The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - Doctor Jordan Peterson: "The NUMBER ONE Reason For Divorce!" & "The One Small Step You Have To Take To Turn Your Whole Life Around!"
Episode Date: November 23, 2023Jordan Peterson became a professor of psychology at the University of Toronto in 1998, and since then has written 3 best selling books, ‘Maps of Meaning’, ‘12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Cha...os’, and ‘Beyond Order’. He is also the host of ‘The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast’. You can join Peterson Academy here: https://bit.ly/3MXf4ge Follow Jordan: Instagram: https://bit.ly/40RRPK3 Twitter: https://bit.ly/3QT9YTc Follow me: https://beacons.ai/diaryofaceo
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Sometimes it can feel like men and women in relationships want entirely different things,
like they're struggling to communicate and connect on the same level about the same set of priorities.
Jordan will now explain exactly why that is. But outside of the context of a relationship,
all of us struggle in our lives for a variety of different reasons. And what Jordan's particularly
good at is telling
anybody who's right now listening to this that is struggling in some way or finds themselves in a
situation where they're struggling to get out and climb out of that situation, step by step,
how to do that. How to turn that situation into the greatest success of your life. And that's why
I loved this conversation
and why I think you're gonna love it too.
Struggle, relationships, men, women, our conflict,
how to rise above it all and be successful in your life.
And before this episode starts,
I've got a 10 second favor to ask you
that are listening to this right now.
The majority of people that
watch this podcast haven't yet hit the follow button i can't tell you how much it helps when
you hit the follow button the show gets bigger which means we can expand the production bring
in all the guests you want to see and continue to do in this thing we love thank you so much for Jordan.
We had a conversation before, and it reached tens of millions of people.
And as I went through the feedback and the comments of that conversation,
I found one that really stood out to me.
Someone said, I had just days of will left in my body i felt like a failure
i hadn't reached the potential i knew i had in me despite effort i couldn't become the person
i was so desperate to become and then i found jordan and his unfiltered words pulled me from my darkest moment just in time.
Now my life is in my hands once again.
And I've built a career and a life I'm proud of.
So thank you, Jordan.
We may never meet.
But you've saved my life.
And my children still have their father because of you. It is one hell of an impact
that you've had on just that single person's life. How do you receive such incredible feedback
from a stranger you've never met? Well, when you were reading that, you know, I mean, it's obviously a very positive thing to hear.
But my mind immediately went to why that's the case. See, I've been in the fortunate position
of being able to synthesize and then communicate a century's worth of clinical research and
experience gathered by very many extremely intelligent
and careful people.
And then on top of that, whatever I've managed to gather being reasonably educated in the
broader sphere of the humanities and sciences, let's say, and the effect that this individual
is attributing to me is a consequence of that, right? I've been successful
because I've been a conduit of good ideas, and I have the ability to synthesize a lot of information
and to communicate that to people in a way that's understandable. The person who made that comment,
they were struggling for one reason or another. And one of the things you do with people who are struggling is you make the simple even simpler
because then they can get a toehold. You know, like if they're really barely able to move. I had
one client, you know, he was, he had a hard life, man. He was like 85. He'd fallen off a ladder
and broken his neck and they had permanently fuse it so he was basically
like this he could hardly move he was so depressed he literally couldn't get out of bed you know it
was awful and he was in chronic pain because of his broken neck and so you know the first thing
i did with him was get him to sit up for like 30 seconds that was it that's where he had to start
you know and after i worked with him when he was in the
hospital after two weeks he was walking down the hall and able to sit up and read for you know
five or six minutes and he got out of the hospital he went home and but he had to start
with the simplest possible steps and hey man you start this, the definition of humility in some ways is that you start progressing where
you can start. I think about this a lot because there's a lot of people that are objectively or
subjectively down and out in their lives. That's how they feel. And it's often too intimidating
to present them with the idea of climbing Mount Everest today, a proverbial Mount Everest. Like,
just pick yourself up and go to the gym and work out. And that-
Yeah, no, that's not going to happen.
It's like putting them at the foot of Mount Everest. But the small commitments we keep to
ourselves are often really undervalued because they seem so trivial. Like you saying-
Well, that's the casual contempt. That's another aspect of that. Well, one of the really difficult things to learn when
you're down and out is how far you're down because it's humiliating. I was ill recently and when I
started to recover, I couldn't really button my shirts. I had to learn to do that again.
I'd forgotten how to put my hands on keyboard. I didn't know where to put
my hands. I had to learn to type again. Now, I hadn't lost all the knowledge and it came back
quite quickly. And the reason I'm saying that is because one of the impediments to people who've
really taken a blow in their life is that things have fallen apart around them so badly that where
they have to start is humiliating even to consider
the rule. It's a pretty straightforward rule when you want to get back on your feet. And the rule is
you have to make the task small enough so that you'll do it, no matter how small that is.
I've worked with people. I mean, one of the things I've become well known for is my advice to start by cleaning up your room.
But I had plenty of clients who couldn't.
They couldn't go home and clean up their room.
They hadn't cleaned up their room for like 20 years for all sorts of reasons.
Maybe because every time they did try to do anything positive in their family, no matter what it was, they were immediately punished and
undermined. And so if they even went home and dared to start cleaning up the room, they'd face
resistance within the family that was just a manifestation of the 50,000 times they'd been
discouraged in the past, but also a move that would upset the insanity that characterized the
pattern of familial interactions and so actually
when if they even made a move to clean up their room what they were doing simultaneously was
confronting the dragon in the family that had made every single person in that household insane for
like five generations right so it looks simple it's not bloody simple and so in a situation like
that you cut it down so that maybe
the first thing they do is clean up like maybe they look inside one drawer and see the mess
that's there and just look at it for a minute and think about how they might reorganize it if they
were going to when people are very down and out and they decide to make a move forward in some ways they're facing the whole panoply of
problems that confront them in in the guise of that single problem right it's all lurking behind
it right it's like you know they see the tip of a reptile's tail outside a gigantic closet let's say
and they look and they think well well, that's just the tip
of a tail. What harm can it do me? But it's connected to the whole damn beast. And the
advantage to that is that if you make that first step forward, you're actually advancing in the
face of all that opposition. The disadvantage is that the first task seems so small that you
literally have to be on your knees to be humble
enough to lower yourself to take that first step. You know, God, is that all I can do? I'm so useless.
You might even be more useless than that because you might fail at it. I had lots of clients who
would come back, you know, we'd make a deal that they would do something simple. I remember one
client, it's such a comical story in a terrible dark way. You know, he was an
overgrown infant and he was 30. He was still living at home in his messy, you know, high school room
under the thumb of his mother conveniently for him because then he never had to do anything.
And he had managed to entice some girl into sleeping with him and she got pregnant. Now
he's going to have a son. And he had enough sense to come to me and say you know I'm kind of a wastrel and I've mucked
up my life but maybe I'd like not to destroy this kid so is there something I could do to put myself
together so you know we talked that through we negotiated which is what you do with a client if
you're sensible you know you lay out the problem first okay what the hell's wrong what you do with a client. If you're sensible, you know, you lay out the problem first. Okay. What the hell's wrong with you? Do you think you have to listen and listen
and listen while the person unfolds everything that might be wrong? They put all their cards
on the table and then you sort through them and you think, well, some of that, even they'll figure
this out themselves. Some of that's not really the central issue. And so you imagine they lay
all the cards on the table and then you kind of get rid of 90% of them. It's a symptom. It's a symptom.
Yeah. Yeah. It doesn't really bother me now that I've talked about it. That doesn't seem key.
