The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - E47: The Solution To All Of Your Problems
Episode Date: February 13, 2020This week's episode of The Diary of a CEO is all about breakdowns and problems and I delve into why only YOU have control over your thoughts. I discuss how we are obsessing over optimising our lives a...nd the worrying increase in loneliness within the...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Quick one, just wanted to say a big thank you to three people very quickly. First people I want
to say thank you to is all of you that listen to the show. Never in my wildest dreams is all I can
say. Never in my wildest dreams did I think I'd start a podcast in my kitchen and that it would
expand all over the world as it has done. And we've now opened our first studio in America,
thanks to my very helpful team led by Jack on the production side of things. So thank you to Jack
and the team for building out the new American studio. And thirdly to to Amazon Music, who when they heard that we were expanding to the United
States, and I'd be recording a lot more over in the States, they put a massive billboard
in Times Square for the show. So thank you so much, Amazon Music. Thank you to our team. And
thank you to all of you that listened to this show. Let's continue. You can't control the future. You can't change the past. And efforts to do so so often result
in something that we never wished for. In this week's chapter of the Diary of a CEO,
we're going to go deep. The things I talk about today may well be
the most important things I will ever talk about. In fact, maybe The Diary of a CEO should have just
been this episode. When you understand the one thing that matters above all else, maybe you'll
agree. So without further ado, I'm Stephen Bartlett, and this is The Diary of a CEO. I hope nobody is
listening, but if you are, then please keep this to yourself.
For the first point in my diary this week, I've just written you versus your thoughts.
And I'm going to start off with a quote which I think is incredibly
relevant and pertinent to what I'm about to say. The quote is by Buddha and the quote goes like
this, to enjoy good health, to bring true happiness to oneself, one's family and peace to all, one must
first discipline and control one's own mind. And it kind of begs the question, why was Buddha so obsessed with
something so internal when referencing external factors? And I guess my question to you is,
what is your experience? What is the experience you have as a human being? What is that? What is
the experience you have at work? What is controlling that? What is the experience you have at work? What is controlling that? What is the
experience you have within your romantic relationship with your girlfriend or boyfriend?
What is the experience you have when you're just walking down the street, when you're arguing with
someone, when you're sad, when you're happy, when you're celebrating a win or a victory,
when you're riddled with anxiety and you can't move? What is that? The irrefutable answer is, it's just a bunch of thoughts, both vividly
conscious thoughts and quite distant, intangible subconscious thoughts, right? And those immaterial
thoughts, whether conscious or subconscious, have tremendous material consequences in your life.
They can make you depressed, right? We all know that. They can make you physically ill. They can impact your physical appearance, right? They can destroy
your immunity. They can change your habits. They can change your diet. They can make you ecstatic,
fulfilled, content. They can make you react in ways that will cost you your job or your partner.
Or in some cases, as we've seen many times, they'll
cost you your dreams, your career, your livelihood, everything. Those thoughts are your experience.
And the, I guess, imperative truth that I've come to realise, especially this week, is I cannot
control other people. I really can't control all the bad things that happened to me this week. I can't stop bad things
coming to the people that I love either. But I can control my thoughts. And in a world of
total chance, in a world of luck and unpredictability and unintended consequences
that are forced upon you, I've come to learn that there is so little outside of my mind that I can control, basically nothing.
I've given my life every hour I have for the last, I don't know, couple of decades and still
things go awfully wrong sometimes. No matter how hard I work, no matter how much I care about
perfection, heartbreak, pain, misfortune and unwanted consequences still manage to find me.
It doesn't take you long to realise that controlling the world, controlling external factors is a fight that you will never win.
That I will never win.
And this week I witnessed two things which really gave me perspective on this.
This week I witnessed a close friend of mine completely have a breakdown because their train was cancelled because of the storm that's hit the country over the last couple of days.
