about you.
Like, so this is something that only,
we talked about how meditation improves interoception,
which is that the ability to like sense what's going on in your body.
One of the things I remember back when I started meditating a lot,
one of the first things that happened is I started,
and I still do sometimes,
I started mixing up physical ailments
for emotions.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Like still to this day sometimes, if I get indigestion, I feel anxious.
And I think I'm anxious about something.
And then it's like, oh, no, just that burrito ate.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, in Lisa Feldman Barrett's book, she has this great example of, uh, she got,
and during graduate school, she got asked out for a lunch date.
And she went out with this guy.
And she's like, I wasn't really attracted to him, but I went out with him, whatever.
And then during lunch, I was like, oh, I started to get like this kind of anxious,
not in my stomach.
I was like, maybe I am attracted to this version.
Wow.
And then she goes home and immediately throws up.
She had the flu is what it was.
But she mistook that for some level of attraction for somebody else.
So, yeah, you can definitely get mixed up with these physical sensations and emotional states are definitely very, very intertwined.
It's not mind and body.
They're all one thing.
It's all one thing.
Right.
They're synergistic.
Yes.
It's like the healthier your body is, the more adaptive your emotions are going to be, the more adaptive your emotions are.
the more clear-headed you're going to think, the better decisions you're going to make,
the better actions you're going to take, the better your body's going to be.
So it's like it's an upward spiral or it's a downward spiral.
Yeah, we just have this propensity to think in dualistic ways.
There's mind and body.
There's spirit and there's physicality.
And the more you pay attention, the more you're like that, there's no separation between the two.
Yeah.
That I think is kind of the last major tool in the tool chest.
We've talked about a lot of different stuff.
One of the things, you know, when talking about integrating all these things, I think, you know, the goal isn't to necessarily like, I know we've said this a few times, but it's not necessarily to like overcome an emotion.
Like a lot of times that language gets used, like overcome your anxiety or deal with your anger.
You know, really it's more, I think adaptation is probably the most accurate word.
It's like, don't deal with your anger.
Leverage your anger, right?
If you're angry about something, like turn that into something productive.
Use that energy and harness it in a productive direction.
If you're feeling sad, like use that to evaluate the things that you need to evaluate.
If you're feeling anxious, like use that to motivate you to move and take action.
Ultimately, emotions, the whole purpose is for them to generate a new behavior.
Like, you are supposed to, they are a signal that change needs to happen in some shape or another.
Just the whole mentality of emotions that you need to defeat, overcome, master, dominate, like, whatever, add whatever verb you want to add is probably misguided.
But yeah, I think, I think frankly, like, this is, to me, this is the most distilled usefulness of these kind of four different clusters of schools of thought.
like obviously all these modalities have different individual techniques you know um i think
the cognitive distortions in cbt are like super useful i think the defense mechanisms and
psychoanalysis are also super useful understanding like how your your emotions can uh how you
protect your emotions and your your beliefs and your predispositions with uh irrational thoughts
there's a lot of tools to go around but like ultimately at the end of the day i feel
Like the most important things are verbalizing what you're feeling.
Like really bring what's unconscious into the conscious, cognitive reappraisal, rewrite the story, figure out, you know, what's the meaning that you're attaching to this thing and does it mean something differently potentially?
Third one is mindfulness, self-awareness, getting a grip on like, you know, what you're experiencing in the moment, widening the gap between impulse, stimulus and response.
and then finally
just a basic
physiological health.
Move your body, get enough sleep.
You know, we didn't talk about
substances.
You know, we talked briefly
at the top of the show
about the neurotransmitters
and dopamine and serotonin and everything.
I think the physiological side
is where this comes in as well, right?
Like, you can use something like alcohol
or, you know,
even an antidepressant
to like to temporarily lift your mood or change your emotional state,
but you are introducing a new physical substance into your physical system.
And so it's it is going to change the balance of adaptation within your system.
And in the case of something like drugs or alcohol,
like that's going to have second and third order effects.
It's going to have long term consequences, you know,
especially something like alcohol.
Like you are, you're harming your body's ability to regulate in the long term to potentially regulate moderately better in the short term.
Right.
And it's very short term.
In the very short term.
So it is useful to look at things like that.
And you could even make an argument for things like, you know, video games or gambling, doing the same thing.
Like you're, you're, they are short term, like emotional regulation hacks that potentially create like long term compulsive behaviors or, or, you're, you're, they're, you're,
emotional regulation hacks that potentially create like long-term compulsive behaviors or long-term
dysregulation.
So let me give an example of this toolkit.
Okay.
So my parents were visiting a couple weeks ago.
Good opportunity for emotional regulation, huh?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
If you ever need to practice emotional regulation, have the parents in town for a three-day weekend.
So my stepmother and I, we get along really well now.
Yeah.
But for a long time, we didn't.
Yeah.
And there are still, like, sensitive topics, we'll say.
Right.
That come up occasionally.
That used to trigger me.
Like, there are certain opinions that she has or things that she will say that, you know,
10 years ago would quickly end up in a pretty feisty argument.
And occasionally they come up.
And so they were in town this past weekend.
And, you know, she said a couple things.
And it's, I do think the thing I've gotten really good at.
is A, I have a very strong awareness of like where those triggers are, right?
So in some, sometimes in the psychological literature, you see this, you see this term, the
amygdala hijack, which is basically like just getting triggered.
It's just like a suit, like something that's close to your trauma or your like, you know,
some very, very negative experience in your past.
And it's like anything around that subject or that reminds you of that thing.
When it's touched, it's like you, the gap between stimulus and response strengths to nothing.
Right.
You're just like gone.
I'm very aware of where those places are in my life at this point of like I know I have like a very wide gap on most things.
And then the few things that I don't have a wide gap on, at least I don't, I'm aware of where those things are.
And so I'm like kind of ready for them.
So first one, it's just mindfulness and awareness.
The second one, when she says something, one of the things that I've learned to do is, you know, for a long time, I used to take it personally.
Like she would say something that I found, personally found offensive or rude.
And I took it personally.
And it took me many, many, many years to realize that, like, some of her, in my opinion, fucked up ideas are really like, they're not about me.
They're not personal at all.
They're about her, right?
Like, they're actually part of a worldview that keeps her feeling safe and secure.
And so, like, understanding that that cognitive reappraisal of, like, what her words actually mean,
that they actually have nothing to do with me, that it's actually all about maintaining a safe and comfortable worldview for herself.
Like, that takes a lot of the sting off of it, right?
And so I'm, like, less likely to react and create a bunch of drama.
The other thing I've learned, since I have widened that galley,
enough and developed enough of an awareness around what's going on, it's given me the space to
enact a better behavior. So whenever she brings up one of these topics, I just artfully
changed this.
You gently redirect.
Yeah.
I'm like, oh, that's really interesting. Hey, you know what the crazy thing I saw on TV last week
was? You know, and then it's just like we're off to the races.
And then finally, and we're going to get to this in our last section here, my wife is an
amazing support shield and ally.
She's also aware of these moments and these subjects.
She knows how to deflect them.
She knows how to stick up for me in my stead in a way that's not, you know, not going
to cause drama.
And also, you know, when my parents leave, I can vent to her and, you know, confide in
her and she'll listen and she understands and she empathizes.
So we're going to get to the importance of relationship.
and the co-regulation that happens within relationships,
because it does deserve its entire own section.
But I just wanted to give an example of, like, you know,
young Mark would have heard one of those things that she said,
and it would have been immediate trigger reaction.
I would have made a snide comment, offensive comment, back to her.
It would have started an argument.
I would have, like, we would have said a bunch of mean shit to each other.
My dad would probably start pulling his hair out.
and it would like completely ruin the weekend.
And then I'd be resentful for like the next six months.
And so thankfully, those days are beyond.
You don't do that anymore.
That's good.
No, don't be.
Yeah.
Glad to hear that.
It only took getting the 40, Drew.
Yeah, right.
Well, there's probably some of that too.
I mean, I do think that, again, going back to the constructionist view of emotions,
based on your past experiences, as long as you're paying enough attention and you're
mindful and all the things we just talked about.
you can really start to change your emotional
landscape, I think,
that way. Just through that type of
example that you just gave, I think it's a
very common one anyway, as you get older.
You can probably shortcut that to some extent
though, too. You don't have to be old and
Yeah, ideally it doesn't take as long as it took me.
Right, right. You know, I do think there
is
an age component to this. Well, I think
people, as you get older,
you become more secure in who you are, and you
You understand who you are.
I think once you, ideally at least, you kind of learn where the traps and pitfalls are
in your own mind.
You learn where you're susceptible and where you're insecure and you learn where you're like
you feel good and comfortable and you learn the people that you feel good and uncomfortable
around and you learn the people that who don't make you feel good and comfortable.
So maybe I'm contradicting myself here.
Maybe it is a maturity thing, Drew.
God damn it.
I don't know.
It's it is like some of it is skill, but like, I don't know, something.
I guess skill comes from experience.
It does, but I think there is some skill around it.
Again, going back to the constructionist view of emotions.
If you have these past experiences that are helping you to construct an emotional reaction
in any given circumstance and a specific situation when an emotion comes up, that's shaped
by your past experience.
and you can kind of just let that happen to you.
Yeah.
Or you can be a little bit more, you can be a little bit more intentional about it.
And I think as you get older, you realize, okay, I've done the same thing over and over again.
That's what you start to realize is that the past experience that keeps feeding the emotional reaction that you have isn't very useful for you.
And so you need to reconstruct that in some way.
I think that's where, if you want to call it emotional maturity or just experience or whatever, I think that's where that comes in.
Yeah.
So, okay.
Okay.
All right.
So that's the four schools of thought.
I tried to break.
I mean, I think we just went through like eight or nine therapeutic modalities and like summarize
them each in a couple of minutes.
So like I really tried to distill everything as succinctly as possible just for the sake of the
podcast.
But if people really do want to learn more and they want to do some exercises from each of
these therapeutic modalities that do represent the emotional toolkit as we're talking about,
We have built out a full 30-day challenge that does that, that we pull all these techniques and different skill sets, help people build them.
And it's laid out so that you do one or two small actions each day.
So we're launching this in the momentum community.
If you're listening to this, it's already out.
The community is, it kind of tracks the podcast.
So every month we do one of these huge-ass episodes.
And then the momentum community, we build out a 30-day challenge.
for people who actually want to implement everything in the episode.
So if you're interested in doing that with all the emotional stuff that we're talking about,
you can go to find momentum.com slash emotions.
And it's all there.
Not only do you get access to the emotion 30-day challenge,
you get access to all the previous episodes as well.
So if you want to work on procrastination or values,
you get access to future 30-day challenges.
And we also just have an amazing community of people in there,
working on this stuff, talking about this stuff, meeting up, hanging out, doing all sorts of cool things.
So check it out, find momentum.com slash emotions.