I think I'm really done with that. That isn't interesting to me, but they'll still have to
lay it all out. And then you focus on the problem. And then the next thing you think is, ask them,
this is great general problem solving strategy, is okay, could be better as far as you're concerned what would better look like and then
they have to lay their cards on the table about that so you do the same thing and now you have
the diagnosis that's the problem statement and now you have a hypothetical uh cure let's say
and now you need a strategy right And that would be the steps in between
the problem and the final destination. And then you break down the steps until you find a step
that the person will take. And you have to do that experimentally. So the first step for him was
to vacuum the carpet in his room. And so this is literally what he did. He brought the vacuum. It was a stand-up
vacuum. He brought that into his room, but he only got it to the threshold. And then he left it 45
degrees across the door, leaning, and he walked over it for a whole week. And so then he had to
come back and tell me, you know, and he was embarrassed. He said, said you know I got the vacuum cleaner just to the doorway and
I left it there and then instead of bringing it into my bedroom I just you know I put an obstacle
in my own path and stepped over it for a whole week it's a very humiliating thing because he knew
that his life was on the line and he knew that his son's life was on the line and he knew that
he was one useless
bastard for not being able to bring that vacuum cleaner into the room. But the proper interpretation
of that in part is, well, you got the bloody thing out of the closet, didn't you? So what we did was
renegotiate. This is called, technically, this is called collaborative empiricism it's a behavioral
approach for clinicians and the the collaboration is well as i said what's the problem diagnosis
what's the potential solution the person has to be on board with all this right i mean
they have to be the people who decide that's the problem you can't enforce that on them they have
to discover it for themselves.
And the same with the solution and the same with the strategies. It's like, I don't know what's
right for you. I'll listen. We can jointly explore what might be the right vision for you.
And then we can break that down into a strategy, but you have to be on board with the strategy.
You have to feel that this is right for you.
It's absolutely 100% crucial that it's voluntary.
And then we'll say, okay, well, maybe this is a solution.
Why don't you go implement it?
Come back next week after having attempted this.
Let's see how it went.
And sometimes people come back and say, well, that went great and it started me and I did three other things and you know what we seem to be on the right track and sometimes
they come back and say nope that didn't work at all like with the vacuum cleaner and so then you
have to think what you do in that situation is make the task smaller if you make the task small enough, I've never seen anyone not be able to progress if they made the task small enough.
But, you know, that can be pretty humiliating.
Now, the upside is that once you take that first step, you've looked the beast in the face and you'll start progressing, not linearly, but exponentially
in speed. So what's cool is that it doesn't really matter how small that first step is,
because it'll start doubling and anything that doubles grows unbelievably quickly. And so
that's a very useful thing to know too. And that's true when you're learning anything new.
It's like, you'll feel like an imposter, you'll feel like a fool because you are,
and you'll think I'll never get there
and the destination might look very distant.
But if you take a sufficiently small first step
and get the ball rolling,
you can be cruising along at a pretty good rate,
generally faster than you'll think.
What's going on in one's psychology there?
Is it building
evidence of your own capabilities and capacity? Definitely. What seems to happen when you expose
people to small but challenging tasks, it does two things. It makes them more skilled because
now they're actually dealing with the problem. And so they're acquiring the new perceptions
and the new behaviors that are mastery. So they're actually
expanding their domain of conceptual structures and actions. That's both conception and skill.
But at the same time, they're seeing themselves as the actors that can change the direction of
their life. For example, when you do exposure therapy with people who have phobias,
agoraphobia is probably the best example. So agoraphobia is a condition where people will
become so terrified generally of life that they often literally can't go outside their house.
If they go outside their house, their anxiety levels climb to the point where they have a panic
attack, which is like the complete disinhibition of the fight or flight system. Very overwhelming experience. People will go out and they'll have
a panic attack and then they'll avoid where they had the panic attack. But then the probability of
the panic attack starts to spread so that wherever they go, they have a panic attack and then they
end up stuck at home. And it's quite a common condition. Now, the people who develop that are generally women, and that's because women are more sensitive to anxiety than men. They're
generally women who had an over-dependent relationship with their parents, maybe particularly
their father. They're generally women who went from their father to a boyfriend who was either
overbearing and overprotective or who was enticed into becoming that by the
dependency of the person, of the sufferer. And then, so imagine you're a dependent young woman,
you haven't learned to stand on your two feet. Every time you had a problem, you were taught
to seek authority. You sheltered behind the protective walls that someone else had established
for you. You married someone like that. Now he died or you're getting a divorce.
So that wall is starting to come down.
So all that existential panic starts to rise.
You start panicking when you go out
and you end up at home unable to move.
Also thinking you're the only person in the world
who's suffering that way.
And so what you do is you find out,
you do a problem analysis and you find out their core fears. And agoraphobics are often afraid of elevators. And that's quite convenient because, you know, there are elevators everywhere.
So you can start having them confront their fear of elevators. So how do you do that?
Well, if they're really terrified, you say, well, let's look.
Why don't you come sit by me and let's look at some pictures of some elevators.
And you say, look at the elevator.
Okay, now imagine being 20 feet from it.
How are you feeling?
They'll tell you.
They're nervous.
They're afraid they're going to get trapped in the elevator.
They're afraid they'll have a heart attack.
They're afraid that they'll be in there with other people who are watching them panic and
have a heart attack and being humiliated.
So the two big categories of fears for people are like painful death and then public humiliation.
And if you have a really good anxiety fantasy, it's that you're going to undergo a painful
death in a very humiliating way.
And so
that's what they imagine happening in the elevator. So it's not exactly that they're afraid of the
elevator, right? They're afraid of death and humiliation. And the elevator is a portal to
the realm of death and humiliation. It's like, I'm afraid of an elevator. Okay. How afraid?
Can you, could you look at an elevator from from 100 yards down the hall? Well, if it isn't 100 yards, then 125 yards. You'll find some threshold that the person can tolerate. the magnitude of their confidence is precisely matched with the size of the apparent dragon,
right? And they feel that. It's like there's a place where their fear will,
they'll say, that's close enough. It's like, okay, now you're on the edge. You're on the edge.
So now we'll dance on the edge. We'll move your foot forward. Okay, so let's move a foot forward.
Okay. Anything negative happening? Well, I'm feeling a little nervous. Okay, so let's move a foot forward. Okay, anything negative happening? Well, I'm feeling a little
nervous. Okay, well, let's just stand here for a bit. Keep your eye on the elevator. Don't hide,
because you can avoid by just not looking. We do this all the time. We look away, and the bigger
the dragon, the more we're likely to look away. You don't like to look at, and you can understand why,
people will avert their eyes from atrocity. And they'll certainly avert their eyes from the
thought that they could participate in atrocity. And you could think of that as the heart of
darkness. It isn't because you could look at the fact that you could take glee in the commission
of atrocity. And no one wants to look at that. Well, you start, and you have to look at the fact that you could take glee in the commission of atrocity. And no one wants to look at that.
Well, you start, and you have to look at that.
You have to look at that in the final analysis.
But one step at a time.
And you can do that with any problem, literally any problem.
Break it down, break it down, break it down.
Public speaking.
Anything.
Going to the gym.
Anything, anything.
A small dose, you know, break it down. Public speaking. Anything. Anything. Anything. A small dose.
You know, a small dose. And it's so fun to do this with people. It's the same thing you do
when you're encouraging your young child. And that's a primary source of gratification for
human beings is putting someone on the edge and encouraging
them. And so you do that as a clinician. So I love being a clinician because, you know, people say,
well, how can you, you know, how do you tolerate listening to people's problems? Well, first of all,
they're not your problems. You have to understand that. Because if they're your problems, you're
stealing that person's problems from them.
Because you could come to me, especially people who are very unsophisticated,
they can come and talk to somebody like a well-experienced clinician,
someone whose breadth of knowledge exceeds theirs by a substantial margin,
and that person can just give them advice.
But then they go act out that advice.
And then that's not them. They have to come to it themselves.
This brings me to a point about trying to help people in your life, because we all have people
in our lives that are struggling in some way. And our knee jerk response is to get in there and
solve the problem. This is a problem that men often have when they're dealing with women. They leap to the problem solution phase.
And they also do that in some ways to avoid,
and this is what annoys women,
because what the women want,
and they don't even know this,
but this is what the women want.
Women are more sensitive to threat than men.
Okay.
So they're looking for predators.
Now, predation detection is an intuition. Anxiety is an
intuition. Something's wrong. Okay, what? Well, then you guess, right? So imagine the threat system
has sort of got something in its sights, but it's a sense that something's not right, but it's not
fully fleshed out, the the picture because serpents
are camouflaged, right? So the threat is hidden. Well, what the woman wants is to lay out all the
things that might be wrong. Okay, well, the guy doesn't want that because first of all,
you know, maybe your wife is upset about something in relationship to your children
and she doesn't know what it is. So now she has to go through everything she thinks that might be wrong.
Well, even for you to listen, that's going to be rough
because some of those things are going to be about you.
And so you just have to shut up
and you have to let her put her cards on the table.