And that resulted in a one hour delay for that person to get home. I witnessed that that caused
them a breakdown. And I also witnessed another friend, a completely different friend, have a
lesser reaction after her older brother, who was rendered brain damaged and had his skull removed following a horrific car accident,
regain his consciousness, lose his total sense of identity
and begin to aggressively attack his own family,
tearing her whole family apart
and rendering her and her aging mother basically his permanent carer.
That one hour train delay caused more of an emotional and bleak reaction in one friend and her aging mother basically his permanent carer.
That one hour train delay caused more of an emotional and bleak reaction in one friend
than the loss of a close family member to another.
And if I ever needed proof that anyone's experience
is not determined by what happens,
but by the filter we apply to what happens,
maybe that was it.
And what is that filter?
It's your thoughts. And we're all predisposed to think
in constructive and productive or toxic and destructive ways, of course. I can hear people
right now shouting back at me, you know, science has presented evidence that chemical imbalances
can alter your thoughts. That is true, right? But science has also clearly demonstrated that your
thoughts can change your chemical balances.
That every thought releases some type of chemical.
When positive thoughts are generated, when you're feeling happy and optimistic about the world,
your brain produces serotonin, which creates a feeling of well-being and happiness and ecstasy in some cases.
And when you're thinking negatively, the brain actually draws precious metabolic energy away from your
prefrontal cortex within your mind. And even more alarmingly, the more you focus on negativity,
the more you think negatively, the more synapses and neurons your brain will create,
which will allow you to think more negatively in the future. So really, those that think positively
will likely have more serotonin, feel better, and therefore continue to think more negatively in the future. So really, those that think positively will likely have more
serotonin, feel better, and therefore continue to think more positively. Those that think negatively
will have less serotonin, feel worse, and therefore continue to think negatively in the future. It's a
cycle, a rewarding and positive one, or a viciously negative one. But either way, it's a cycle that you
have control over, just by what you think.
And what you think is the thing that's determining your entire experience at all times in the past and in your future.
That's the thing.
It's not what's happened to you.
It's not that you've lost your keys, that you've got a flat tire, that it's raining, that your train's been cancelled.
You know, that arsehole ex-boyfriend, your boss, your spouse, that dickhead colleague, all your clients. It's what you think about those things. The majority of
harm is caused in your head by you and your thoughts. The harm isn't caused by reality,
what actually happens and the outcome. The problem isn't the problem. The problem is the way you
think about the problem. And I don't think anybody loves this idea. I didn't love this
idea the first time I heard it. Because once again, it puts a mirror up in front of us and it makes us
take responsibility. That horrible thing that none of us really deep down want to do. It makes us
take responsibility for how we're feeling. And we, all of us, including me, are conditioned to believe
that things piss us off. You know, today my videographer
was telling me about the things that piss him off. He said, and I quote, my clients used to piss me
off when they didn't pay me on time. And I thought about that sentence. With the logic I've just
presented to you above, any sentence of that nature is inherently flawed. Your clients didn't piss you off. The sentence
should have been, I pissed myself off when my clients didn't pay me. Suddenly external blame
becomes internal responsibility. Suddenly it's on you. And suddenly you can do something about it.
Suddenly you have control of a seemingly uncontrollable circumstance of a late paying
client. And when you have control, you can change your life and you can make hell into a heaven.
It becomes a choice. And if you understand what I've said above, and if you believe it,
if you take it in, it may just be the most important thing I've ever shared with you.
It may be the most important thing I ever will, because your thoughts are your experience. And what else is there other than your experience?
So what else is there other than your thoughts? Understanding this is most of the battle and
believing it and embracing it and living it is most of the battle, because it's the
helpless losing battle of not being able to control negative news or negative events and
negative people that causes most of our anguish. You know, in this podcast, this isn't an observational podcast
where I just point things out that I've noticed in my life over the last couple of weeks or whatever.