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It feels impossible to do a full solved episode on emotions without addressing emotional
intelligence.
Ah, yes.
It's such a popular concept.
It's in the lexicon.
I think probably a lot of people listening to this have either read about it or heard
about it at some point or another.
And I think it's a great candidate.
You know, back on the subtle art and not giving you no fuck podcast, we used to have a segment called Brilliant or Bullshit.
I think emotional intelligence is a wonderful brilliant or bullshit topic.
Yeah.
Let's lay out the terms.
Yeah.
What is emotional intelligence?
It was a realtor back in the 1990s was two researchers, Peter Salvy and John Mayer.
Not that John Mayer, different John Mayer.
Wow.
John Mayer really gets around.
And then he learned how to play guitar, right?
Yeah.
No, there were these two researchers that kind of coined this term of emotional intelligence
as the ability to perceive, understand, and manage emotions in oneself and in others.
Okay.
So it kind of encompassed this whole emotional, I guess, control within yourself, but also
being able to handle and navigate the emotions of others as well.
That was the original concept.
Sure.
But then in 1995, it was more popularized by Daniel Goldman's book, by the name of Emotional
intelligence.
And he expanded the concept to include kind of like these five different traits, self-awareness,
self-regulation, motivation, empathy, and social skills, which that last one's kind of very vague.
How do you measure any of those?
That's probably part of the problem was that we talked about a lot of these things already,
being self-aware about things.
Right.
We're talking about regulation through all of this, about how emotions motivate us, how you can
have empathy for other people. The social skills still, I'm not really sure about what that was about.
But in this book, it became very popularized and it was kind of a tool for corporate management,
you know, it made its way into all the work seminars that people had. And you talk about emotional
intelligence. I'm sure he went and gave all sorts of corporate talks and all of that kind of
stuff. Right. Made a killing. Made tons of money, not just off of book sales, but probably doing these
seminars too, right? One of the big claims from the book, and I think this is still
probably in the popular kind of ideas right now is that 80% of your success is actually based
on your emotional intelligence rather than what he calls EQ.
Yeah.
Emotional quotient over IQ.
So it's only 20% IQ, 80% EQ.
There is absolutely no.
Bullshit.
There's not that is bullshit.
It's total bullshit.
Okay.
That part is definitely bullshit.
Yeah.
There's nothing.
But isn't it funny that that is the stickiest idea in that entire book?
Because, like, I read that book, I think, when I was in college.
And that was the number one thing I took away from it.
Is that your emotions matter more than your IQ.
Yeah.
And, like, it's one of those things that is believable.
It's a combination of, like, it's believable.
I think it's, you kind of want to believe it.
Yeah.
And it, but it's also contrarian and kind of sexy.
And then also it's like, oh, well, this book can teach you how to be better at your emotions.
Like, I'm very, my radar is very far on the bullshit side.
at the moment, but continue.
Well, I mean, there were a lot of claims like that, but that, you're right, that one
was the stickiest one.
The problem was, and this was pointed out pretty early, too, but of course, you know, once
it makes its way into the popular culture, then it's kind of hard to get rid of, as we
have seen before.
But some of the early criticisms, and they still hold up today, was that there was just so
much overlap with personality traits.
It's like it wasn't actually a separate kind of intelligence that we're describing here.
It's just that there were specifically, there was all this overlap with the personality traits
of agreeableness, neuroticism, and conscientiousness.
So people who were highly agreeable, those are the people who were pretty attuned to other
people's emotions too.
You know, they're going to agree with you because they want to please you.
Low in neuroticism, too.
They're not like emitting all these like crazy emotions and causing everybody else to kind of lose their minds around them.
And then highly conscientious too.
So they can take care of shit.
They need to get shit done.
They'll do it.
Right.
Early researchers, other researchers who were critical of this idea pointed that out.
And that, but of course, they were being all nerdy about it and didn't have a book and seminars behind it.
Right.
Okay.
Of course.
There's just a lack.
There's a big lack of measurement to, like you just said, how do you measure any of those things?
Yeah.
So here's the thing other than the.
the stickiness of the EQ is more important than IQ, which is bullshit.
But the other thing that bothers me about the emotional intelligence thing is that
EQ or emotional intelligence implies that it is a fixed metric that like people either have
it or they don't.
But then if you actually go read the book, he's like, well, if you listen to, if you do these
five things and listen to me, like you can improve your EQ, anybody can.
And then it's like, okay, well, then that's, those are skills.
That's not intelligence.
Right.
Yeah.
So it's like, it's a misnomer on.
top of, it's almost like, and this is where I started getting very cynical.
It's, it's, it is titled in the most salacious way possible.
Like, he named the concept in the most salacious way possible to get the most attention.
And then he, but then he, uh, defined the actual metrics and traits in a way to get as much
attention as possible.
So it's like, it doesn't, the simple definitions of it, don't, the simple definitions of it,
make sense to me. If he had said, if he called it emotional skills or emotional techniques or
something like that, I'd be like, okay. Emotional methods. Like, cool, I'm in. Even emotional
maturity. I'd be like, sure, I'm in. Right. Here's how to improve your emotional maturity.
Here's how to improve your emotional skill. These are the five most important emotional skills,
but it is like, no, it's emotional intelligence. And this is, this determines 80% of your
professional success.
So hire me for a low price of, you know, $50,000 to come to your corporation and train
all of your team on how to have a higher EQ.
And, like, it just, it, there's a, there's a whole cottage industry that you see pop up
in psychology over and over and over again.
MBTI is another huge offender of this in that you take a very sexy concept or framework
that has no empirical validity.
or very little empirical validity,
but it's a, like, markets really well.
Like, it's like, it's a sticky concept.
People like it.
They want to talk about it.
They want to know their score.
They want to know their friend's score.
They want to know their co-workers score.
And then you take it to the business world.
And you can make a killing.
You make a fucking killing, like, in corporate training.
You know, like Microsoft, pay me this much over the next three years.
And me and my team, we're going to,
increase the EQ of all of your staffers by this much. And it's all made up. It's made up numbers.
It's made up measurements. It's all fucking made up. That's my soapbox. Back to you, Drew.
Okay. Now, I agree with that. What I will say, though, is that people with those emotional skills
probably... They do do better. They do better. I'm sure they do. I'm sure they do.
And now, whether that's a form of intelligence that you can train. That's the question here. Yeah,
I agree with you. That's probably not right. But, you know, like,
talking earlier, but your friend's wife, who they're doing layoffs and the guy who they're
not sure, it sounds like he's fairly emotionally intelligent, or what would be defined as
emotionally intelligent here, and he's doing pretty well. So it's not that it's like there's
not nuggets of little truth in it, I guess. It's just the way it's framed, you're absolutely
right. It's not, I mean, it's not something you learn at a corporate retreat for sure.
What they're really finding is that it's more just a personality, a set of personality
traits that people have that are conducive to having good emotional skills.
Yeah.
And that's what it is.
And for sure, you can you can do very well with those skills.
That's great.
But don't call it emotional intelligence.
A separate form of intelligence that we is lurking in our brains or something like that.
Yeah.
That's just that's bullshit.
Yes.
I agree with you on that.
So we're coming down hard on the bullshit side on this.
I, for the most part, bullshit.
Yes.
I mean, you know, there are some.
So as you said, the five skills as skills, they are important.
Yes.
And they're very much the same skills we talked about in this episode.
So it's, you know, I'm on board with that.
But the framing, the labeling, the definition and the marketing of it.
Right.
I'm like, oh, I hope you enjoy your yacht, Daniel Goldman.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I think most contemporary researchers too will agree with that as well.
They're like, you know, yeah, sure, they're the skills.
Yeah.
That then this is what we're trying to get on.
And all these different areas of research that we do are based on these skills, sure.
but it's not a separate form of intelligence.
All right.
So I think it's actually pretty appropriate to kind of end the episode or wrap up the main content of the episode.
Talking about relationships, both because I think fundamentally people tend to struggle with emotions the most around their relationships.
I think we tend to get the most triggered by our relationships.
And also, like, ultimately, I think our emotional health is so tied to the quality of our relationships.
It makes sense that most of the applications or the most urgent or important applications of managing your emotions well are going to be around your relationship.
So I think if we could almost do like a fractal episode within an episode, I think it's worth taking a little bit of time going through some of the models and frameworks of how emotions function within relationships and then pull out all the takeaways and the advice.
and like just talk about like what healthy co-regulation looks like in a relationship and what
unhealthy co-regulation looks like.
Yeah, because ultimately I think you're right.
I mean, emotional regulation really does come down to improving your relationships.
That's like kind of the end goal.
The biggest benefit you get out of learning how to how to manage your emotions better,
which is just better relationships.
Yeah.
Yeah.
If we look at kind of how what emotion, the function of emotions in relationships, really the, you know,
emotions come up in relationships.
They're going to happen.
And I think there's this, people get this idea that they can like have these awesome
relationships without any negative emotions that come up or any difficulties whatsoever.
And that's just obviously not realistic, but also not really the goal.
The goal is to manage those kinds of difficult emotions within relationships.
The thing is that we all kind of go about this in different ways, right?
And that's where the real problem start is when we are trying to use one emotional strategy
and somebody else in the relationship is using another one
or we don't recognize somebody else's emotional strategy.
We take it personally, all of those kind of things, right?
Okay.
Some of those strategies or some of just the basic strategies we use
to regulate emotions in our relationships.
I have a list of like six here that are the most common ones.
So first of all, there's people who just openly express their feelings, right?
They share them openly.
That can usually be healthy, but sometimes it's not, right?
You have the suppressors then to the people who just avoid feelings at all cost.
They hide them.
They cover them up.
They don't even acknowledge them themselves.
They might not even know they're having these emotions.
You have distraction, redirecting attention away from your emotions.
People who withdraw.
Of course, you know, they just kind of shut down.
You have the vocalizers and the venters that people who are like coming at, you know, a lot.
And that's one strategy we might use.
If we're overwhelmed, we tend to vent.
And then you have the reappraisers to people who kind of try to change the way they view emotions within their own relationships.
Kind of in the moment.
And some of these, what we're going to see is that some of these strategies work in some instances and sometimes they don't.
Yeah.
Okay.
My hunch, and I've not looked into this.
But my hunch is that generally people of the opposite type probably work well together.
Like somebody who's naturally a suppressor probably works well with somebody who's an overexpressor.
because you can kind of compensate for one another.
Yes, I think if you're aware of that, if you're not aware of it and you're expecting
somebody else to have a certain style and they're not showing that style, then that can cause
problems.
But yeah, I think if you're aware, which I think that's kind of the goal we're going through
this is just the awareness of both your own styles and your strategies and someone else's.
Sure.
So, yeah, but I would agree with that for the most part.
Yeah.