Understanding, now, she has to do it in good faith, right?
She can't be using that opportunity to skewer you.
And so these things are tricky to
manage but you want to listen to her lay all the cards on the table now the advantage to that is
now you know where all the hidden snakes are now if you do that what you'll find out and so will
she is that most of the things that she's worried about she's not actually worried about she won't
know that until she lays them out on the table and can see them. And then both of you can triangulate to the actual problem. And then
you can negotiate a solution and offer help. But if you jump right to help, the reason you can't
do that is because you probably have the problem wrong. So then back to your question about helping one of the most effective things you can do to
help people is to listen and there are technologies of listening and so the first one is don't assume
that either you or the person who's talking knows what the problem is it's so hard. Once you have the problem specified, you've solved like 95% of the problem.
It's really, that diagnostic move is really hard.
Are we sure we're addressing the most crucial issue?
You have to have your sights focused right on the center point of the cross, right?
Like in a gun sight.
It's like, are we aiming at the right target?
And then you can start negotiating
problem solution. But you can develop the patience to do that once you understand that that initial
act of listening is in itself the most helpful thing you can do. Just listen. And then how do
you listen? Okay, so if I'm listening to to you there'll be times when what you're saying
doesn't make sense and so then i'll just say well you're saying this now but you said this
five minutes ago and if you listen a lot you can learn to track conversations across a very long
span of time and that's quite fun you said this but then you said this and they don't like they
seem contradictory to me you're not accusing the person.
You're saying, I see an inconsistency in the way you're formulating the problem.
And they'll sort of startle a little bit and then try to rectify that.
They'll check you out to see if you're insulting them or trying to play a game of moral superiority first.
But if it's just an honest question, then you're actually helping them lay out a description of the situation that's not
internally contradictory. Okay. So, and the great podcasters do this. You see this with Rogan,
you know, all Rogan does is ask stupid questions. And the way he does that is by consulting with
his own ignorance in humility. Rogan is listening. He's thinking, I'm a stupid lunkhead and I don't
understand this. What do you mean mean and the what's that's brave
because he's exposing his own ignorance but it's it's honest because he doesn't understand but it
also unites him with his audience because especially with someone like Rogan the probability
at this time that if Rogan doesn't understand the gist of the conversation that 95 percent of his
audience doesn't understand is it's like 100%.
The importance of listening can't possibly be overstated. Listen, ask questions until you
understand. And by doing that, you also help the other person clarify the situation.
It is so hard to do. And I think we have to just pause at that step because
it is, as you said, you said like that like that's 95 of the challenge it is so hard
to do in relationships in work i've sat literally at this table with a colleague of mine about a
year ago and she was telling me she works in one of my companies she was telling me that she's
unhappy in her role and i remember sitting here and she gave me a bunch of reasons why
and i kept asking and asking questions and after just 30 minutes of asking the questions she had decided that in fact everything she had just said was not the issue
and then it related back to a much more fundamental issue of just right right in her work see see okay
well that's very important that's very important jung called that a circumambulation okay so now
imagine the threat system is going off right right? It's saying something's wrong, something's wrong. But it's just, it's a primordial predator detection instinct.
That's what's being triggered.
It isn't high resolute, it isn't capable of high resolution conceptual formulation.
Not to begin with.
Something's wrong, something's wrong, something's wrong.
Okay, what?
Maybe this, maybe this, maybe this, wrong okay what maybe this maybe this maybe this
maybe this maybe okay now what happens is the the maybes circle and spiral right and as you lay them
out you spiral inward to the gist of the matter but you have to see because you can imagine while
this woman is explaining her problems to you she's talking about things about the company and her relationship with the company that might be unsettling to you.
So you're sitting there thinking while she's laying out her problems, maybe you're getting
defensive. Well, that's not true. The company's better than that. That's an unfair accusation.
So you're feeling on the spot. Plus you want to jump in with your, you know, with your solution
because you want to show that you're bigger than the problem that she's showing, or maybe you're secretly attracted to her and you want to be a white knight i mean
there can be 50 things you're sitting there thinking about what you're going to say next
because you want to play dominance or maybe you think that's what you should do because you're a
boss and it's like there's a lot of things that will interfere with listening but but so you learn
you say just shut up ask stupid questions until, until the person that you're listening to has specified the problem.
Now, if you're very fortunate, both of you will converge on that and it'll just become clear.
Think, oh, and you pointed this out.
This is what that's really all about.
Now, the person may be discovering too that they were resisted to that conclusion.
They, you know, because the fundamental threat is more key to their self-esteem that they,
to their conception of themselves, then allowed them to be comfortable. Before they get to the actual point, which is where they're going to be most vulnerable, they're going to throw out a
bunch of screen concerns just to see if you can be trusted with something
that will reveal their vulnerability. And they're even doing that to themselves. It's like, dare I
tell the truth about this situation? Because I've betrayed myself before, so maybe not.
You're so right. They test you on the way to the truth to see how you'll respond.
Yes, and they're testing themselves too. And know and you can facilitate that see if you facilitate that by calm listening then you're modeling the fact that
whatever the hell they have as a problem isn't so terrifying that you have to avoid it and run away
yeah right right it's so interesting what was actually revealed because this person that works
in one of my marketing teams in a different company where there's a CEO said to me it's the work they were doing that was causing them the unease and that's
the reason they wanted to leave etc and I asked them the question after about 30 minutes when was
the time you were most happy in the business they revealed to me that the time they were most happy
was when they were with me overseas at the very beginning. And what that really revealed at its essence was
there'd been a change in the proximity to me
and the real meaning of the work.
And they now felt like they were doing trivial things.
Their happiest time was when they were right next to me
doing the most important stuff.
So the most difficult problems.
They were solving the most difficult problems.
When they were most challenged.
So really, the fix wasn't what they thought it was the fix and they're now they actually texted me i sent the message to one of my team members last night
saying i just don't want to i want to keep their identities yeah so let's say they were with me in
canada they text me when they were most happy they text me last night saying i feel like
canada jenny again right And all the adjustment that had to
be made was getting them back close to bigger challenges. Right. So they wanted to be closer
to the front line as it turned out. When Freud first developed psychotherapy, he developed this
technique of free association. Okay. So all free association is, for this is why people put Freud put people on the couch and sat
behind them see if I'm face to face with you and I'm laying out the problem space just what you're
signaling to me by your face might stop me from fully revealing the truth because maybe you'll
raise an eyebrow or you there'll be a micro expression of disgust or contempt,
or you'll look away, because I'm going to be evaluating you to see how you're reacting
morally to my revelations. So Freud just hid himself. And I don't think that's strictly
necessary, but it's a very wise intuition, and you can imagine how it would be helpful.
So now, I think the counter to that is you can signal to someone who you're talking to
like open reception of the message they're receiving, right?
It's just that, and kids love this, right?
One of the things kids are doing all the time is testing you to see if you're paying attention,
and they will modify their behavior in any way imaginable to get attention there's no
it's because there's no difference between attention and love by the way like there's no
difference and so i don't think you have to hide yourself from your client but that's why freud did
it now what freud noticed and the psychoanalysts noticed is that if you let people free associate,
the topics that they picked would be linked to one another. That reminds me of this. That reminds me
of this. That reminds me of this. Now, obviously, because people aren't just emitting random
noises, there's a reason the things they're revealing are linked. There's some implicit
similarity that they're
striving toward. Now, often what'll happen if you listen to your wife, for example,
she's laying out a bunch of problems and it'll spiral. It'll remind her of something,
this happened with Freud. If you got to the gist of it, it would remind people of something that
happened to them much earlier in their life and often something that was traumatic. So a trauma is a problem you
encounter in your life that's quite deep so that it unsettles you that you do not resolve.
So it's like, imagine that in your bedroom, there were holes that you could fall through into
trouble. And so you want to make a map of where all the holes are
so that you can walk through the landscape without falling into the pit. Now it'd be better if you
just fixed the holes, but at least you have the landscape mapped out. Well, a trauma is a hole
that hasn't been filled in. And so maybe if you had a trauma when you were four, you hit a wall and you couldn't resolve
the trauma, that's no different than not maturing in relationship to that problem.
So what you have at hand there are only the tools that you developed by the time you were four.
Now, then you might encounter a situation where that's reminiscent of that. So for example,
someone might say, I had a problem with my boss.