This is a podcast where I also try and share the solutions that I use for these problems. And
I guess step one to this is to believe me and to believe what I'm saying because it wasn't until I
believed this that things started to drastically change in my life and I got so much better at
dealing with bullshit and you know in my job as a 27 year old CEO of a company with hundreds and
hundreds of employees all around the world across five headquarters and seven offices
I know that every day that I wake up, I'm going to be exposed to unpredictable bad
news. So I needed to believe this. I needed to really, really embrace it. You have to believe
that your thoughts are everything, not the circumstances you find yourself in. And then
you have to like resign. You have to hand in your notice. You have to quit the job of trying to
control the uncontrollable. That's step one. I guess step two is you have to try and
be ultra conscious about your thoughts. You have to like really observe yourself thinking, and this
is an art in itself. It's not easy to do. One way you can do this is by writing down your thoughts,
by journaling, making a diary, just like this one. I can't tell you how much having this podcast and
writing in
my diary and really analysing my thoughts throughout the week in hindsight has changed my
life. This will increase your self-awareness, your thinking awareness. And when you can see your
thoughts from a bird's eye view, you can understand the patterns, the triggers, and then you can start
to be, I guess, more conscious about the effect that those triggers
are having on you. And for fairly innate survival reasons, thinking becomes an automatic thing.
So by the time you're 27, like I am, although you like to believe you're the CEO of your own
thoughts and actions, you're not. Most of them are reactive. Most of them are survival-orientated,
emotional, ego-driven, blame-orientated, and somewhat negative. And,
you know, in many cases, they're so automatic, in fact, that we don't even realise that thoughts
exist in the process of us making a decision. We don't even know we're thinking. People do
terrible things, and then when the dust clears, they say, sorry, I wasn't thinking. Yes, you were.
You just weren't aware consciously of your thoughts and you can't control
that which you don't realise exists. So step two has to be actively becoming more conscious of your
thoughts and the patterns and triggers that are causing those thoughts. Step three, I'm going to
give you a tool for step three. You know, every time you encounter a situation that triggers a
negative downward spiral of overthinking and doom and gloom, anything that you can't seem to shake, anything
that just consumes you, right? And things happen to me all the time, small things that will just
play out in my head over and over and over. And the reason they're playing out in my head is
because I can't seem to find a solution to that problem. So I'm playing it out in multiple ways
in the hope that my brain, which is consumed by it,
will be able to solve it.
And that's almost never the case, right?
At least, even if I do solve it,
it's probably not gonna be solved
when I'm in that frame of mind
in the most wise, productive way.
So here's my tip for you.
Here's my little trick for you that has worked for me
and that is backed by science. It's called the best friend method. You have to write down your
best friend's name at the top of a page, right? It can be in your notes, in your phone, wherever
you want to. And then, you know, it can also be a sibling. It can be a parent, whoever matters the
most to you. And then write down the problem, right? The thing that's
been bothering you, the thing that's consumed you, and then write down what you would respond to your
best friend if they came to you with that problem. Be totally honest. Say exactly what you'd say to
your friend. Use expletives or profanity if you need to. Be totally honest. What would you say to
your friend if they came to you with that problem? You
know, earlier this week, a friend of mine came to me and they were having an absolute breakdown
because of a problem. For the sake of their anonymity, I'm going to call them Jenny, okay?
So I'm sat there on Jenny's couch and she is telling me all of her problems with this one
particular situation. She's really upset and she's doing that thing people do where they make a bunch
of negative conclusions
all the way down into that dark hole where there is no solution. So they'll say this has happened,
so that means this, which means this, which means this, which means this, which means there's no
solution. And I was observing her make those very irrational, emotional, negative conclusions
downwards, like a downward staircase into a black hole. And I just interrupted Jenny and I said,
Jenny, okay, I've listened to you now and I've got a problem that I want to tell you about
and I need your help with this. So I'm going to tell you my problem, Jenny, and I need you to
solve it for me, right? I'm your friend, please help me solve my problem. And I just repeated
back to Jenny what she had told me. And immediately her face changes. Immediately.
Immediately she looks at me like,
what I've just said is pathetic.
When she could see her problem reflected back on her from someone she cared about,
it looked so pathetic.
It looked very easy to solve.