But broadly speaking, more broadly speaking, people kind of approach relationships and two
broad ways. One is the prevention focused, and then we have the promotion focus. So prevention
focus are these people who just want stability in their relationships, emotional stability
in their relationships. They want peace. They want calm. And so they'll tend to use those
styles more like suppression and distraction more often. But then you have the promotion focus,
people too, who really what their goal is is like emotional intimacy and closeness.
And so they're okay with some emotional turmoil, as long as it's,
They're getting towards that goal of emotional closeness, right?
Especially because sometimes emotional turmoil or drama can make you feel close to.
Right, right.
And sometimes that's what they're going for too.
And so, again, sometimes you have those two opposite strategies going on at the same time.
And that can either, if you're aware of it, then great.
If you're not, then that can cause some issues.
So the conflicts kind of arise, though, when a promotion-focused partner will seek, like,
like immediate emotional resolution when you have a prevention focus partner who just wants stability
and so we get that. And this is going to overlap as we'll see with things like your attachment
style and stuff like that, which we'll get into. But just being aware that like if you do
have a partner who has a style that like isn't the one you would prefer, that's not necessarily
a bad thing because you can work with it. Again, just the awareness that we're trying to develop
up here is really the goal.
And then being able to, you know, these emotions, again, they're going to come up.
They're going, it's going to be difficult at times.
But recognizing that somebody is using a certain strategy over another one, I think that does
help a lot, the awareness around it anyway.
Yeah, or just knowing that it's like, it's not that there's anything wrong with them.
It's just, that's just the way they are.
That's the way they, they cope with intense emotions and, and, you know, being able to
compensate for that or adjust to each other or whatnot.
Yeah, absolutely.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
And so, you know, as part of that, too, I'm kind of rifling through these frameworks here.
But there's regulation styles within these relationships, too, within relationships, too.
So, again, you do have like the suppressors versus the expressors.
Then you also have the externalizers versus the internalizers.
Okay.
So externalizers are the people, like, if big emotions come up, they'll tend to just go outside of themselves and blame people.
So this is a really common one I think you see with.
people who kind of they're they're more of the promotion focus they want like some
resolution but they'll also like blame other people for emotions so if they get upset it's
somebody else's fault that made them upset or if they're jealous it's because of
somebody else did something that made them jealous right they don't take any
responsibility for it next necessarily okay but on the other end of the spectrum two you
have the internalizers and these are the people who tend to blame themselves a little bit
more but they'll also kind of shut down a little more easily too okay interesting
yeah maybe they have an externalizing partner that
externalizes and blames them.
They're like, yeah, they're right.
It's my fault.
Now I'm going to shut down and I'm going to like make myself small in the relationship
and not work through these emotions because these emotions are obviously dangerous, right?
Fun fact.
Yeah.
So women are disproportionately, have a much higher rate of depression than men.
Yes.
And men have a much higher rate of suicide than women.
The reason for both of those things is that it's suspected that women tend to be internalizers.
They tend to blame and focus on themselves around their problems.
and men tend to be externalizers.
They tend to look at something they can do to resolve their problems.
And so they blow their brains up.
So, you know, take that one to work and tell everyone in the break room.
Okay.
I don't know where to go with that one.
Just another day at the Solve podcast.
A little nugget of wisdom for you there.
Okay.
Okay.
Well, I mean, you can see how these dynamics can escalate.
to something where, like, it makes you miserable within a relationship if you're not aware of
these again.
If you're internalizing versus externalizing or whatever you're doing suppressing versus expressing
expressing too much, that's obviously like this is a big source of strife and relationships.
Right.
Okay.
So, but the goal here is to be able to, again, I think a big, a big goal of this section is
to just get you aware.
I think the awareness around this is going to get you like at least half the way there, if not,
if not more.
I mean, there's obviously some going to be some regulation strategies we go through.
But just being aware of your own style versus your partner style and how they express
or suppress their emotions within their relationship, that gets you a long way because you can
understand somebody.
And that creates, again, that gap we were talking about where you can navigate these emotions
together and co-regulate.
I was going to save this for later because we're going to talk a little bit later about, you
know, how to co-regulate in a healthy way in a relationship or how to have a healthy relationship.
essentially, but because you've brought it up a few times, the importance of the awareness.
I would even go as far to say that it is, the awareness is, it's just a prerequisite to all this stuff.
And I want to say this simply because I get, I've gotten so many, probably thousands of emails at this point over the years from people in very unhappy relationships who say, I've read all these books, I did this seminar, I've worked on myself, I understand, you know, I'm a avoid an attachment and I'm,
a suppressor and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
But my partner doesn't care about any of this stuff.
They don't want to go to therapy.
They don't want to talk about it.
And they're like, what do I do?
And the fact of the matter is, is that the thing that's so hard about relationships is that
you can do all the work on this stuff.
But if your partner is not doing shit, like nothing's going to change.
You have to have both people on board and at least doing the work.
And the work, it may not work out.
may not go anywhere.
But at least you need both people trying.
And so if one person is just checked out and is like, I'm fine.
I don't know what your problem is.
Then you're kind of stuck.
So the awareness piece, it's not only is it, you know, probably the 80%.
It is a prerequisite.
Like you can't really do anything with any of this unless both you and your partner or you
and the other person, whoever the other person in the relationship is, or at least,
like thinking about some of this stuff or care about some of this stuff.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And that's why we're going to talk about co-regulation.
It has to be like there is, it takes two to tango.
Takes two.
Right.
Yeah.
And have a relationship and all of that.
Obviously.
Okay.
Cool.
And by the way, you know, snide distasteful suicide jokes aside, it probably is worth
mentioning that there is a lot of data showing that the two genders process emotions or deal
emotions differently within relationships.
You know, men tend to be more suppressors.
They tend to push things aside and ignore.
I mean, it's like, think of all the stereotypes.
They're stereotypes for a reason.
There's a lot of data backing them up.
And I know that's not like super PC to say, but it's like, it's a thing and it's important
to know that.
And it's, again, it comes back to understanding that people are just different.
Like you can't, like you have to work with them where they are.
and not expect them to completely change and reinvent themselves for this reason or that.
And when it comes down to it, it's like certain people, you know, we've already talked about how a lot of our emotional nature is biologically based, genetically based.
I think it's important to have realistic expectations for you and your partner to understand that, like, you know, they're not going to completely reinvent themselves.
overnight or in a seminar or over six months of therapy.
Like,
they can get better.
They can adjust.
They can improve.
But, like,
they're not going to be a different person.
And so,
you know,
it's,
I guess the lesson here is to just, like,
ultimately,
you have to love them for who they are,
not who you wish they were.
And if that's not the case,
then,
you know,
None of this stuff is going to make much of a difference.
Right.
Another pre-worker is it, I think, too.
Yeah, definitely.
Definitely.
Okay.
Yeah.
Well, I think with that, though, we can get into a little bit of the attachment stuff.
Okay.
We don't got to go too deep on this.
I think at some point we're going to do a relationships episode, right?
Oh, for sure.
Attachment's going to be very, very central to that.
For sure.
Anybody out there, I mean, you've probably heard about attachment at this point,
anybody who's in the dating world or anything like that and listen to this podcast,
you probably know your attachment style.
If you don't, we'll go over them really quick.
But just to preface all of this, too, just so you know, if you don't already, your attachment style is not destiny.
Okay.
There are things you can do it that you can work with it.
Maybe you can't completely change it, but you can definitely work with it.
Again, going back to the awareness part, being aware of some of this stuff is a first step, but then also working within the relationship, within the bounds of your attachment style.
We'll go over how to do that.
But just to preface all of that with that.
So give us like the five minute.
Sure.
Summary and explanation of like where attachment styles came from.
Talk about Bulby and Ainsworth and all that stuff.
Yeah, so Bulby and Ainsworth, they were these two researchers back in the like 60, 70s, 80s, they formulated this idea of attachment styles.
And where it kind of starts and originally comes from is the attachment you have to your primary caregivers growing up, okay?
So you learn from them, you learn emotional regulation styles from your,
from your parents or whoever was your primary caregivers as a young, as a baby even,
as the moment you're born to probably seven or eight years old or more.
Yeah.
One way to think about it is like when you're a young infant, like your parents' emotional regulation style will kind of like, it's almost like making a key.
Yeah.
Right?
Yeah.
you as an infant, you kind of shape yourself into the key that unlocks your parents'
affection and attention. And then as you grow up, that key is like solidified. And so then you kind
of go out into the world looking for somebody in the world that has a key that you can unlock.
Right. That's a guy. I like that. Yeah. Man, I should be an author.
No, that's a good explanation for that. Because it really is. I just came up with that, by the way.
Yeah. I like that. It does. It like the relationship.
Your parents, when you're like a baby, they're kind of showing you this is what the world is like.
You're defenseless.
You're completely dependent on them.
And so you're looking to them for every single cue as to what's going on in your environment.
What kind of environment are we in?
How do I need to prepare myself emotionally?
So you have parents, you know, if your parents were when you cried, if they came to you and they comforted you and were responsive to your needs and stuff like that, that usually leads to what they call a secure attachment where you're in.
able to handle those big emotions because you were like, okay, it's okay to have these emotions.
My parents responded to them in a way that made me feel like it was okay to have these emotions
and that I could regulate these emotions as well.
Okay.
And they were held out.
They were there to help me soothe my big emotions at any time that I had and help me regulate them.
And that's how you learned how to regulate your emotions.
There's other parenting styles, though, too, that will produce what they call insecure attachments.
Okay. One of those is the anxious attachment, right, which is if you had a parent that was,
they weren't comfortable with your emotions necessarily and it became clear to you that they
weren't comfortable. And you learned that having any sort of emotional reaction when you needed,
when you had some emotional need that wasn't being met, they weren't very responsive to that.
And so you, the theory goes is that you will be highly sensitive to rejection as you grow up as well.
You kind of need more reassurance that you're not going to be abandoned.
So you kind of get afraid that you're going to be left alone and not be able to deal with your emotions.
You don't learn to deal with those big emotions in a very healthy way.
And instead, you develop a style that you end up spiraling a lot with your emotional reactions,
especially within close relationships as well.
And that's the anxious.
That's the anxious type, right?
Then another insecure type is also the avoidant type, okay?
And this is usually when you learn that having, again, it's another reaction to your
caregivers showing that, you know, having these big emotions isn't appropriate.
And they usually in some way, they kind of encourage you to kind of shut your emotions down
and not express them at all.
Okay. So as you grow into adulthood and you come to form your own relationships, those emotional, that emotional kind of strategy solidifies and you are more likely to be like the withdrawal or the suppressor in the relationship. And you avoid those emotions because they're like, oh, this is a big emotion coming up. I'm just going to shove it down. Right. And so you keep people at a distance because you think close relationships are dangerous.
or those emotions that are related related to those closer relationships are dangerous and they can be harmful and hurtful to you.