I have a recurring problem with my boss. And so you listen to him. He says, that reminds me exactly
of what my father did in this situation when I was a kid. And so the reason the person is reacting
to their boss in a negative way is because they're using the same conceptual structure that they used
to construe their father when they were four.
You'll see this in marriages all the time. Like, if you have a recurring problem with your partner that you really can't understand, now it might be your fixation at some developmental stage
that's the problem. Like, she's interacting with you in a way that elicits your 13 year old self consistently
but she also might be reacting to you in a way that elicits her 13 year old self
and so then but if you listen to her she'll get to that and then she'll tell you the story and then
sometimes she'll be able to figure out what to do about that herself, or sometimes
you'll have to discuss it, but it almost always results in tears.
Almost always.
And I think the reason for that is think that what happens is when people break down in
tears.
So children cry quite often, and they cry when they encounter an impediment that they
can't surmount.
And I think what tears do is dissolve you
to the state of neurological plasticity that characterizes early childhood so that you can
learn. Now, people don't like that, right? That reversion, it's humiliating, but you have to break.
That's the crying. The crying is an indication that the current conceptual structure is insufficient.
It has to die.
And then the tears come, right?
And then now you're prepared neurologically to learn something new.
And that'll be whatever comes out of the discussion.
And that'll replace that old conceptual structure that's outdated and immature with a new,
somewhat fragile conceptual structure, right?
And then the person will try that out a couple of times.
Like maybe this is something where you have to,
it's like something that's just come out of a cocoon.
You have to be very careful when you negotiate with your partner
because, you know, maybe they'll decide that they'll try a new tactic
that you have both agreed on.
But the first 30 times they implement that new tactic,
first of all, they won't do it very well because it's new.
And second, if you punish it, it'll kill it right away. Yeah. So you're describing my relationship
very accurately because I am someone who in the mid... So what's my sort of attachment style? I
grew up in a household where my parents were at each other a lot.
It was fighting, arguing.
So I learned very early on that relationships are like prison.
Right, right.
So I wanted to, commitment, I ran from commitment my whole life.
I met someone who had an opposite attachment style where whenever things get a little bit rocky,
she wants to like latch on, in a sense.
Like she really wants to make sure that she's got my attention
yeah for example i could come home and say one word that shows that i'm focused on my work and
then suddenly she's like fighting for my attention that makes me want to run and that makes i want
to chase right right and so then she'll you know she'll get triggered and then she'll kind of
retreat and be it's quote unquote like the word sulking is often used yeah um so we came up with a system
where i said to her when you feel triggered by me not giving you the attention you want and
we end up spiraling can you just try and tell me as soon as possible yeah instead of like the seven
hour silence yeah um so that was the mechanism we came up with and then the first time she did that
i was as you said very conscious of making sure i didn't
react badly to it or get triggered by it right so you're describing the process i've been through
entirely yeah well this happens this happens to everyone and those those sulks let's say
that's that's a non-verbal threat response right right and and you want to replace that with a
more differentiated practical practical, and more immediate
strategy. And so one of the things that I've seen, for example, with my wife is that
the periods of time where she gets upset shrink and shrink and shrink and shrink,
because she can get from the problem to the verbalizable statement of the problem and the
solution way, way faster.
But that takes just from continual practice because continual attention is like, oh, I'm upset.
Okay, well, what am I upset about?
Here's a bunch of things that I might be upset about.
Okay, which of those are focal?
This is something you can learn, but you have to admit you're upset.
And you also have to understand that you don't know why.
Because one of the things that will happen in a marriage with any relationship is like,
well, if you and I talk and we hit a pit, I would rather that it's your fault.
Right?
Because then you have to take the conceptual structure and you have to allow it to die
and you have to cry and you have something to learn. And it's you and it's an indication that you're insufficient.
It's way more convenient for me if it's you.
Plus, I get to feel moral superior and like I have myself under control and that I've, you know, mastered the universe.
And also, women also in some ways want that from men because they want the men to be competent.
And so men will pretend to be more
competent than they are it's like you want to find out what the problem is because then you can solve
it and one of the things you have to consider is that you're you're the problem maybe you're not
but maybe you are now you might say well why should you undergo the cataclysmic revelation
that you're the problem and the answer, because you could stop being the problem.
Like that's the payoff.
Because you might say, well, why attend to your wife?
Why fight?
And the answer is, so you don't have to fight again.
See, and I know this.
So I'm a very agreeable person.
I don't like conflict.
Like I'll do almost anything to not to paper it over though that's the thing to fix it but the
reason that I'll engage in conflict is because I know it isn't a theory I know that conflict
delayed is conflict multiplied and so if I do have a problem with someone I want to note it, get it on the table, fight it through to the bloody bottom, fix it and move on.
And that's a lot of emotional stress and complex reconceptualization and retooling.
And people would rather avoid that because you come home from work and your mind is on something,
whatever the hell it is. And then this like snake pops up and you think, do we really have to deal
with this now? It's like, well, maybe. And if not now, when? And that's something you can also
negotiate, you know, like I can give you an example of that. there was a time a very long time where my daughter was
insanely ill and suffering brutally and deteriorating at the same time and that's
overwhelming by definition because a problem you can't solve is overwhelming and then so the
question arises well how do you deal with the problem that's overwhelming that you can't solve
without making it worse so one of the things that Tammy and I did was we made rules it's
like we didn't talk about Michaela after eight o'clock at night it was just off the table because
we knew well are you gonna are you gonna go to sleep are you gonna need some sleep tonight
like if we're gonna battle this for like decades we better not wear ourselves out. Okay. How not to? Well, let's make some rules. They're
like negotiating rules and you can do this. This is good advice to the degree you can give people
advice about a relationship. Here's something to understand about your marriage. Okay. You are
going to have to listen to your wife 90 minutes a week. Okay. And you might as well just get that
through your thick skull. Now, why? If you listen to her enough, you can make peace and you might as well just get that through your thick skull now why if you listen to her
enough you can make peace and you can play so there's a huge benefit if you don't listen to her
that will accumulate and you'll listen to her in divorce court like you will eventually listen
and at some point you'll pay for the privilege of doing so, right? Because there'll be other people involved,
and then the backlog will be so high that you might never escape from it.
Why don't men like to listen?
Well, often because the insufficiencies are pointed at them.
You know, and sometimes, especially if the woman, let's say,
and this can go both ways, let's be sure about this,
but we might as well revert to the woman, let's say, and this can go both ways, let's be sure about this, but we might as well revert to the stereotypes. And I think it's fair because women are more
threat sensitive. So they're more likely to bring up problems. Now that's the disadvantages,
they bring up problems that don't exist because that's a false positive. But the advantage is
they bring up problems before you're sensitive enough to see them. And so this is very important if you think about the role of women is the woman is closer
to the infant than you.
Okay, so you're, you know, doing whatever the hell you're doing.
You're concentrating on your career.
You know, you're not, especially when the infant's under a year old, you're a step removed
now and good.
You can be dealing with the external world, but she's concentrating on the little kids. And one of the things you want to hear from her is what the hell's wrong with the kids
before you're wise enough to see it now the price you pay for that is she might be shorting out
about things that don't exist so you know and this is especially true if your wife is high in
neuroticism and it could be true if the husband is too but as i said that's the more stereotypical
situation so why listen to get to the signal
now will she get to the signal yes although she might not be very good at that and it might take
a lot of listening but if you listen long enough she'll get better and better at it until she'll
get like really good at it and then the time between the emergence of the problem and the
solution will just it'll collapse to the point where it's virtually immediate. Now that can take, that's a very high level of mastery that can take a very long time.
But then, you know, you also want to put forward to your wife and yourself, the proposition that
you're better than you are, which is, well, I can, okay, I get the problem. I can solve it.
It's like, no, you probably don't get the problem. And even if you did, it isn't necessarily the case
that you could solve it.
And so you have to put up with the fact
that you're going to have to be dragged through the mud
because she's going to point to,
you know, maybe her kid's upset because you're a tyrant.
And you probably are a tyrant to some degree,
you know, clomping around, overconfident and all that.
And so she's going to poke you.
Well, maybe this is how you're stupid.
And maybe this is how you're stupid.
And maybe this is how you're stupid or maybe this is how you're stupid and maybe this is how you're stupid.