And without the cloud of mist,
without the emotional mist around us,
for some bizarre reason,
and this has been supported by science
and multiple psychological studies,
we're able to think so much more rationally.
And she immediately could think of solutions for me
when I had her problem.
She was so compassionate, so unbelievably compassionate.
And you know, remember earlier on in this podcast,
I said that the problem isn't the problem.
It's the way you think about the problem.
So how is one going to solve their own thinking
with your own thinking?
When in factual thinking is the problem. It's a bit of a conund your own thinking? But in fact, your thinking is the
problem. It's a bit of a conundrum, right? But it does make sense. I've been over this a couple of
times. But for some remarkable reason, when we're in a cloud of emotion about our own problems,
we can't reason clearly, but we can still think rationally about the exact same problem if it's
happening outside of the cloud of our own
emotion to someone else. And we're especially compassionate if it's someone we love and dearly
want the best for. No matter what I've tried in my life, no matter how mature, experienced or wise
I've become over the years, at times I still can't think clearly outside of my own cloud in a certain
situation, especially heavily emotional situations. So I do this exercise to help me find the correct and compassionate way forward.
It feels really fucking silly. And if I was to read this in a self-help book, I'd probably just
turn the page, right? I'm not into all that fluff and all that crap, right? So you can probably
trust the fact that if it comes from me, someone that doesn't believe in fluff and crap and bullshit that isn't logical or proven by science or doesn't have some kind of psychological
evidence to support it then I then I tend to throw it in the bin but I promise you this is
backed by science I've read about it and I promise you it's worked for me and you know I really really
hope it works for you you can do it on paper once you've mastered the art of doing on paper or on
the notes in your phone then you can do it without paper and Once you've mastered the art of doing it on paper or on the notes in your phone, then you can do it without paper.
And that's something that I default to now in almost every circumstance that consumes me.
I really hope that works for you.
You know, this week I posted something on my LinkedIn and my Twitter.
It was just a thought that I had and it went pretty, pretty crazy.
And on LinkedIn, it's been viewed by half a million people already.
It caused a tremendous, tremendous debate.
But the vast majority of people, about 98% of people, completely agreed.
And this is the statement that I made.
I said, unpopular opinion, the rise in young people wanting to be entrepreneurs
and isolating themselves and working remotely or alone in co-working spaces
is going to make this generation more miserable,
lonely, burnt out and purposeless
than any generation that has come before them.
And I said this because I know at the end of the day,
we are tribal animals and we gain great meaning
from having supportive communities around us
and shared goals that we're working towards.
You know, the most empty days in
my life, and I might have talked to you guys about this before on this podcast, were the days that I
spent as a remote consultant, or when I was doing freelance work for a little bit, or when I was
building my startup alone in my bedroom in a boarded up house in Moss Side for two years.
And you know, this sounds crazy and contradictory
and hypocritical coming from an entrepreneur, but being an employee in a supportive, high trust and
high freedom environment where you're doing meaningful work that matters to you and that
you enjoy is so, so underrated, right? Largely because of disingenuous hustle porn star entrepreneurs
who are trying to convince you
that being your own boss is inherently superior because they've got an agenda, right? But my
advice is to try and create a set of principles, completely agnostic to the solution. Try and
create a set of principles that matter to you. One might be freedom. One might be working with
good people that aren't assholes. One might be and should be meaningful work. One might be working with good people that aren't assholes. One might be and should be meaningful work.
One might be and should be doing something you're good at or something you stand a chance of being good at.
And number five might be work-life balance, right?
And make your career choice agnostically based on your principles,
whether that leads you to becoming an entrepreneur
or whether it leads you to becoming an employee at a great company.
And really, the other thing that I had to debunk is this idea that you can be your own boss.
It is a total myth.
I work more now than I've ever done as an employee.
Obviously, that work feels more meaningful,
because my previous jobs were predominantly in sales and telesales and things like that.
But I also answer to more people now than I ever have in my life.