Yeah, those are kind of the two big insecure types, but then there's another insecure type too called the disorganized.
And they're kind of like the worst of all worlds, basically, right?
They're both anxious and avoidant.
They want closeness, but then when they get it, they pull away.
Yeah.
And this is a pretty small minority of people who exhibit this attachment style.
But it is kind of, it's like these people are, they tend to be just kind of a mess.
Yeah.
So they'll be both emotionally explosive and they'll withdraw when at different times.
And it just seems to be unpredictable really.
Yeah.
And that's why they call it disorganized.
One way to think about it, you know, for those of you who are single and dating out there,
if you're like talking to a person who like will text message you eight times.
Right.
Yeah.
In a single night and asking where you are all the time, wanting to know everything you're doing,
who you're hanging out with, you know, why you didn't invite them, that's an anxious.
Right.
The clingy people, right?
Yeah, they're the clingers.
They're super needy.
And part of it is that they, as you pointed out, they never learned how to regulate their emotions alone.
And so they are like constantly seeking somebody to co-regulate them at all times.
The avoidance, on the other hand, are the people who you might text five times over the course of a week and not get a single response.
Because they are just so kind of detached, withdrawn, almost uncomfortable with intimacy.
and they have the opposite problem.
They've become very comfortable regulating their own emotions,
but they never learned how to co-regulate.
So introducing another person into their emotional regulation system
introduces unpredictability and chaos.
And so that freaks them out.
And so they try to keep you at arm's length all the time.
And of course, in pure cosmic humor,
anxious types tend to spend most of their lives,
chasing avoidance and avoidance tend to spend most of our lives running away from anxious people.
Because the truth is, is that secure types don't really have time for any of this bullshit.
A secure type will look at an anxious and be like, dude, stop texting me.
What is your problem?
And a secure type will look at an avoidant and be like, dude, return a text message.
What is your problem?
Right.
And just not have time for any of this.
So the anxious and the avoidance usually end up
a shit spiral together.
Right.
Yeah.
I think the modern dating market is full.
That's, you know, everybody thinks, oh, dating is trash.
It's because you have the anxious and the warden constantly getting together and nobody's
aware of what's going on half the time.
I almost wonder if like, like, because dating apps in a way like actually increase the ability
to sort people together.
So I almost wonder if like that's a byproduct of that the increased sorting ability, like
because maybe anxious and avoidance are no longer being exposed to secure types, they're only being exposed to each other.
And so you get all this frustration because I, like, and it's been a while since I've read up on attachment theory.
So correct me if I'm wrong here.
But like my understanding is that generally speaking, the insecure types, one of the ways that they kind of get over their insecurity is they like run into and have relationships with secure types.
Yeah.
Right?
Like it's the anxious type spends time with a secure type and the secure type's like, hey, relax.
Like you don't have to text me eight times.
Like I'm going to hang out with you again.
I promise, right?
And it's like it helps the anxious person chill out.
And similarly, the avoidant spends time with a secure person.
And the secure person's like, hey, man, you know what would make this easier?
You actually like took the time to respond to me occasionally.
Like that would be really nice.
You know, no pressure, by the way.
Right.
Right.
And then the avoidance like, oh, okay, cool.
Like, I can open myself up.
But it's like if they're just never getting that exposure, then they just, they end up in their own little spin cycle and they never get out.
So I don't know.
That's like a hairbrain theory.
Yeah, no.
I think it makes a lot of sense, though.
If you're, I mean, if you're creating a dating market that's full of people who have had trouble dating,
probably because they are insecurely attached,
then yeah, you're going to,
it's a sorting mechanism in the worst possible configuration.
Yeah.
And I, yeah, I do think that happens.
So that's kind of the standard advice to insecure,
insecurely attached people,
is to go find somebody who's secure, right?
And like you already mentioned,
or a lot of the time, at least,
secure people are just not going to put up with the bullshit, right?
They have boundaries.
Right.
And they're just like, oh, this person's like way too,
they're over the top and coming at me.
No, I'm walking away.
I feel secure enough that I can walk away and find somebody else who's not going to cause me the problems.
Same thing with the avoidance is like, well, they're not even trying.
Then fine.
I'm done.
But yeah, the advice is, oh, just go find somebody who's perfectly secure, you know, and is going to put up with your bullshit.
And I think, for one, I think that's a, it puts the responsibility on somebody else for you to deal with your own emotional bullshit.
And so I just, that right there, I think is a bad strategy.
I think we, again, you need to have what they call earn security, which is one, like we've
already mentioned, the awareness around your attachment style and how you regulate emotionally
and the awareness of the other person as well.
But also, like, there's all sorts of different ways.
You don't have to, there's low risk ways you can kind of wait into being more secure
as well. Yeah. Right. So I know for me anyway, so I was a pretty hardcore avoidant for a long time.
Same. Yeah. Yeah. You and I both. I was actually a little bit more anxious. We can talk about this.
Yeah. I got to go. I'll, uh, I'll see you later.
Were you ever that avoidant? Do you ever just like, I'm done? I never ghosted people.
Like that, that, uh, I could never, I'm too, I have too much integrity to go somebody.
Right. Yeah. I would always try to be like, oh, okay, sorry. This isn't working out. It would be short and like just get out.
I'd be blunt. But yeah, I'd at least let the person now. Yeah. There are though, I know for me anyway, one of the ways I slowly got over this, and I didn't really realize it until after it had happened. But I decided I was like, okay, even in friendships and stuff like that, I would be a little bit of void and keep people at arm's length and all that. But I think actually friendships are a good way to start or family members or.
or whatever, to at least open up a little bit and be a little bit more expressive.
And that kind of can set the emotional.
It's a low risk way.
It's not like you're going to be rejected, you know, by a friend, like romantically,
rejected by a friend or family member.
So there's a lower risk way of getting there.
Yeah, I think that gets into an important point, which is that you don't have to date a secure person.
You can be friends with a secure person.
You can find a secure coworker and work with them.
Like, it's really like all a secure attachment type is is just somebody who is like has a healthy form of emotional regulation and can set boundaries, as you said.
Right.
And so if you spend time with that person, you can, even if you're not dating them, you can kind of observe and understand like what they're doing and how they functions.
I've always said that attachment theory is an excellent descriptor of relationships, but I don't, I'm not convinced it's a good prescriptor.
of relationships.
Like it's not clear, if you're an anxious attachment style, like, it's not clear what you
should go try to do based on that information.
It's just like, yeah, it's, this is a useful description of like your emotional process,
like where you feel anxiety and insecurity and why you're feeling it.
Okay, so how do you think you have become more secure over time and how did you do that?
I think part of it.
Are you still just super avoid?
I do think I've become much more secure.
Some of it was like kind of brute force.
So I look at my early romantic relationships and I was definitely in relationships with
insecure women.
I was an insecure man and I was in a relationship with an insecure woman.
I definitely think my wife is probably the most secure person I've dated.
But like also I like obviously like everybody like she had her own issue.
I think it's just by the time I met her, I had seen, again, it comes back to the awareness.
Like, I had seen this story play out so many times in my adult life and watched myself sabotage perfectly good situations for no reason and like pick up and move the other side of the world for no good reason.
And I finally hit a point in my late 20s where I'm like, okay, dude, like you can't.
just keep doing this.
Like, if you keep doing this, you're going to be, you're going to be one of those old bald
guys on White Lotus.
Like, that's, that, that is your future.
You're going to be, you're going to be in Thailand with like a 20-year-old Thai girl who doesn't
speak English, and, uh, and you're going to have like a shady history with arms smuggling.
So you need to learn how to have relationships, man.
And, um, and so I really, I really had to consciously, and I'm still having to consciously do
that.
I'm still having to consciously do this in my personal life, my relationship,
right, friendships and social life.
I'm still not good at it.
As an avoiding,
I never learned like good social hygiene of like following up with people and inviting people
like, you know,
if I'm going to go for a walk on the beach,
like inviting a friend that come with me.
Like I never learned how to do that shit.
So I'm still trying to figure that out.
But on the relationship side,
it really was just more of a brute force thing.
I definitely had a lot of avoidant type insecurity in my relationship with my wife, but I just remember checking in with myself frequently and being like, okay, is there actually a problem?
No, there's not actually a problem.
Yes.
Yeah.
Am I making the problem?
Yeah, I think I'm probably making the problem.
So let's not make the problem.
That was kind of the agreement that I made with myself is like, look, you don't have to stay with her forever.
You don't have to like do anything you don't want to do.
It's just like don't invent a problem where there's not one.
Right.
And that was like what I tried to stick to.
And, you know, over the course of multiple years, it slowly got easier.
Right.
Yeah.
And that's one of the issues I think I have with the relatively bad prescriptive advice that comes out of attachment theory, I think, is that a lot of times with the, especially with avoidance, they don't.
First of all, there's not a whole lot of.
advice they give to avoidance. It's usually they're,
they're usually targeting anxious people. Yes.
Because they are. Because the anxious ones are the ones that care enough to get on
on YouTube or Instagram and look this stuff up. The avoidance don't fucking care.
The avoidance don't care. They're like the,
we're like the hardest demographic to reach because we just don't, we don't care.
I don't care. I don't care. I don't care. I'm happy alone. I don't care.
And so, yeah. So it's not like it's, it's, you're right. I think when you have a
an anxious and avoidant together.
I think for me anyway, through my experience,
it's like, okay, I needed to be the one as the avoidant
to start the process of, hey, how do we address this?
Because the anxious person, in my experience anyway,
is just, they're usually like just go, go, going.
And they need just a little bit of reassurance at first.
And I think that's the seed I think that you can start on.
And that has to kind of come from the avoidant person.
In my experience, that's how it's worked anyway.
I became aware, kind of later in my adult life, too, of just how little reassurance that you have to give somebody sometimes, usually anyway.
It's just like, okay, they just need a little bit of reassurance in the moment.
Yeah.
And that brings their nervous system down a little bit, regulates their emotions a little bit.
And then now you have a space to negotiate what's going to happen from there.
Yeah.
We'll come back to this.
I want to get to, there's like a section I've got here called like rules and agreements.
And I think what you just said is like super important and ties into that.
But I think this is like actually a nice segue to just talk about like what a toxic relationship is.
Ah, okay.
Yeah.
And what it looks like.
Yeah.
Because it is if we define a healthy relationship as two people who are effectively co-regulating together, that implies that they are, they are A, able to regulate their emotions by themselves.
And then B, they're actually helping the other.
person be more effective at regulating their emotions and this is kind of what I was
getting at about like the the diametrically opposed regulation styles you know I
I am a natural suppressor I'm like I am totally you know I come from a family
and a world that like every problem you just brush under the rug and pretend like it
wasn't there whereas my my wife is like a hundred percent expressor and like
very overt and like very
emotionally focused.
And we know that about each other.
And it actually works really well because it's like she can tell when I'm kind of upset about
something and not saying anything and she can kind of pull it out of me.