Long list of potential ways and actual ways
you could be stupid.
So you have to listen to that.
Now, your wife has to act in good faith.
One of the things that Tammy and I did
when we first got married,
because I thought a lot of this through
before we got married.
I said, look, if we're going to do this, you have to tell me the truth. I don't care what it is. I'll tell you the
truth, but you have to tell me the truth. I don't care what the truth is, but it has to be true,
right? And so that's, without that, you get nowhere and you can't trust your partner either.
And so your partner has to be all
in. That's why you have a marriage vow. Because the marriage vow is basically this. This is the
vow. No matter what you tell me, I won't run away. And that's a bitch of a vow, man. Because
when someone unveils their whole heart, they unveil themselves all the way down to hell. It's not pleasant. It's awful. And so they need to know that you will not run away. And that's a vow,
because what do you know? Look, the person's always going to be thinking, always, if you really
knew who I was, you wouldn't love me, you wouldn't be with me. And you know, hey, fair enough, because people are full of snakes. And if all
those snakes were revealed, perhaps the logical thing to do would run, would be to run. And so
then you might not, you might say, well, why not run? It's like, well, you want to run from everyone
for the rest of your life? You want to forego the advantages of a permanent relationship? And you're full of snakes too. So you're both making a bad bet. And so you make the
bad bet based on the idea that if you are faithful and you are truthful, that you can resolve the
issues and you can. It's a good deal. Resolving issues. Much of what you've talked about stems
back to childhood trauma and things that happen in our formative years. I often wonder, those holes in the bedroom floor you describe, the early traumas, can we ever-
They're often in the bedroom floor, by the way.
Yeah.
You bet.
Can we ever fill those or can we just put planks of wood over them?
Oh, no, no, no.
You can't put planks of wood over them.
You have to fill them.
And what you do, oh, and you can do this.
You know, let's say you were bullied
repeatedly when you were a kid. Okay, you're probably still being bullied. Because if you
didn't, being a bully victim is a stable trait. So the great analysis of bullies that have been
done, Dan Olwes in Sweden did this, who is a great psychologist. He analyzed bullying behavior and bully victim
behavior. So he defined bullying very carefully. You're a bully if you use power disproportionately.
So like if I'm 12 and I'm picking on someone my own size, I'm not a bully, right? Because there's
the risk to me is commensurate to the risk to them. That's just aggression. That's just competition.
And even if it's violent, it's not bullying. A bully is when I'm 12 and you're 8, or when there's two of us and one of you, or when I get you in a position where you're completely vulnerable and
can't defend yourself. Disproportionate use of force, right? Bully victim is someone, the bullies
will check out, imagine a bully comes into a room full of kids, he'll poke at all the kids, and one of the kids will manifest a disproportionate emotional response.
Well, then it's like he just zeroes in on that. And those are often kids who are higher in
neuroticism or who are fragile for other reasons. And then that can become permanent. And both the
bullies and the bully victims have a negative long-term developmental trajectory.
The bullies tend to become criminal and alienated on that front, especially as they move into high
school. And the bully victims tend to become depressed, anxious, and dependent. If you have a
partner who's been a bully victim, for example, that's going to be brought into your marriage.
And then one of the things that's going to happen is every time you try to have a dispute, which is to actually think and solve a problem, they're going to see you through
the bully template. They're going to treat you like you're a bully. They're going to accuse you
of being a bully. They're going to bring up all the times before when you acted like a bully,
and then you're going to have to defend yourself. And part of the reason that people can't listen
is because they also don't know how to defend themselves. It's like, especially if you're, here's 15 pieces of evidence that you're a bully.
It's like, can you counter those? Maybe. What if you're not very articulate? You know,
it might take you two weeks to think up how to argue yourself out of that. Plus you're going
to be doubtful about it. You know, so those are very complicated things to work through, but
you can listen.
If you listen, the person will dispense with some of their accusations by themselves.
The accusations that can't be dispensed with, though, now those are questions.
You know, maybe your kid's upset when he or she's interacting with you, and your wife says, well, you're too hard on him.
It's like, well, are you? Well, it's time for you to go away for like a week
and meditate on that, right? And that's soul-searching, right? You're going to go down
to the bottom of your hearts like, well, are you a bully? Are you a bully like your father was a
bully? You know, are you a bully like a friend who was a reprobate that you admired and tried to copy
was a bully? You know, you have to see because maybe you are, maybe you should stop, but then
you also have to figure out how you would be if you weren't being a bully. Then your wife can help
you, you know, and this is another good rule for couple conflict. Like, let's say I'm unhappy with
you. Say, so I come and tell you that you can ask me okay what do you want
if I could give you what you wanted what would it be well I don't know it's like no sorry I cannot
hit a target you won't specify let's discuss it at least we got to have a target here and so this
is also if you're an employee you got to know this if you're an employee, you got to know this. If you're an employee, you're going to your boss with a problem. Why don't you go with a solution too?
You know, and if you're the sort of employee who goes to your boss with a solution,
you'll racket yourself up the hierarchy. If you're in a halfway decent business,
you will ratchet yourself up the hierarchy so fast you can't believe it because you'll get
a reputation as the person who can solve the problem. So, you know, and you can't believe it because you'll get a reputation as the person who can solve the problem so you know and you can actually play with this in in in your marriage because
one of the things that you can do for example is well let's say you say something that irritated
your wife okay and then you can say okay she'll say well that really bothered me it's like okay
it's an open question why maybe she's too goddamn sensitive and maybe you're too
much of a son of a bitch it's like who knows right but you can ask her okay if I had said what you
wanted me to say in that situation what would have I said now that's a hard question she has to think
about that it's like well what would what would have worked and then she'll say you know well
maybe you could have said this and then you can say okay let me say it now then she asked and but it's sort of like let me say it it'll be sort of fake
it'll be a first pass approximation you're putting words in my mouth but let's assume that i'm trying
to do something better stupidly and badly to begin with you know with an eye to mastering it over 50 repetitions
so but i'll start by just saying it so she'll tell you what to say and you can say it now if
you're absolutely 100 unwilling to say it because you think it violates your conscience that's a
whole different issue that means there's a deeper discussion to be had but maybe you could try it
you know you could try it out for size. And maybe she could see if that
sort of satisfied her. And now you've got a rubric for how that interaction might go in the future.
Let's make it concrete. You come home at the end of a workday. Okay. There should be,
there's a right way of doing that, that you have to negotiate with your wife.
Maybe she rushes to the door and meets you with all the problems of the day okay that's probably not a
great strategy you know because you're already up to here you're tired so is she likely from
whatever she was doing maybe maybe she was at work too you can't meet each other when you're both
tired every single day for the rest of your life with nothing but a ball of problems. Partly because if you do that 50 times, you're going to view the person as just a bunch
of snakes that are coming at you. That's not good. Even if the problems that are being pointed to are
real, you know, you might think, okay, so you come home after work. What would be the best way for
that to unfold? And you have to negotiate that
and i would say we you know let's parameterize that a bit you're probably hungry well you don't
want to talk to someone this is another great rule don't talk to your partner about something
complicated when they're hungry it's not going to work so maybe you come home you have something to
eat you kick off your shoes maybe you take 10 minutes for yourself, and then you can talk. But you want to get that right. Or maybe you come home, you meet each other
at the door, she gives you a hug, you have something to eat, you relax for a minute, maybe you have a
shower, but then you've already negotiated about when you're going to have a conversation, and
you're going to be prepared for it. Now people do this in the business. You don't just randomly
discuss a bunch of problems at your business if it's running reasonably well. You have a meeting,
it's parameterized. You kind of have an agenda. You have to do that at home. Your home is also
a small business and it has to be run like that. And you have to spend 90 minutes, at least 90
minutes a week with your wife, just running the damn business.
And I can tell you, if you don't do that, you'll never get to the play ever. Cause maybe you'll,
you know, you'll be romantically interested in each other and you want to spend some time together,
but there's a bunch of problems brewing and your wife will definitely do this will absolutely
happen is that when you're trying to be interested in each other, these things will come into her
mind and distract her and she'll bring them up. and then you'll get pissed off because it's like well we're
supposed to be having fun at the moment we're supposed to be attending to each other why are
you bringing that up and the answer is well we're together and these are problems we haven't set
aside time to deal with them the reason you should listen to your wife is because if you listen to
her enough she'll tell you what's wrong and what she wants.