I have investors. I have clients. I have customers. I have But I also answer to more people now than I ever have in my life. I
have investors, I have clients, I have customers, I have the government to answer to. And I only
really had one person to answer to when I was an employee. And, you know, this message sometimes
is construed a little bit. People say, you know, co-working is amazing. It is. Remote working is
amazing too. But when you do it in total isolation, it's unhealthy. I'm not discouraging entrepreneurs.
I'm not telling you not to become an entrepreneur. I'm encouraging healthy entrepreneurship.
Entrepreneurship that doesn't sacrifice these fundamentals that make humans happy and full
of joy. There's this obsessive optimization of our lives And it's made loneliness just this epidemic within all of us, and especially
within entrepreneurs. We're incredibly lonely people these days. You know, loneliness is
currently considered at epidemic levels by any government standard. And there was a really
recent study of 20,000 adults who live in Western countries, and it found that nearly half of them
feel like they are alone.
Nearly half of them said they didn't have meaningful
in-person social interactions on a daily basis.
And half of them said that sometimes or always
they feel that their relationships aren't meaningful
and they feel isolated from others.
Shockingly, one fifth of people surveyed
said they feel that they have absolutely no one to talk to.
A large proportion of adults over the age of 45 suffer from chronic loneliness,
while younger people, the people that are aged between 18 and 37,
who are ironically the most connected generation ever,
if you consider social media connection,
are the single loneliest generation in recorded history.
So 18 to 37 year olds living today are the single loneliest generation in recorded history. So 18 to 37 year olds living today
are the single loneliest generation in recorded history.
You know, clearly social networks aren't that social after all.
And clearly an internet connection doesn't guarantee human connection.
This is where it gets really bonkers.
No pun intended.
The loneliness epidemic is so bad
that world leaders have now been forced to
intervene. The British Prime Minister that we've just kicked out, Theresa May, appointed the first
Minister for Loneliness in January 2018. And when she did that, she declared that this was a decision
taken to address the sad reality of modern life. And in doing so, the fight against isolation became official business of the central
government. This news left me with this disturbing, dystopian vision of the government screaming at us
through public tannoys, talk to each other for fuck's sake, while we stand anxiously in lifts
and underground trains and in other public spaces. You know, take it from me, as someone that did it,
someone that spent years in isolation to start a business, someone that made it and got there and can look back and
scream back down the ladder to anybody that's not there yet or anybody that is. The best days of my
life were not the days when I sat alone building my startup in isolation in a rundown house in the
middle of nowhere, right? The best days of my life were the days where I was surrounded by good people doing meaningful work. And anybody that tells you otherwise
is probably, and I'm not saying definitely, is probably lying or they have too much of a bias
to realise or a lack of self-awareness to realise how they actually feel or felt. Take it from me.
Okay, the next point in my diary
is one that I've really never touched on,
quite surprisingly.
You know, I do these stickers on Instagram
where I ask my audience to ask me a question
and something has always puzzled me to some degree,
but I guess I kind of understand it
because of the intensity of my life.
People always ask the question
when I do a public Q&A,
Steve, how are you feeling? I get asked that question all the time. I believe that question
is coming from a compassionate, empathetic place. And I've never really answered the question
because it's a fairly long answer. But I'm going to answer that question today. How am I feeling?