And similarly, like when she kind of overreacts or starts to get sucked down a drama
hole, I can pull her out and be like, that's not worth it.
Let's let that go.
Let's pretend that's not there.
You know, and so we're able to balance each other.
And I think even though we're both very effective at regulating our emotions individually,
I think when we're together, we're actually even more effective.
So, like, I think that's kind of the ideal what you're going for within a relationship.
Now, a toxic relationship is the complete opposite of that.
And it's generally two individuals who are bad at regulating their emotions solo,
and then they come together and they get even worse.
Okay.
And generally speaking, the reason that happens is,
You have each individual's bad at doing it by themselves, and so they need their partner
to come in and compensate for them.
So it's like, I can't deal with any of my own problems, so I need a partner who's going
to come in and be willing to deal with my problems for me.
And as soon as you do that, now it's like, now I'm not taking any responsibility for
my own actions, and now I'm like developing a victim complex and I need to be saved all the
time.
And now my partner is like, it's putting all this like undue pressure on my
partner to like always be there and be responsible for everything that happens to me. And then you start
falling into this like victim savior cycle that never ends. Dependency, yeah, which is yeah,
which is essentially codependency, right? And these toxic cycles, they can actually work in both
directions just in different contexts. I always like to think of it as like there's a person in a
relationship who's like playing with matches near gasoline and, uh, uh, and then there's like the other
person in a relationship is like holding the fire.
extinguisher. And it's like, and they, they like both sign up for this and, and like, keep doing it
because they get to, A, they get to feel the excitement of the drama of like watching the fire
starting and watching it get put out over and over again. But, but B, because the person who's like
lighting the matches gets to feel saved periodically. Oh, yes. It's like, oh my God, this horrible
thing happened to me, but Drew, Drew showed up. He's my.
rock. Oh my God. He took care of everything. It was so amazing. And then like a week later,
lighting matches again, you know, like starting shit, you know, sabotaging stuff so that Drew can
come save the day again and they get to feel like, you know, I don't know, the damsel in
distress again. Although I say damsel in distress like men totally do this too. Oh yeah.
And then on the other side, if you're the savior, I mean, what feels better than saving
Right. Yeah. Like, oh my God, you're so like, look how needed I am. Holy shit. And not only that, you get to live like avoid all your own emotional shit and take care of somebody else's emotional. Exactly. Exactly. It's like who who cares that my life is completely falling apart? Like I got to go save that person over there. And and so you get into this like this little shit spiral that just and it, and it, the thing is is like a drug, it escalates because it's eventually, you know, if you're, you're, you're, you're, you
if you're causing the same drama over and over,
well, that drama, it starts to get old.
It starts to get normalized.
So you need to cause a little bit of a bigger drama next time
to get the same kick, to get that same feeling of like,
oh, my God, I just got saved.
And sure enough, the savior needs to like a bigger challenge to overcome.
Because, you know, that first drama, it's like, oh, that's table stakes.
Like, let's go all in here.
And so you get this escalation that starts happening,
to all the drama.
And yeah, it goes to a dark place.
I feel like everybody listening has probably either been in one of these spirals or has
been close to somebody in one of these spirals.
And it gets very ugly, very ugly.
Yeah.
Okay, so yeah, that's a toxic relationship is that spiral.
You get addicted to that.
Yes.
Yeah.
And here's like actually the saddest part about all this.
People fall into toxic relationships because they are not able.
to effectively regulate their own emotions
or manage their own emotions.
And so they start unnecessarily relying
on somebody else to manage their emotions for them.
But because the toxic spiral gets so destructive
and so turbulent and so, like,
there's so much, like, stress and emotion and drama
and sometimes trauma involved,
that generally when people come out of the toxic relationship,
they're even less able to regulate their emotions effectively.
Like, a lot of people can actually make
themselves worse off for being in that relationship. And so it is something to be very,
very careful of and try to stop the roller coaster as soon as you can, wherever it is.
But when you do get addicted to that, though, Mark, you know, normal healthy relationship
looks very boring. Yes.
To those people, too. Like, do you just, you need like a, I don't know, just like going to rehab and
do a detox?
Where's the reset for that?
Yeah.
I mean,
this gets into a little bit,
you know,
I could pull out my soapbox again here.
I,
and this ties in a little bit
to what we were talking about earlier,
about culture,
and how,
you know,
Westerners tend to associate
like happiness with excitement.
Right.
Right.
High arousal states, yeah.
Right.
Like people mistakenly associate romance.
with excitement, with intensity of emotion, and especially young people.
And it's actually not.
Like a healthy relationship, yeah, it is dull.
It is from the outside.
It is definitely boring.
But on the inside, it's peaceful.
It's like very harmonious.
And it's funny.
It is very like actually my experience is quite analogous to the experience of quitting
drinking.
Like the biggest struggle for me when I quit drinking was boring.
It was like drinking made everything fun and and suddenly you don't have the thing making everything fun and so everything feels a little bit boring and you really have to like work a bit harder to find stuff that's fun to you.
But then when you do, the fun is actually it's like a peaceful relaxing fun.
It's a sustainable fun.
It's like a fun that you're like, oh, I could do this forever.
Like I don't ever get sick of it.
I don't ever wake up hungover or tired.
I don't ever like have ups and downs and mood swings around it.
It's just fun.
And it's, I think that's, that's very analogous to like a toxic relationship and a healthy relationship.
A toxic relationship, man, when that roller coaster's up, God damn.
It is, it is nice.
It is like dizzying how how exciting and overwhelming the passion and the romance can be.
But man, when it's down, it is fucking brutal.
And once you've ridden that that ride up and down enough times, no pun intended, it is, it is like, it's not sustainable.
And I would say a healthy love, it is like much more even keeled, consistent, sustainable.
And after a while, you, I don't know, you just, you end up in these situations where it's just like, I don't know, like sitting on the couch reading a book together is like actually more appealing than.
going to a crazy party and getting fucked up and screwing all night.
Like, I don't know.
Like, it's, maybe I'm just old.
Oh, yeah, yeah, I don't know.
Yeah, I think you're right, though.
I think there is just a diminishing return to that excitement that you eventually just...
You wear it out.
Yeah, yeah.
And it is unsustainable.
Right.
Right, for sure.
Yeah.
So, okay, let's talk about how do we get from an unhealthy place to a healthy place?
And, you know, step number one.
is the one that we've been banging on about for 30 minutes now, which is really just try to
understand these patterns, both in yourself and in your partner.
And also your partner should ideally understand these patterns, both in themselves and in
you.
And it doesn't necessarily mean digging into all this science and research that we're talking
about here.
Like they don't need to go read a book on attachment theory or understand if they're promotion
focus or prevention focus.
Like that stuff's nice, but like ultimately it's just getting an awareness and
understanding between each other of like, this is kind of how I'm, how I am, this is kind of how I
function, this is what feels natural to me.
This is what I need.
This is what I need.
This is what I want.
This is what I can give.
And I think, you know, the cliche advice of just good communication, like, it's really this.
It's really just like making sure you're both very aware of the emotional dynamics that are
going on and making sure you're on the same page that you both kind of agree on what's going on.
It's like, okay, like, yeah, when we feel.
fight, you tend to do this, and I tend to do this.
You know, instead of trying to change each other, it's like, okay, how can we manage that?
Remember, it's all the way back to the top of the show.
The goal here is not to change in emotion.
It's to change how you, it's how to adapt or manage that emotion, how to leverage that
emotion in a way that's useful or productive.
So the same is true within relationships.
If your partner tends to get really sad and withdraw, don't try to convince them to stop
being sad and withdrawing, find a way to work with the sadness and withdrawal in a way that's
productive and useful. That's like, you know, that's the long and short of it.
All right. So step one is just gaining an overall awareness, like getting a clear picture of like,
what are your patterns, what tendencies do you guys have, et cetera? I think step two is then
recognizing that there are, it's not that like any of the.
stuff is right or wrong, like it's not necessarily better to be an expressor versus a suppressor.
It's not necessarily better to be somebody who needs space versus somebody who needs closeness.
It's, there are healthy and unhealthy ways to do each one, right?
So, for example, an unhealthy way to suppress is to just sit there and not say what you think, right?
It's just be like, I don't want to deal with this.
I'm just going to say whatever gets me out of this situation.
A healthy way to suppress, because some people need time to process, a healthy way to suppress
is like if a conversation starts to get really intense and high stakes, to simply look at your
partner and be like, I need some time to process this.
Can we come back to this in like 20 minutes?
Right.
Or tomorrow or whatever, right?
And if your partner understands that, hey, you're a person who needs time to process things.
It takes a while for the emotions to kind of work their way through your head.
Then they should be okay with that.
Like that's part of the understanding.
There's two parts of that though, too, right?
Just that I need the time.
But then also, I am going to come back to this.
Yes, yes, right?
Yeah.
But commit to coming back to it.
And that usually puts the other person at ease a little bit too.
Yeah.
Anyway.
One of the things that as an avoidant is like a fucking lifesaver is alone time's not personal.
It's, you know, so there's a health.
way to avoid and there's an unhealthy way to avoid.
The unhealthy way to avoid is to just fucking go somebody and spend a week by yourself and not text or reply or whatever.
The healthy way to avoid is, I think this is one of the things that I started doing differently with my wife that was very effective.
At some point I just told her, I was like, look, I need alone time.
Like, I just need to be alone periodically and it has nothing to do with you.
Like, you're great.
This is great.
But like, I'm going to go to this place for four days.
Yeah.
And the first time, the first couple times, it made her really uncomfortable.
But like, she trusted me.
We did it.
It was fine.
It went great.
And throughout her relationship, there's like pretty frequent times where I'm like, you know,
I kind of want to just like take a trip by myself.
Yeah.
Like go somewhere by myself.
And she's cool with it.
So again, it's that awareness, the communication of it.
I would say there's also, you know, we talked about cognitive reappraisal.
I think one of the benefits of a close relationship is that you can leverage each other's
reappraisal of situations, right?
So it's like if you're really good at reappraising, say like failures in your career
and your partner's not, they can rely on you to help them reappraise that situation.
You can be like, no, no, no, no, you didn't screw up.
Like, this is what happened.
Think of it this way.
it's just a lesson you're going to get better.
Similarly, it's like if you have a deep insecurity around, I don't know, something in your family
and they're actually very good at reappraising their family problems, you know, they can come
to you and say, no, no, no, don't.
It's not about you.
She just needs to be this way because of this and, like, just realize it's that, right?
So it's like when done correctly, reappraisals can be very, very effective.
Like if your partner is better at reappraising certain areas of their life than you are, you can lean on that and vice versa.
But it also works the other way.
If your partner is a reappraises things in like very fucked up ways and has like very negative, destructive beliefs about things, that can also influence you.