And then you can fix what's wrong and you can give her what she wants.
In your practice, have you ever encountered those holes in the bedroom,
those childhood traumas that you realized at some point
when you stared into the patient's eyes, they could never solve?
Yes.
Yes.
Yeah.
A bottomless abyss. it's awful yeah i was in situations where you know i i'd get to the bottom of it i thought and then it was like dante's so dante's inferno for everyone
who is reading listening you should read that book d's Inferno is a topography of hell.
So underneath every problem is layers of problems, right? Right to the bottom.
For Dante, the worst problem was betrayal, right? And the reason betrayal is the worst problem is
like, if you and I want to have a relationship, we have to trust each other. And betrayal is the
violation of the trust upon which
relationships are predicated so it blows apart everything so the lowest level of hell for dante
the bottom of hell was filled with betrayers and that's right that's childhood sexual abuse like
it's the ultimate betrayal right it's the it's the a child sexual predator is someone who takes the role of guardian to be the wolf,
right?
It's the worst form of betrayal.
And so it just devastates children.
And because they're actually faced with the problem of malevolence at a very early age
and they, what the hell?
It's like you're four and now you see the bottom of hell.
Well, that's trauma.
And the only, the way you treat that, by the way, is you walk people through a topography of hell well that's trauma and the only the way you treat that by the way is you
walk people through a topography of hell that's what you do and and you can do that well let's
say you were abused when you were a kid okay so what's your problem well your problem is you've
seen into the heart of darkness that's your problem and just blew you into pieces. Could people really be like that? Is that my father?
Right?
Is that my uncle?
How could he do that?
Well, you're gazing into the face of malevolence itself.
You have to develop a philosophy of good and evil.
It's a religious philosophy, essentially,
because a philosophy of good and evil
is a religious philosophy.
Those are the same thing.
You have to develop a philosophy of evil,
and then you have to understand how you combat that. And that's very complicated. How do you
combat evil? With truth, with love, with beauty. You have to start to embody that.
Or maybe it's even worse. You're traumatized because you did something like brutal,
seriously brutal, and maybe you enjoyed it. That's a very common pathway to
post-traumatic stress disorder for people. And post-traumatic stress disorder occurs when you
have a very large hole that, you know, gapes large enough to swallow virtually everything
that hasn't been fixed or papered over. You do that by finding your way out of hell. And that's
what happens in the inferno too. Dante is guided through hell by Virgil,
who's the spirit that guides you through hell.
That's a good way of thinking about it.
So, and every problem,
even the problems your wife brings to you,
especially if they repeat,
there are levels underneath that.
And at the bottom, there's a betrayal,
something like that.
There's some bit of hell in there somewhere.
And so, and sometimes, you know,
if you go all the way to the bottom
and you solve that bottom problem, you'll solve a whole bunch of peripheral problems.
So there's a movie, Apocalypse Now, that's about a journey to the heart of darkness,
and that's what the book is about, Joseph Conrad's book. And there's a documentary called
Heart of Darkness that describes the making of Apocalypse Now. And the people who made Apocalypse Now,
which was a movie about a journey to the heart of darkness, it had an effect on them while they
were making the movie. And all of the people that were acting in the movie and directing and
producing and financing all went on a journey to the heart of darkness inside. And it virtually
killed them. One of them had a heart attack. One of them went completely broke. Like they just had a catastrophe when they were making this movie. They fell into
its archetypal clutches. Heart of Darkness is the name of the documentary. It's fascinating.
Have you been on that journey yourself?
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Sort of, I would say in some ways permanently when i went back when i was 20 something like that 20 i started
studying atrocity right and so i was i've always been interested in the holocaust auschwitz in
particular but it's a very particular interest like evil nazi germany auschwitz prison guard prison guard who enjoyed his work right because my
my question was how could you be an auschwitz prison guard who enjoyed his work now one answer
is well you're just like a demon from another planet who's so unlike me that i don't even have
to worry about it and that's a very convenient answer, but it's not true.
Many, many, many, many of the people,
not all,
many of the people who were involved
in the Nazi atrocities
were perfectly ordinary people.
They were just like you.
And you think,
no, I wouldn't do that.
It's like,
that's not what the evidence suggests.
The evidence suggests
that the vast majority of people in Nazi Germany went along with it.
Now, not all of them were dragged into the abyss itself, but plenty were.
And if you think you wouldn't have been one of them, that just means it's highly likely that you would have, because you have no idea what you're capable of.
There's a great book about that, it's a terrifying book called Ordinary Men. And it's about the initiation of a police battalion from Germany who went to Poland
after the Germans marched into Poland. Now, these were ordinary men. They were policemen,
middle-aged, who had grown up before the Nazi propaganda mill got going. Okay. So they weren't
indoctrinated Nazis from like the time they were four.
They're just ordinary middle class guys. Plus their commander told them in Poland when they
were starting to do military work, even though they were civilian policemen, that they could go
home, that they didn't have to do this job, and that there would be no repercussions. And in fact,
out of the battalion, a number of men right at the beginning
said, I'm not doing this, and they went home. The vast majority went along. Now, why? Okay.
So now these policemen are in Poland, and they've been told a story, which is that, you know,
Germany's at war. And the reason for that is that evil Jews have conspired up a, you know, a
conspiracy, and they've united the Western world against us.
And they're a fifth column within the country. And your patriotic duty is to root them out now
that we're in Poland and you're saving the fatherland and there's going to be dirty work
associated with it. And do you really want to leave all that to your compatriots, you know,
your companions, your, your guys? Cause like if you and I are together and someone that we're working for presents us with a
dirty job and I say, well, I'm not doing that, well, then I leave it to you. So there's a kind
of betrayal that's built into that. Now, the guys that left thought, I don't care, I'm not doing
this, but most people didn't. And part of the reason they didn't do it is because they were
loyal to their peers. By the end of this, which took months,
these guys were taking naked pregnant women
out into the middle of fields
and shooting them in the back of the head.
Like, and becoming violently ill because of doing so
and tearing themselves into shreds internally.
Like, sick, sick at heart, but doing it.
And that's a, it's a terrible thing to look at.
And I started looking at that, like,
it's 40 years ago now. It was shocking. And so what did I discover? Well, I discovered a lot of things. I discovered
that the road to totalitarian hell and atrocity is paved with lies. Lies are the pathway to hell,
really, practically and metaphysically.
And so one of the things I decided, and this was in 1985, was that I was going to stop lying.
What does that mean practically?
Lies ruin your life.
So you will not accept a white lie?
You won't?
Well, look, a white lie is better than a black lie. But look, if you're really telling the truth, you're serving truth at every level of analysis simultaneously. That's right. So if my words are landing properly, they're going to be the words that work right now and tomorrow and a week from now and a month from now. And they're going to work for me and they're going to work for you. So a true statement has levels of application. And a white lie is a statement that's true at one
level and false at another. Now, you might not be able to, maybe you don't have the wherewithal at
that moment to come up with the statement that satisfies all the truth conditions at every level.
And so you default to the best you can manage. You know, your wife says, do I look fat in this dress? You know, or, or maybe she says, how do I look in this dress?
And you think you don't like that dress. And you know, the easy thing to do is to say,
I love it, dear, whatever you want, or, you know, of course not. But that's, and that's a white lie.
But that's not the optimal answer. Like a better answer to that is,
don't ask me questions like that.
And then you can have a discussion about it.
See, the thing is, I bought a lot of clothes for my wife.
I like clothes shopping for my wife.
And I tell her how I think she looks.
And the advantage to that is that
if I tell her that she looks good,
she knows I mean it right I'm
not muddying up the water and if I have to say something I mean I it's not like I the number of
times that I've told her that I'm not happy with the way she's presenting it like it's it's virtually
that virtually never happens she actually has extremely taste. And so it's just an example.
But if you're forced into a situation where you have to tell a white lie, there's snakes somewhere
that you haven't dealt with. And maybe the best you can do, and that's Leonard Cohen, the poet,
said, there's no decent place to stand in a massacre. You may have already compromised
yourself to the point where in that situation, the best you can
do is a lie. But that means that you shouldn't have bloody well been there to begin with.