In this exact moment, I'm tired. I'm almost tired to the point where I'm mildly delusional. It's 3am, I didn't
sleep yesterday, didn't get great sleep the night before either and it's not that I can't sleep,
it's that I'm busy. So I'm waking up early, I'm going, I've got a flight to Berlin in literally
two hours so I'm probably not going to get much sleep tonight either. I function fairly well but
I do feel the tiredness and I'm really fucking tired now. And I also had one of those weeks where the bad
news was pretty constant, right? That coupled with tiredness creates a high risk situation
for my state, right? If I'm tired and bad news shows up, then that creates a risk situation
for my state, right? And in those moments, I have to be
incredibly conscious about my thoughts and my actions. Because again, as I said, your thoughts
are causing your actions. And if my thoughts are as susceptible to tiredness or bad nutrition or
whatever it might be, then my actions can get pretty unfavorable. And just like you, I'm a
fucking human being. And tirednessness poor nutrition and bad news or
risk factors that can trigger behavior I don't like that's the micro answer to your question
the macro answer is a little bit different the long-term big picture answer is and honestly
always has been the same I'm so so happy to the point that I literally just got goosebumps when
I said that I'm so grateful and I always have been so grateful
to the point where I could literally cry tears of happiness at any moment if I really, really dwell
on how happy and how grateful I feel. That's the thing. That's the thing that lives at the core of
me. All of the other shit, tiredness and bad news, just dances somewhere on the surface in the short
term. Again, that core, that internal fulfillment is maybe something I don't have the awareness
to fully explain the origin of.
And I'm conscious of the fact that
if I guess where that's come from,
if I guess where that internal sense of happiness
and fulfillment has come from,
I might be misleading you.
I'm conscious of the fact that none of us fully appreciate
the full array of the factors
that have led us to be where we are today. You know, successful people rarely point to luck
and timing. They point to their hard work and their intelligence. In the same way, happy people
often demonstrate the same biases. When you try and ask them why they're happy, they might say,
I just look on the bright side. I just smile. But the reality is perhaps much more innate, right?
And despite me saying that, I'm still going to guess.
I'm still going to guess where that core of me comes from.
I'm going to try and tell you why I think I'm internally happy all the time.
Number one, I'd say, is I'm living a life I love.
One that's true to me.
And I've quit everything that wasn't that.
And my ability to quit, I guess you've got've quit everything that wasn't that. And my ability
to quit, I guess you've got to then ask, where does that ability to quit stuff or where does that
ability or strength come to pursue your passions? I think my ability to quit things and run in the
direction of uncertainty of the thing that I think will make me happier at the potential cost of my
family disowning me as they did,
or warnings of failure as school or university will give you, was probably a mixture of nature
and nurture. I probably don't know what made me that fearless, but I do know for a fact that you
can become more fearless. I know that because I've seen it happen. Number two, I think there's
probably some genetic disposition that I have that I'll probably never be aware of. And I say that because you see patterns in families and my family
are pretty optimistic throughout. There's not someone in my family that I don't consider to
be optimistic. Number three, thoughts make me inherently grateful and positive. And where do
my thoughts come from? Probably that genetic predisposition, probably my nature and my nurture.
Number four, I think always that I'm in control of my circumstances. I think I have this internal locus of control
and studies show that when people think that they are not in control, they typically get
more depressed. They have a higher sort of chance of getting anxiety and other sort of mental
ailments. So I think that's number four. Number five, podcasting, journaling, and analysing
my own thoughts. I think that has made me more resistant to toxic external influences. I think
that self-awareness and being aware of what I'm thinking and feeling has made me happier constantly.
You know, I don't believe Instagram. I don't believe some hater that tells me I'm a
fucking worthless idiot. I have healthy mechanisms to deal with external influence, to process it,
and to make my own decisions. Instagram might tell me that I'm this, or I'm not fashionable enough,
or I'm not skinny enough, or I'm whatever. I don't believe that. So external influences go through my
own filter before they become part of my reality or part of my thoughts.
And I think that's incredibly important too. That's my guess. Maybe I'm wrong.
The next point in my diary this week is about the podcast sponsor, which is Boost by Facebook.
They are a dedicated one-stop shop for entrepreneurs, for CEOs, for small businesses,
job seekers, and anybody with ambition that's
looking to thrive in this digital economy. They launched with the aim of creating a place where
all of us can understand this new world of digital and social. It can be incredibly intimidating. My
mum was talking to her about Boost with Facebook the other day. She doesn't know how to use a phone.
She doesn't know how to type and she's trying to run a business in 2020
and compete against people that do.
Boost is a place for people like her
where she can learn more about the digital economy,
about features and skills and training
and all of the things that matter,
the things that might level the playing field for her
as someone that doesn't know
about this new world that we live in.