So you need to be very careful and make sure that you're not a like reappraising your partner's situation and a really destructive.
in spiteful way
and in B, not accepting their reappraisals
in a destructive way
either. And it's hard because generally
speaking, like if we're bad at
our own cognitive re-appraisals, like if
we're bad at regulating ourselves,
we are going to have a vested
interest in like
making sure other people agree with us.
Like, this is the other thing about
security and insecurity. It's like
secure people don't care
what you believe.
Insecure people really need you
to believe what they believe.
Be on your side, yeah.
Yeah. And so if somebody's very insecure about something in their life and they're in a
relationship with you and that situation comes up in your life, man, they're going to push
their views very hard onto you. And so it's just something to be aware of and make sure.
And so for this reason, to make sure you keep like the healthy co-regulation going,
this brings us to step three, which is what I call rules, principles, agreements.
I talked to a friend once who said that, like, him and his wife,
have a marriage constitution, which I thought was really cool, actually.
It's like super nerdy.
I just going to say it.
But it was basically like they sat down after like all of these conversations about each other.
And they kind of just wrote down like, you know, who they are, what they need, what they like.
And then some of these rules and principles that they've created for themselves.
And so when I say rules and principles, I mean you should make up your rules and principles together
of like what your relationship needs.
And it's going to be different
for every single relationship.
And these rules and principles,
they're not,
there's nothing moralistic about them.
They're completely practical.
I'll give you some examples.
So in my marriage,
the word fine is like a four-letter word.
Okay.
And there's a reason for that.
And that is that it's,
A, my wife has a lot of negative associations with it,
I guess, from her family and her upbringing.
And then B,
I am absolutely a prevention focused.
I'm a suppressor, and I'm also very easygoing.
And so one of my, like, we caught very early on in our relationship that, like, one of my favorite ways to avoid anything, oh, it's fine.
No, no, no, it's fine.
Keep doing that.
And it's like, meanwhile, I'm like, inside, I'm like fucking seething.
And I'm like, no, no, no, it's fine.
Yeah, don't worry about it.
Yeah.
So it's the word fine is a four-letter word.
Okay.
It's like anything important, any topic that's important, any debate, argument, discussion, fight, the word fine's not allowed.
Okay.
It's what do you feel?
Do you like it or dislike it?
No, there's no fine.
You either like it or hate it.
Tell me now.
And it's so, like, that's actually been incredibly useful because it, it kicks me out of my defense mechanism.
And it, like, prevents her from getting triggered.
All right.
So another example from my relationship.
I am definitely, like I said, I'm a suppressor.
I need time to process emotions.
I get angry very slowly.
Very seldom.
But when I do, it's like, it's like a very slow, intense experience for me.
And so my default as a suppressor, as an avoidant, sometimes I just storm out of the fucking house.
I'm like, peace.
I'm out of here.
I've been there too.
Yeah.
I'm like, don't fucking talk to me.
Yep. And I go outside and I, you know, I'll like walk around the block or something. And, you know, in previous relationships, in the first couple times it happened in this relationship, you know, they'd call me, they'd come out, run after me. And of course, that just makes me even angrier. At some point along the way, my wife learned, like, just let me go. I'll be back in an hour and I'll be like way calmer and I will, like, process things. And I'll, like, have the right thing to say. Whereas if you just, like, pressure me in that moment,
I'm probably going to say something that I regret or that is like not actually reflective of how I feel overall.
So that's another one.
Similarly, you know, I, it takes me a long time to get upset, but then once I get upset, I get over it pretty quickly.
Whereas my wife, like, she is a slower processing on the backside of a fight.
So I used to, early in the relationship, I used to like always try to make things okay.
I'm like, hey, we're okay, right?
Like, it's okay.
And she'd be like,
blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Now I just know, I'm like, okay, just leave her alone.
Like, when she feels better, she'll come, she'll come to me.
Yeah.
Like, she'll come say her, she's sorry when she's like,
when she's gotten to that point.
But it's like, she just needs a few hours and like,
I'm going to go in the garage or something and, you know,
find something to do.
So those are some examples from my own personal relationship of like,
recognizing each other's patterns,
creating like little rules and principles,
agreeing on certain things.
There are plenty more examples.
I'm curious if you've had any rules or principles like that
in relationships in the past that have been effective.
I mean, for me anyway, it was definitely like I was more quick to anger
or quick to get emotionally charged up
and I would also take a while to get over it as well.
What I've gotten better at, though,
is when those emotions do come up is I've gotten a lot better
at pausing and being like, okay, what's the actual best way to do this?
Again, it goes back to that gap we've talked about.
You know, you have the emotional reaction and the behavior and then you have that
interpretation with in between.
And I've gotten better at expanding that gap in there.
And that has helped tremendously in all sorts of relationships that I've had.
Whereas before, if somebody would say something that I found like insulting or it was
I'd take it very personally, then I would just immediately react and lash back out and, you know,
do the avoidant thing and be like, I'm putting up a.
barrier here. And now I've been way better at just kind of like stopping. And then in again,
this kind of goes back to the avoidant thing, avoidant versus angrient saying and the avoidant
kind of taking the lead here is I stop. I'm like, okay, what does this person need right now?
And I can like kind of stop and let's address that. Yeah. So like just an example. Like I just
remember like when I was younger somebody would like a romantic partner or somebody would would
snap at me for something. You know, I was doing something stupid. And
something that annoy them, it snapped at me, and I would just go right back at them.
And I'm like, okay, put up my defenses and I'm going to fight back.
More recently, what's, though, in the last few years, I've learned to, okay, stop.
Apologize to them.
Like, I'm sorry that upset you, obviously.
Can we talk about why that was?
Yeah.
And I've gotten a lot better at that anyway.
So that's kind of like one of my rules right now anyway is just like don't just, if you're feeling big emotions, just stop.
And that takes a lot of practice, obviously.
but if you're feeling like even upset or something like that,
I've just noticed that in the past,
when I've reacted in those moments,
that's almost always led to just a worse relationship,
just from that point forward even.
For sure.
Yeah, there's that.
For sure.
One thing too, I want to ask you about in this, though,
how much of the relationship, like the idea of kind of like the shared emotional experience,
like how much of the other person's emotional life is your responsibility
when you are in a close intimate relationship with them?
Because I think there's people who are like,
well, but your emotions aren't my responsibility, right?
Sure.
And true, they're not, ultimately.
But at the same time, too, you're in a relationship with somebody at the same time.
So where do you think the boundary is for that?
My, just off the cuff, thinking about it, like, I don't feel responsible for my wife's emotions because obviously I can't control those.
Right.
I do feel responsible for the relationship, though.
Right.
Right.
So it's like, let's say she gets super upset.
I don't feel responsible for her being upset.
but I do feel responsible for
supporting her or
doing whatever I can
or being available to her
because that is in maintenance
of the relationship.
That is in the interest of the relationship, right?
So I do think that is a very subtle
and meaningful distinction
because it's like
if she started just getting upset
all the fucking time
I can't do anything about that.
Like, it's, it's, you can't decide for other people what they should be feeling, should and shouldn't be feeling.
But you can communicate.
Well, again, it comes right back to the same point.
It's like, can't change the emotion, but you can, you can adapt to the emotion and you can react to the emotion.
Okay.
And so the, the adaptation and the reaction are your responsibility.
Okay.
Yeah, that makes sense.
Yeah.
Okay.
I guess it's worth saying, and this is probably like the main point to wrap up on before,
we get to the final takeaways.
Ultimately, the goal in all of this is kind of a regulatory flexibility.
You know, we've talked, we've now talked through probably half a dozen items in our emotional
toolkit, different skills that you can develop.
In the relationship section, we've talked through different frameworks, you know,
learning how to identify, like, what your personal proclivities are.
and I think it's ultimately, it's not about changing yourself,
it's just like becoming more, developing a wider range of emotional skill sets.
So the same way, it's like, you know, like if you're a very introverted person,
the correct advice is not, oh, you should be extroverted, because that's impossible.
No, the correct advice is it's great you're introverted,
but you need to at least develop the skill of being extroverted for a short
period of time when the situation requires it because that flexibility is going to serve you
really well.
There are going to be moments in your life where you need to talk to a lot of people and to
accomplish the things that you care about.
And so if you don't develop that skill, then you're going to be severely limited.
And I think the same is true here.
It's like as a natural suppressor of my emotions, I had to spend many years developing the skill
of expressing myself.
It's not what comes naturally to me.
It's not what I'm good at, but I learned how to do it because I'm often in situations both in my marriage and other relationships where it's like, okay, like this is a moment.
Like here's a moment where I need to say what I feel.
I need to speak up and say something.
Otherwise, it's going to cause more problems, right?
So it's developing that flexibility and that range of skills.
around these emotions that is
like I think that is kind of the end goal with all of this.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, I'm similar where I tend to be more of a suppressor as well
and I'm still very bad at the expression part of it,
but when I do it, even when I do it bad and clunky and awkwardly,
it's still like better than not doing it.
Yes.
Right.
So yeah, I totally agree with the, you need to have this toolkit
and use it in a flexible way for sure.
Yeah.
But also, this is one thing I thought about when we do talk about this emotional flexibility, can you be too flexible?
Can you, like, when you start, like, pulling out like little swift's army knife of your emotional toolkit and you're using this little strategy over here and this little strategy over here, can you just become too flexible and not?
Like, that's kind of boring, right?
In a relationship, if you're just always like, oh, I'm going to be super flexible and we're going to address this right.
I don't know, part of what makes relationships interesting is the, you know, we've already talked about.
This is how challenging it is, right? Yeah. Yeah. And that experience of growth together.
Yeah. I mean, first of all, I don't think there's anybody who's like nails all this stuff all the time. For sure. Yeah. I don't know. I'm like, it's reminding me of, and I think I talked to him about this on the podcast, I'm sure he wouldn't mind me talking about it. Derek Sivers. Yeah. He's one of the wisest people I know. And I think one of the reasons for,
for that is that he does seem so skilled and flexible at all this stuff and it does seem to come
very naturally to him. I even asked him once, I was like, if you ever like not been happy and he was
like very rarely? Like there's been like very brief moments of unhappiness in his life. And he's like,
yeah, it's, I remember talking to him and I was like, do you think that's actually been kind of a
problem? And he was like, actually yes, particularly in relationships. He's like, I'm generally
always happy. And so if my partner's not, I can, he's like, I can. He's like, I can. He's like, I can
just kind of put myself in a little pretzel and be whatever they need me to be.
And he was like, yeah, it's almost, it just creates like a very weird dynamic.
I think there needs to be an interesting balance in a relationship in that both people
need to be both self-sufficient and better with each other.
Like, I think if either one of those things isn't true, then the relationship's probably
not long-term sustainable in a super healthy way.
And I guess if you are like so adept at regulating solo,
then it's gonna be very, very hard for you to ever find a relationship that like makes you better.