And the antidote in many respects is honesty further upstream, honesty with yourself and
others further upstream. You can get yourself in positions where all of your options are bad.
And what that means is exactly as you pointed out, you did something upstream, man.
Now, one of the things you do in therapy is you find out what people did upstream.
You know, and you'll find this in your discussions with your wife.
There'll be a problem.
And as you circle towards it, you'll see, oh, this is where I made a mistake, right?
This is what's wrong with me.
And then you can even find out if you look can you can go back into your past and you can think oh yeah that's when i made that
decision i knew when i made it it was bad decision you know and your life is full of
the consequences of decisions you took in the past that put you on the wrong path
and you said we were talking about repairing things What you do is you go back to where you made the mistake. You figure out what the mistake was. You know,
there's this cartoon trope that there's an angel on one shoulder and a devil on the other. Well,
you come to a crossroad. That's also where you meet the devil. Go this way or that way.
If you go the wrong direction, your life will be then the consequences of that bad choice.
And then that will tangle you up and then you'll suffer for it. Then you have to figure out, okay,
what's the suffering? What's the problem? When did I make the bad choice? Which road should have I taken? That's how you fix a trauma. You replace the road you did take with the road you should
have taken. And now you have a road forward. and now you have a road forward and once you have a road forward the trauma is no longer traumatic because you have a road your brain
brings up the past because you have not specified the proper road forward you go back into the road
you took that was the wrong road you find out what the right road was, now you've atoned, you've confessed, you've repented,
and you have specified the proper pathway forward. And that's what you do when you negotiate a
solution to a problem with your wife too. Here's the problem, here's what we did wrong,
here's what we'll try to do in the future. And if that new future map works, that past trauma will be
rendered irrelevant. I was looking at our past conversation, and I thought it would be interesting
to see who the audience were, their demographic. And the age group were 20 to 40-year-olds,
really 18 to 40-year-olds. My question to you is, in their lives, in that demographic's
lives, what do you think the biggest challenge is? Because both your kids, Julian and Michaela,
both fit into that category as well. What is the greatest challenge that that demographic face?
Well, the biggest challenges we had with our kids was, see, I think the biggest challenge I had in my generation was negotiating the years
between 13 and 15, something like that. But my sense is now the biggest challenge to young people
is negotiating the transition into adulthood, into adulthood identity. And I think that's partly why
we have this terrible war in our culture of what constitutes identity. And I think the reason that
identity has become such a problem is that our concepts of identity are unbelievably unsophisticated,
narrow, hedonistic, and self-serving. So the identity groups that have popped up
are all, you could say, whim-based identity groups. They're sexual identities,
say, or something arbitrary like sex or race or ethnicity, something arbitrary. But the sexual
identity groups are particularly interesting because the idea that that's your identity is
predicated on the notion that there isn't anything more vital to you than the immediacy
of your sexual behavior. Well, you're not a sex machine. You're not a short-term sex machine.
That's not what a human being is. So if you revert to that, all you're going to do is produce
like anxiety, hopelessness, and misery. It's not a good solution. So then you might say,
well, what's the solution? And the solution is something called a subsidiary solution.
So what's your identity? Well, you should get your act together and take care of yourself.
So you have to integrate yourself. You have to integrate across anxiety and hatred and pain and jealousy and fear and hunger and lust and all that plethora
of spirits that wage war within you. It's a lot. It's a lot. You have to bring that into a unity,
okay? And one of the things Nietzsche said, the famous German philosopher, was that every drive
attempts to philosophize in its spirit. So those sub-city sub subordinate spirits that war
inside you will try to dominate i'm only my anger i'm or rage that's the protester type you know
i'm only my sexuality i'm only my my app my appetite that's the consumer model but all that
has to be integrated and then you might say well integrated into what well integrated into a structure that serves all of those spirits simultaneously and harmoniously across a long
time that's maturity okay but that doesn't happen in isolation so then the next there's stages above
that okay so the next thing is maybe you've got your act together enough so that someone can tolerate being around you. So there's enough left over from you so you can play with someone else. So you establish a relationship, marriage, let's say. You invite someone else to join forces with you. there's you as husband. And it's the joint interplay of those that's now your identity.
Okay.
And so now you have a role and you have obligations and responsibilities and opportunities.
You know, you say, well, I'm constrained by my marriage.
You know, there's all sorts of things I can't do, which really means I can no longer, in
the most primitive way, it means I can no longer immediately gratify my
short-term whims. Although it could also be more complex in that I don't get to pursue the things
that I need to pursue, which means you haven't negotiated with your wife very well. Like if your
marriage is a prison, you're either very immature in what you want or you haven't negotiated
properly. If you've done it well, you've got your individual unity established, and then there's a
unity within the marriage that's better. And why would it be better? Well, you could learn to love
someone, and that would be better, because getting outside yourself decreases your anxiety. So we
know as psychologists, one of the things that was learned 20 years ago is that there's no difference between
thinking about yourself and what you want and being miserable. Those are self-consciousness
and negative emotion are so tightly tied together that they're statistically indistinguishable.
Does that not raise the question about the decline of religion?
Absolutely. Well, that's the next level. It's like, okay, so there's you, now you're a husband, right? And so your identity is those
two things in lockstep. But that's not enough. Now maybe you're a father, now you have kids,
now you have a whole nother level of responsibility and opportunity to flesh yourself out and support
and love, right? So now, and then, well you so you've got your family together that's
not enough you've got the community to serve so you want to serve the community and then community
scale you know maybe you're good in your local business and you have a local business organization
and you're good in that and then well then there's the town level and the city level and the state
level and the country level and then you know america is one nation under god there's the town level and the city level and the state level and the country level.
And then, you know, America is one nation under God.
That's the ultimate level of this hierarchy of identity.
And that's what should be served most fundamentally.
That's a definition.
Okay?
God is that which should be served most fundamentally.
It's a definition. So when you're thinking that B is better than A,
what you're saying, even if you don't know it,
is that B is a step from A on the road to God.
That's what you're saying.
The medieval definition, a medieval definition of God
was something like the sum of all that is good
or the essence of what is good.
And so if you believe that there is a good,
then lurking behind that is the spirit of all of that which is good. That's God by definition. Now
you can debate forever about what that is, but it is something you live in relationship to,
like that's absolutely inescapable.
And you might say, well, I don't believe in God.
And then I would say, well, do you believe in good?
And you'll say, no.
I say, well, then you can't act
because you act towards a good or you're not motivated.
I called Simon Gunning,
who's the CEO of Campaign of Living Miserably.
It's a big mental health charity here.
And I said, give me the updated stats.
He said to me, 19 to 35 year olds, which is that demographic that are listening to this
predominantly, are twice as likely to report being in crisis than any other group.
Right. And there's a reason. It's a very straightforward reason. It's literally this,
the more you are focused on yourself, the more miserable you are. It's as simple as that.
But that's society now these days.
I know. And there are terrible forces pushing us in that direction. I could attribute this
to the idiocies of a degenerate Protestant liberalism driven by postmodernism. But you
could also just as easily point to consumerist capitalism. It like it's all about you it's all about what you want worse it's all about what you want right now worse it's all about what your basest appetites
want regardless of cost right now well that that's the same as being two years old it's there's
nothing about that that's and why do you think that's you anyways it's like since when did what
you are become what the most idiotic part of you who cares nothing about anything else and any other
people wants right now why is that you how about this though so this is where i'm trying to make a
distinction is responsibility is a good thing but responsibility, sometimes comes this idea that it's about me. My outcomes
are about me. It's all about me. My success and failure are a consequence of me, me, me, me.
Yeah, well, right, right. Absolutely. Absolutely. Well, that's why the classical Christian
philosophy has always been that you cannot infer someone's moral worth by the level of accomplishment.
So the aristocrats would have said, the Roman aristocrats would have said, well, look at me.
Like, it's pretty obvious, speaking to a slave, say, it's pretty obvious that I'm better than you.
First of all, I can slap you, and there's not a goddamn thing you can do about it.
And you have to do what I tell you to do. and I've got all the money and all the stuff,
and I can make all the decisions, and I have all the power, clearly that's evidence that I'm morally superior to you. But didn't they believe that a god had granted them that superiority to some
degree? So didn't they often believe in fortune as the... Sure, sure. Well, sure, of course they did.
That just made it even better. The fact that I've
got the power is a reflection of the fact that the cosmic order is clearly on my side.