You can learn more about this
at facebook.com slash boostwithfacebookuk.
And if you do check it out,
drop me a message and let me know how you find it.
I always pop on there every now and then
to try and make sure I'm staying ahead of the curve.
But yeah, do let me know how you find it.
Point four in my diary.
I wanted to do something this week on this podcast
that I've never done before.
And I wanted to pick one direct message
that I've received of the thousands that I get weekly from people. Here's the thing that's
really interesting. Imagine I get a thousand DMs a week, right? I would say 90% of them
could be answered by one of five different responses. And that really goes to show, so imagine I get a thousand
DMs. I think that if I wrote down five token responses, five set responses, I could answer
900 of them, maybe all of them. And what that shows is that we're all experiencing the same
fundamental problems, but just in slightly different ways and slightly different
nuanced ways. But the fundamental problems are the same for all of us. And it's not until I was put
in the position where, you know, I had 700,000 followers on Instagram and 700,000 on Facebook
and millions of followers overall. And people started to send me their problems that I was
able to see that we're all going through the same shit, just in different ways. And people sometimes
say to me, you know, how is it that you're wise? Or how is it that you can write things that are relatable
to people? It's because I have that clarity and I have that bird's eye view. And so I'm able to say
something which is simple, but it feels like it was for you. It feels like it fits your life.
And the thing is, it does fit your life and it fits all of our lives because we're all going through the same thing.
So with that said, the DM that I've picked this week
is from a guy called Adam.
And I've asked Adam if I can share it
without showing his full name.
Adam said to me,
hey, Stephen, I'm in such a hard spot in life right now.
I have a handful of invention ideas and business ideas,
but my current job has me traveling and working
seven days a week, 12 hours a day.
I've been trying to become a firefighter.
And in my current position,
I'm a rescue technician doing technical rescue,
but I'm getting burnt out and discouraged
because I work so, so much.
And it's so hard for me to apply for other jobs
or to go for interviews.
I don't know if I should take a huge risk and leave my job because I am so miserable.
Even though it's, I guess, a good job, I'm so miserable.
I've been holding on because I want to talk to a patent attorney about some of my new ideas,
but I don't think I'm making enough money to do that.
And I need to pay off my student loans.
I know it's a long shot, but one of your posts just hit me hard and I don't know what to do. I know it's a long shot to talk
to you because I'm sure you get thousands of messages and I don't but I don't have anyone
else to talk to. And here's my response to Adam and of course I've messaged Adam back and I've
actually said to Adam that maybe we should jump on the phone and just have a phone call when
when the time is right for him and when he gets some time, because I'd love to really get to the bottom of this problem. But I wanted to share
my, I guess my response and my feeling towards this with everybody. And it's a fundamental
problem that we all go through in almost every facet of our life. And it's this battle between uncertainty or certain misery, right?
People stay in miserable situations because they haven't got the strength or the foresight or the resources, so they think, to experience a moment of uncertainty.
Uncertainty is this gap between the miserable situation you're in and the happy one you want to get to. It's a place you
almost must have the guts to venture through if you want a chance of happiness. It's a vulnerable
place. It's a place where the lights are off. It's a place where your future is unclear. It's a place
where your comfort has abandoned you. But it's a place right before you reach the happiness you've
so desperately been searching for. And,
you know, the idea that we can swing straight from one miserable situation straight into a
happy one without experiencing any uncertainty is an idea that is untrue. It is fictional,
but it's also one that prevents people from making the jump because, you know, in the hopes of an
easier route, they hold out for another chance to jump
that won't involve any uncertainty or risk.
And then, you know, decades pass.
I'm here to tell you that that's bullshit, Adam.
Every time you leave a negative situation,
you know, a toxic relationship, a horrible job,
whatever it might be, any miserable situation,
the most unwelcome guest that is uncertainty shows up.
And the feeling of uncertainty can feel so isolating
that it might even make you consider not jumping at all
or going back once you've jumped back to misery.