You're always gonna be the one giving and they're gonna be the ones receiving.
And you're probably also gonna attract people that need a lot of help with regulation.
So I don't know.
That's like a spitball answer.
But when you said that, the first person it came to mind was Derek.
Yeah, yeah.
I do remember I've talked about that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Interesting.
Okay.
Yeah. All right. So that is all of the relationship stuff. Before we wrap up here with all of our 80-20 and our takeaways and everything, I do want to remind everybody that if you do want to start implementing this stuff into your life and get better with your emotional regulation, improve your emotional toolkit, develop these skills. We have a 30-day challenge in the momentum community. It's at findmomentum.com slash emotions. It is, we've broken everything down from this episode into sing-
daily practices or challenges. They are relatively easy to do. You can usually do them in 10 or 20
minutes each day. They're super helpful. We've like, we've really dug into what are the most
useful exercises that you can get from this entire episode. And then you get to do it with the
support and accountability of a community of thousands of people around the world. We're working
on the same shit as you. So it's, it's an awesome community. I'm in there every week. I'm
interacting with people, giving people feedback, helping out, answering questions.
So go to findmomentum.com slash emotions.
See you there.
All right.
It's 80-20 time, Drew.
What is the, we covered a lot, as usual.
And we've now distilled, at the end of every episode, we like to distill all of the
advice, all the most useful stuff that we've talked about into the 80-20.
That is the 20% of the episode that will get you 80% of the results in your life.
Why don't you kick us off with the most basic one that everyone hates hearing?
That's right.
That's the physical side.
It's a physiology, right?
Getting that is a foundation of emotion regulation.
So, for instance, your sleep, exercise, diet, those types of things.
And yeah, you're right.
People don't like hearing this necessarily, but I will say.
I'm already sick of hearing it.
Yeah.
You can say this for just about any problem in your life.
Right.
Like, well, you just get your, get your, the physical side of everything kind of down.
But the cool thing about this episode is that it dovetails nicely into the point that we made at the top of the show of like the mind, body problem is not, like, it's the same thing.
Your mind and body are the same thing.
And if you're not taking care of your body, your mind is going to suffer.
And if you're not taking care of your mind, your body's going to suffer.
So it's a two-way street.
And really just sleep, exercise.
basic nutrition.
And like even within this 80-20,
there's another 80-20 here
of like, I think when people here
exercise nutrition, they're like,
oh, God, I got to go on a diet,
I got to join a gym.
It's like, no, actually there's a huge
80-20 to sleep exercise
and diet itself, right?
So it's like something as simple
as like going for a 30-minute walk every day.
That, like, there's tons of research
showing that a 30-minute walk each day
gets you like 60%,
70% of the results.
of like a hardcore workout program.
Something as simple as like cutting out sugar six days a week will get you like 50% of the results of like this like hardcore diet regimen that you go on.
So it's like just do the basic things.
Do the small things, the simple things.
It really is just about the small easy wins day after day.
They accumulate over time.
That's why we built our whole fucking community around it.
It's like it is not complicated.
No.
It just requires consistency.
Right, right.
The consistency is key there.
And it's also like, I don't want to overstate it necessarily, but it is, it's foundational
in that, you know, you get these things right, you get your sleep right, you get your diet,
you get some exercise.
They don't have to be crazy, like you said.
And it's not that like these are going to fix your emotions.
I think what it does is it gives you like the space to manage your emotions a lot better.
You're better able to handle emotional ups and downs when you have these things right.
Yeah.
So all the other things we're going to talk about come easier if you get this right first.
That's why we're starting with it.
For sure.
Yeah.
For sure.
But yeah, with that, so like your sleep, as we all know, I'm terrible at this sometimes.
I've been better at it lately, but it's huge.
Like when you get worse sleep, I mean, there's all these studies that show like your brain suffers because of it, right?
There's less connectivity from your prefrontal cortex that thinking part of your brain
to the rest of your brain.
So whether that's any sort of emotional regulation network or whatever,
there's just less talk with the thinking part of your brain.
You notice this, I'm sure, if you are tired, you're just, you're more reactive to things.
I noticed this the other day.
I was just getting annoyed with somebody who, they weren't doing anything annoying, but I was tired.
And I was like, every little thing they said frustrated me.
And I was like, okay, I'm just, I'm tired.
I tend to, I've noticed that I get pessimistic.
Yes.
Yes.
If I don't say, like, I'm generally.
and pessimistic.
I'm generally a very optimistic person.
I'm like pretty much always excited about something in the future.
And so when there are times where I'm like, oh, this sucks, it's not going to go well.
Oh, what am I doing?
Why am I here?
Like, it's generally because I didn't sleep.
Right, right.
We go back.
We talked about emotions versus feelings versus moods versus affect.
And that really affects your mood, I would say.
Absolutely.
Yeah, 100% with that.
Number two, verbalize your feelings.
And we talked about this in the constructivist view of emotions.
We talked about this some with the cultural influence of emotions.
Language as well, yeah.
With how much language determines emotion.
And then, of course, we got into this with the psychodynamic school of thought,
the old Freudian old school Freudian talk therapy.
It's stuck around for hundreds of years for a reason.
It works.
It's like, honestly, to this day, it is still one of the simple.
list most consistent, most effective interventions that we have for emotional problems is like just sit
your ass in a chair and talk about it for a couple hours.
Use your words, yeah.
And it's, it doesn't have to necessarily be a therapist. It could be a friend, a partner,
a confidant, a family member. It could be a journal. It's basically taking all the messy stuff
in your head and trying to structure it and verbalize it, you know,
put it into a container that is a little bit more manageable.
And that is what the process of putting language around sentiments and feelings actually does.
And there's just something about it that makes it feel less overwhelming, less out of your control.
And it helps you plan around it, adapt to it, mitigate it, so on and so forth.
Yeah, we mentioned emotional granularity.
And a lot of that comes from the language research that they've done is if you can,
put words to your emotions rather than this is, I feel good or I feel bad.
It's like, okay, what do you, are you feeling angry?
Are you feeling depressed?
Are you feeling upset about, you're feeling joy or you feeling happiness, whatever it is?
If you can label those emotions, that affects the experience.
Again, we're going back to the constructed view of emotions.
That affects your emotional experience.
And it kind of creates a container for you to be able to manage those emotions a lot better.
Yeah.
And again, similar to the physiological stuff, there's an 80-20 with this as well.
Like, you don't need the same.
down with a therapist for 25 hours.
Like just journal for five minutes.
Like make this a small daily practice.
You know, journal for five or ten minutes each morning.
You know, catch up with a friend each week.
Confide in them.
Talk about some of your problems.
Like it is actually super simple.
And again, it's more about consistency in developing the habit than like, you know,
cornering somebody and emotionally dumping all over them.
And you know what else involves daily, small journaling,
verbalizing of your thoughts and feelings.
The momentum community.
The 30-day challenge in the momentum community.
And if you go to find momentum.com slash emotions, you too can verbalize your thoughts and
feelings in a constructive and productive way to increase your emotional toolkit.
All right.
I promise I'm done promoting now.
What's the next one?
The next one.
We have cognitive reappraisal.
So we talked a lot about this, especially like in the context of like the CBT therapy, right?
The cognitive behavioral therapy.
That's this kind of where this.
comes from, and we talked about, was it Aaron Beck as well, a very simple entry point into
emotional regulation is around your thoughts.
You can do this at any time.
It's not like with the way you're feeling or the way you're behaving necessarily, but you can
control or have some influence anyway over the thoughts you have around your emotions.
And you can reappraise what those mean to you.
And that's really what reappraisal is, is reframing the meaning around these emotions.
And that's very powerful.
When done consistently, it's not one or two times you do it, okay, fine.
But when you really practice this consistently, then your mind really starts to change over time.
So cognitive reappraisal, just to recap, is when you take, let's say you have a thought, like, you know, these people are ignoring me.
You can reappraise that, say they might be distracted or stressed out in some way.
Or, you know, I'm behind in life or something like that.
Well, I'm progressing at my own pace.
You could start reframing things like that.
Or just what an emotion means.
Like, this person made me very angry and said, well, okay, I'm feeling angry right now.
That's kind of a Buddhist way to reappraise things as well to kind of detach yourself from the emotion.
There's all sorts of little exercises around cognitive reappraisal that you can do that reframe the meaning of emotions in the moment.
And like I said, when you practice that consistently, then your mind starts to change around these and you start to see, oh, these emotions, I do have some influence over these.
Just by thinking about them differently.
Yeah, it's crazy.
By telling yourself a different story, you know, there's a kind of a subclass of therapies
called narrative therapy that's built around this.
And a lot of it is around written exercises of basically what is your story, what is the story
you've told yourself about this area of your life?
Again, the meaning, right?
It's like, what happened to you, what caused it, and what does that mean?
And then there are a number of exercises that have been developed over the years that,
like just help you poke at that story, change the story, rewrite the story.
And again, some of this stuff is is very academic.
Like it's been academically validated.
Some of it, like I would say this is an area that, you know, the self-help space does well.
I'll give you an example from each school.
So on the academic side, there's a process called Pennebaker journaling.
And it's basically, it's a specific journaling prompt sequence that begins with,
essentially asking you to write about one of the hardest experiences of your life.
And then it takes you through a few follow-up questions.
And it just gets you to look at that experience in different ways and question whether it
potentially means something different, whether you could have approached it differently,
whether, you know, it may or may not be true.
And there's tons of data backing up showing great results from that, you know, that sequence of
journaling. On the self-help side, I'm a huge fan of Byron Katie. She's got this method called
The Work, and it's a series of four questions. As always, it starts with the problem in your life.
And it says, the first question that you have to ask yourself is, you know, you write out the
problem or the story around the problem. And the first question is, is this true? And the second
question is, yeah, but are you sure it's true? How do you know it's true? And then, of course,
You have to answer that.
And then I believe the third one is like, okay, invert it now.
Right.
So, and the inversion is a technique that she teaches that it's just really clear.
It's kind of just playing with the language in interesting ways.
And so, for example, like, let's say, let's say the problem I'm dealing with is like, you know, my brother hates me.
And you get to the third question and it's like, okay, now invert it.
And what you do is you play with the language and you take, my brother hates me and you turn it in.
into I hate my brother and you write what if that was true and then you turn it into
my brother loves me and you write if that was true and then you know it's
basically it takes you through all these like alternate scenarios and then
forces you to kind of like do the mental exercise of like okay what if I've
been looking at this completely wrong and generally by the time you get to the end
of the sequence you've had a bunch of epiphanies and a ha's and like oh my god I
never thought of it that way before so cognitive reappraisal there's tons of
stuff everywhere. And it is super effective and it is a mainstay of the mental health space.
Do you remember, I think we've shared this, I think before, is this one picture, this meme going
around and there's a top and bottom picture part to it. And there's the top part is, it's like,
oh, nobody gives a shit. And this guy's like, he's really bummed out. And then the bottom was,
nobody gives a shit.