And we believe that less now because of the decline of religion. So we now think that our
outcomes are more determined by our own actions. Yes, but lurking underneath that, there's a hidden
God lurking underneath all that too. It's just that the God has become subjectivity. It's something like that. When God talks to Moses out of the depths of the burning bush, he says,
I am what I am. And that's what every degenerate Protestant liberal says now. I am what I am.
And they also say, and if you don't go along with it, the consequences for you are going to be
pretty damn dismal. Use my pronouns, adopt my identity, play the game that the worst part of me insists on,
or else. And it is a consequence. I said Protestant liberalism for a reason.
Like, as we've moved away from God, we've moved into a radical subjectivity. Now, the problem
with that is that a radical subjectivity, especially one of impulse, is unbelievably immature and counterproductive. It just doesn't work any more than a room full of two-year-olds works.
What's a better idea?
This subsidiary structure. It's the adoption of voluntary responsibility. Way more complex identity. It's like, you know, take on the load. Take someone in your life, make a
permanent relationship, work it out, have some kids, serve your society at all these different
levels, strive upward. What's up? Okay, here's the definition of up. A better solution unites more situations and people across broader spans of time.
Is this why, and this brings me to, you're doing Peterson's Academy, which is an online sort of
interactive learning platform you've designed, which is kind of, seems like it's taking on this
typical university structure. I was on there. I see people can sign up right now,
but why are you doing Peterson's Academy? Well, curiosity. I'm curious about virtually
everything. I started putting my lectures on YouTube because I was curious, what'll happen
if I use this? So curiosity. But then the more deliberative answer is,
I'm in a very fortunate position
because I can meet pretty much anyone I want to meet.
And the people I want to meet
are almost always interesting thinkers, let's say,
or people who've done interesting things
repeatedly in their lives.
And so I can find those people
and some of them are very charismatic
and they have lots to say.
And I am providing them with a platform
to say those things and we can do it at extremely high quality and very very low cost and we can
distribute that to everyone and i am an educator i'm a professor or at least i was i'm still a
professor emeritus and it's time for the for what we've been doing in universities for all these centuries to be
made available on a mass scale because it can be done very well and it can be done
and it's entertaining to do and there's no reason not to do it. Okay, so that's all on the positive
side. And then there's a sense of humor aspect to it too, because it became impossible for me to work in
a university. And so I thought, fine, I'll go build my own university. Because I thought maybe
there's something arrogant about this. When the university came after me, there was part of me
that thought, you think I need you. It's like, I don't think so. I think you need me. And if you
don't want me around anymore, we'll see who needs who.
Now, like I said, you know, I was irritated and peeved, and maybe there's something arrogant
about that, but let's reconfigure it. So here's one of the experiences I've had bringing these
professors down to Miami. This is especially true with the professors from Cambridge and Oxford.
Like some of these people, man, they are deadly.
You're lucky to have a conversation with them. They've been thinking a long time. They're super
smart. They're wise. They know their field. They're great communicators. These are stellar people.
And their universities treat them terribly. No respect. They let their students walk all over
them. They pay them abysmally. They treat them as if they're pawns of the administration it's sickening and so i invite them down to miami and we we make them a good financial offer and we
treat them like people we're very pleased to have there and that we hope they'll come back and they
have a really good time and they deliver and we say look they say well what what what function do
you want this course to serve?
You know, because maybe they're worried that there's a political agenda or something like
that.
And our rule is, we picked you for a reason.
You know what we're doing.
You tell us how to get the hell out of your way so that we can enable you to teach the
course you've always dreamed of teaching.
We will provide you with the audience you've always wanted, which will be people,
because they have a live audience. The live audience members we select are selected because
they want to come and listen, which is what you want for students. And so we want to have the
dream experience for the professor. Come, talk about what you love to people who want to listen,
plus we'll provide you with maybe enough financial security so you don't have to be
concerned about your damn university anymore which is also something i'm quite pleased about
now i don't know if we can deliver on that but even the initial we give them an advance like
like with a book deal and even the additional advance generally is a sizable sum it depends
to some degree on their following right right? Because we do some economic
calibration. But I would love to be in a position where I could take like the best thousand lecturers
in the world, bring them onto Peterson Academy, give them financial independence, because that
would be really amusing. And then to bring what they have to say to everyone for almost no cost.
You've taken a first principle approach to trying to build a new university,
bringing the best professors together, giving them the freedom,
making sure they're not censored in any way,
giving them the audience and the remuneration and appreciation they deserve.
When does this university, Peterson Academy, launch?
Early 2024.
We already have 30 courses recorded,
something like that.
I'll put the link to the university
in the description below on this episode,
but also you can just search
Peterson's University online
and it comes up the first thing.
We usually have a closing tradition
on this podcast where the last guest
leaves a question for the next guest
in the diary.
But I wanted to ask you my own question
because it was
quite pivotal to our it was really informative and the honesty you brought with it in our last
conversation really changed my life in a number of ways how i'll tell you after i ask you okay okay
okay the question is how are you doing good good you know i I still have a lot of pain.
So that's annoying.
But not anywhere near as much as I did have when I was really sick.
So like, I almost always feel like I have a relatively serious flu.
Achy.
It's some neurological problem.
And I have no idea what it is, and neither does anyone else.
But I'm not anxious at all.
And my head is very clear.
And I have such a ridiculously interesting life that the leftover trouble is basically irrelevant.
You know, I wish it would go away, but whatever.
It's not that big a problem so and i i mean i just have an absolutely
miraculous realm of opportunity in front of me it's crazy every day i have is so interesting
that it's almost unbearable and i would tell people who are listening you know you might want
that for yourself let's say you might want to have that and i can tell you you can one way to increase the
probability that things will unfold for you properly is to is to not lie just stop lying
period stop saying things you believe to be untrue stop doing things you know to be wrong
just start with that you'll get closer and closer to the truth. And the truth is the adventure of life.
That's the advantage to the truth.
You have the world on your side.
But obviously, because if you're lying about things,
you're opposing reality.
Who are you?
Who are you to oppose reality?
Good luck.
Unbearable.
It's almost unbearable.
Your life is so exciting and so full of opportunities that it's almost unbearable yeah yeah it's like an action adventure movie all the time it's crazy
it's crazy you know wherever i go i can talk to whoever i want essentially you know i'm going
from country to country people stop me on the streets.
They're happy to see me. It's like I have friends wherever I go. Really, it's crazy. And people,
you know, they feel they know me because they've been watching hours often and they do know me.
You know, I don't know them, but they certainly approach me on good terms, you know? And so,
and I go, I just was in nine different countries and I have a team of people who set up up meetings for me like dinner meetings and so on in these countries. And they're always people, they're well placed people in the political realm and the cultural realm, they're hyper interesting people. And, you know, so I meet 30 people like that every second day in different countries all over the world. And so and then I have these podcasts podcasts and I can basically phone anyone I want,
who I would like to talk to, and they'll talk to me. And so, you know, three times a week, I get to sit down with someone who's like a bloody genius. And for 90 minutes, they'll tell
me a whole bunch of things I don't know. So that's superbly interesting. And so, and, you know,
my books are selling like mad and I'm writing another one, which
I'm really interested in.
And yeah, it's great.
It's ridiculously interesting.
And you can, I truly believe that people have that at hand.
You have that at hand.
That's there for you.
Jordan, thank you.
My pleasure.
It's always good to talk with you.
It's always good to talk with you too.
And you've given me a gift as you did last time in so many ways.
So thank you so much for making the decision.
Because I know you could be anywhere.
So for you to come here, that honor and that decision is not lost on me.
So it means a lot to me.
Thank you so much for the work that you do.
Yeah, well, I'll tell you just so you know too.
It's like there's a reason I'm here.
I have a team that, because I do have a lot of requests.
And when you have more requests than you can possibly fulfill, there's a certain pain in that because there's, the requests are almost always of some quality, you know, so we
triage and we're looking for people whose podcasts have reach and who have been successful and who
will conduct a straightforward and honest interview and that will, you know, that are aiming up and that won't play games. And there's a reason
I'm here. And the reason I'm here is because of the work that you've done. So, right. It's no favor.
I'm glad to be here, but I'm here because this is the right place to be right now. So
congratulations on that. Thank you so much. Bye.