Yes, exactly.
That's one of my like, that's awesome. Yeah, totally. Yeah, totally.
Good cognitive reappraisal there.
So the next one in our 80-20 list is mindfulness.
This could be meditation.
I mean, there are a number of mindfulness practices
that don't necessarily involve classic meditation.
It's really anything that just gets you to focus closely
to yourself and your surroundings,
your thoughts, your feelings, your sensations.
So this could be anything from like a five-minute body scan
that you find on YouTube, to actual, like, Zen meditation practice, to, like, a full-blown,
you know, Tibetan Buddhist retreat, whatever you want to do, like, to develop this muscle in
your brain.
But ultimately, what we're doing here is, like, as you develop this internal self-awareness,
you start to see gaps emerge between, you know, with the CBT stuff, we talked about
how interrelated, you know, thoughts, feelings, and behaviors are.
And I think by default, we see most of us kind of feel like those three things are merged.
Like they all happen simultaneously and like one leads to the next and there's not really anything we can do to like pry ourselves in between them.
Mindfulness spreads those three things out.
Like the gaps between those three things get wider and wider.
And so the more mindful you are of your thoughts and experiences, the larger the gap emerges between thoughts and a thought and a feeling.
a feeling and an action and an action and a thought.
You start to develop the ability to look at an experience and be like, well, I actually don't know what that means.
Or to look at a thought and be like, well, I actually don't know if that's a good thing or a bad thing.
Or look at a feeling and be like, yeah, I actually don't know what I should do about this.
And then being okay with it.
Like that ultimately that's the goal that we're going for.
Yeah.
What I've started doing with this too is I call it minding the gap, actually.
It's like a little mindfulness practice.
Shout out to all the UK listeners.
That's right.
Yeah.
Mind the gap.
That's right on the subway there.
The tube.
The tube.
Again,
I kind of mentioned this is what I've trained myself to do and it's a practice.
It's over time.
But like when an emotion comes up, you feel that.
And then that I kind of insert in my brain, mind the gap.
Yeah.
Okay, here's the gap.
Yeah.
What can I do now?
And you stop.
And you're like, okay, that's when the mindfulness kicks in.
And now I can reappraise.
I can redirect.
I can suppress.
I can choose whatever to do in that situation.
But that's where I have that control is in that gap.
So mind the gap.
Yeah.
That's what I like to do.
What's next?
Leveraging better relationships.
So getting your relationships done, we spend a lot of time on relationships.
And there's this co-regulation aspect to it.
Being around the types of relationships that do help you regulate your emotions better
and finding those secure bases, those sources of growth.
in your relationships versus the vampires, right?
The drains and limiting those and setting stronger boundaries around those.
That's going to get you a long ways just in your social life of being able to regulate, putting
yourself in situations that are more conducive to regulating your emotions in a positive way
versus avoiding the situations that don't and the people that don't.
Sometimes you just have to put those boundaries around them like we've talked about, yeah,
there's just, there's a calming presence too.
If there is a calming presence that you can find in your life,
try to lean into that more than all the energy drains and all the toxic relationships
and everything that we talked about as well.
There's an old cliche that you are the average of the five people you spend the most time
with.
And I think it's a cliche because there's a lot of truth to it.
I think for me, one of the coolest concepts that I came away with researching this podcast
is this idea of co-regulation.
You know, you always hear this phrase like humans or social creatures.
And it's like, oh, yeah, okay, sure, whatever.
What does that mean?
You know?
And the co-regulation thing, like, really drove it home for me.
It's like, no, we have these, our nervous systems.
We have these, like, these emotional systems that are largely built on our own nervous systems,
but actually, like, connect and branch with other people's nervous systems, and we, like,
regulate each other's systems effectively.
And so if you are surrounded by a bunch of people with,
dysfunctional nervous systems, chances are it's going to influence your own nervous system and vice versa.
And I know, like, sometimes I run into people who are like, they hear that phrase that you're the
average of the five people around you.
And they're like, well, you know, they're not great influences, but they're good people.
And I'm, I'm like aware of their faults.
And like, I don't think, I don't think people realize how much of the social influence happens
on an unconscious level.
It's not even like you can look at it.
Like let's say you have a friend who's like a junkie.
Like you can look at him be like, well, he's a junkie, but I still love him and I'm not going to do any drugs and whatever.
But it's like there's a certain standard or expectation that is being lowered constantly when you're around them.
It will make things that are for you, the bare minimum, will feel like overachieving when you're around that person.
where what you really want to find is
where your overachievement
feels like the bare minimum
because those are the people
who are going to bring you up
and help you grow
and help you become a better,
stronger version of yourself.
So, yeah, relationships are huge.
The last one, we talked about emotional flexibility.
So again, looking at, you know,
expression, suppression,
you know, being prevention focused
versus being promotion focused,
attachment types, like looking at all this stuff and understanding that like, okay, it's not
about changing who you are, but it's about developing the flexibility to engage in your
relationships in different ways.
Like having the ability to acknowledge like, okay, this person in my life suppresses and avoids
very deeply, but I do want to have a relationship with them.
So when I'm around them, I'm going to have to be more expressive and I'm going to have
to be more promotion focused.
And that's going to be uncomfortable, but, like, I'm willing to do that to, like,
maintain that relationship in my life or stay connected with that person.
And, like, ultimately, that is what being a very healthy, emotionally healthy, well-adjusted
person is, is, like, because ultimately, like, coming full circle, emotions are adaptations
to our environment.
It is, they are feedback mechanisms that are generated to inspire certain behaviors.
that promote health, well-being, reproduction, and survival.
And so the ideal here is to develop the ability to adapt your behaviors
and your emotional engagement with the world around you
in such a way that you can thrive in almost any environment that you're put in.
That is the end goal.
It's not to stop being angry or stop being anxious or get over your sadness or stop
regretting so much stuff.
It's like, no, no, no, no.
Still feel those things.
But develop yourself to a point where they no longer hold.
you back. Your anger is no longer holding you back. It is now propelling you because you've
found a productive conduit to channel it through. Your anxiety is no longer holding you back.
You've found a productive channel to channel it through. This is ultimately the goal of our
emotions. Like this is where we want to get is it's to that jik kundo, you know, the be like water
my friend. You don't resist the water, you flow like water.
Yeah, and you might have one, you might be, have a propensity to to use one.
one emotional strategy over other, and I get that, that's fine. But it's like, you know,
if you're only using that one, you know, you're always angry or you're always just expressing your
emotions freely and not never kind of strategically suppressing them or anything like that. That's kind of
like, you know, golfing with one club, you know? Like you need, you need a whole set to manage the
golf course, right? And you need a whole set of emotional strategies in order to navigate your life as
well and just getting better like find the ones that you're bad at and practice those first I would
say and then yeah you can go from there yeah yeah all right last question drew how has preparing for
this episode what what have you implemented or taken away from this episode uh and and hopefully implement
into your life right yeah well so the big big um kind of i guess lessons i learned were the culture
stuff, like I said, was just amazing to me. That, to me, really drove up. I mean, I knew culture
influenced emotions. Mostly, I thought it was like through how we express our emotions and everything
like that, but it's actually the culture that you're around, whether it's your immediate culture,
that your family, your friends, and everything like that, or the larger culture itself,
really influences not only how you express your emotions, but the emotions you even feel as well,
which I just thought was crazy. This is the water we are swimming in and we don't realize it.
And it's only when you like enter another culture and really embed yourself in it that you start to realize how influential that is and just how if you have a mismatch between your own personality and your culture, how the problems that arise from that, that's just that's blown my mind a lot.
And so being more aware of that, like if you are someone who's not super emotionally expressive or you're even not, you don't feel a whole lot of like positive emotion a lot.
and say you're in a place like the United States
and you feel like, oh, I just don't fit in,
I just don't belong.
Well, know that that's just like a, it's not a you thing necessarily.
It's a cultural mismatch that you're having.
I think a lot of people, and then you can just be okay with that.
You know, like, it's, okay, I don't fit into this culture of that thing.
I'm just not going to participate.
That's fine.
So for me, that was one of like the big kind of like aha moments I have was like,
oh, this is like way more important than I thought.
Like, the culture around emotions is way more important
and way more fundamental than I thought.
So that was one big thing just from a kind of big picture view.
Yeah.
Yeah.
For me, I just felt like studying all this stuff, it gave me a lot of clarity on my past.
Like looking back at some of the stupid things I did in my 20s or how I used to be when I was a teenager
or why my first relationship was such a mess.
Like there were a lot of things in the stuff.
that we did for this episode, that just like, it helped me make sense of a lot of stuff
over the years and really understand myself and be like, oh, yeah, yeah, that is, that's totally
me and that explains why I fucked up with this girlfriend when I was 24. Like, it just, it connected
a lot of dots for me. So that, that was very satisfying. And then I'll just say that I am, I was
familiar with most of the therapeutic modalities that we went through here, but it was cool to
really dig into how they, I guess the timeline or the progression of the different schools
of thought of like why certain things became popular in certain decades and how different
practitioners built off of each other over time. So that was like my nerdy satisfaction
on this episode. Yeah, I'm really looking forward to, you know, like we kind of started the
episode out with the fact that we kind of got emotions wrong for a very long, like just like just
Like just up until like the last 50 years or so that we really started to understand them and I still think there's a long long ways to go. Yeah. So I'm kind of like I'm like what are we going to figure out? What do we think now that's just like way off? I have no idea. And that's going to be very interesting to see too because I did find again was like we still I don't think have a good definition of what emotions even are necessarily. We kind of have different levels of analysis. We can look at them. But you know, what are we missing? I don't know. We don't know what we don't know yet. I think that's exciting. I don't know.
Stay tuned then, I guess, right?
Yeah.
All right.
I said I wouldn't promo momentum anymore, but I fucking lied we're promoting momentum again.
But seriously, if you want to have a step-by-step process, have all this stuff broken down, put into little bite-sized chunks, and take a little bit of it each and every day, please go to find Momentum.com slash emotions.
We don't run ads on this podcast for a variety of reasons.
and some of them ethical.
And so if you get a lot out of the show
and you want to actually start practicing
this stuff in your life,
the best way to do both of those things
is to go to find Momentum.com slash emotions.
And next time, Drew, what are we going to be talking about?
Oh, Mark, we'll be talking about happiness.
I can finally be happy.
Well, I don't know.
Stay tuned for that too.
All right.
Thanks, everybody.
Hey, so if anything in today's episode hit home for you, don't just let it fade.
Because that's usually what happens, right?
You hear something that clicks, you think, I should do something about that.
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And three weeks later, you barely remember what you heard in the first place.
That's why you should check out Purpose, because Purpose is built for exactly that situation.
It's a personal development AI that learns you.
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