And I think we all need to stop searching for happiness
in the same place we lost it,
but we also need to have that strength to weather uncertainty
if we're ever going to get closer to the things that matter and that will deliver for us the things that are for us we need to have the faith
the strength and the wisdom to keep moving forward if we want to go forward and of course practicality
matters you need an income to support your kids i get it you need to pay your mortgage i get it
we're not all privileged enough to have mummy and daddy light a path through uncertainty for us every time that we find ourselves there. The need for practicality
matters, but it cannot be, and we cannot let it become our excuse for conceding to misery.
We cannot abandon hope because of its presence. We cannot become its slave. It's not easy,
not at all. But if your question to me
is what do I do in that situation, Adam, my answer to you is you have no choice. You have to fight
for your happiness at all costs. There is no decision to make here. You do not need my advice.
There's just a plan to formulate. You have to leave. You have to get out. You have to go. And
for the sake of yourself and your family and your friends and everyone that loves you, you have to leave, you have to get out, you have to go. And for the sake of yourself and your family and your friends and everyone that loves you, you have to go and make yourself happy.
If your concern is being able to provide for others, you know, there was this monk in New York
that I got to ask a question. I went to this big talk and I never go to talks, but this monk is
so, so wise and so famous. So I went along to this talk and I said to this monk,
I described this situation, but I was really talking about finances.
You know, can I make myself a multimillionaire while still being able to serve others?
And the monk said to me, just like a bottle of water, a bottle of full water, you can't pour out something for others that you don't have yourself.
I'll say that again. We can't pour out for others that which we don't hold ourselves. If you become an empty
bottle because you become miserable in your job and you fall into a state of depression, you can't
provide for anyone at all. In fact, the data shows that if you fall into a depression, the likelihood
is everyone around you, your family, your friends and the government will provide for you. They'll
have to provide for you. So in that context, in fact, being selfish might just be the most selfless thing
that you can do right now.
The next part of my diary is super, super simple.
Point five of my diary is just a lesson that I've learned.
I'm not going to equate on this.
I'm not going to go deeper.
I've learned the value,
especially in my romantic relationships of communication.
And I think one of the biggest mistakes we make within our
relationships romantic or platonic whatever is we have expectations from people that we've never
ever communicated and it causes this build-up and resentment and problems and this is the same in
work we have expectations from our colleagues our employer from our you know our subordinates
whatever it might be that we've never ever communicated. And it causes frustration for the person, right? That isn't meeting your expectation,
but also it causes frustration for you. So I just wanted to say to anybody listening to this,
if you're going through a situation where your expectations aren't being met by your boyfriend,
your girlfriend, I don't know, your dog, your cat, your boss, whatever, ask yourself,
have I honestly communicated without sort of emotion whatever. Ask yourself, have I honestly communicated
without sort of emotion, without any blame,
have I communicated what I want?
And so often we haven't communicated what we want.
We haven't communicated how we feel
and we're letting a problem foster
and become more than a problem that we don't need to.
And I've just learned that lesson so clearly this week
because I took an approach which I don't usually to. And I've just learned that lesson so clearly this week because
I took an approach which I don't usually take within my like romantic relationships and
I just communicated very, very honestly about how I was feeling. Something I wouldn't have done
before, maybe because of my ego or whatever it might have been. And the problem was resolved
in like 60 seconds. It evaporated. And that was a problem that in my life probably would have
started to compound. And when we get resentful and we feel contempt towards our partners or to
whatever, you know, bosses or colleagues, these problems, they just compound and get worse and
worse. And this, you know, this molehill becomes a mountain and communication can stop the molehill
becoming a mountain and turn it back into just a pile of sand.
Yeah, that's the point.
My last point today, and maybe this podcast is a little bit shorter because I'm so unbelievably tired.
And I know you want me to sleep because I know that you guys do care about me.
And I want me to sleep because my flight is in about an hour's time, is about the diary of a CEO live.
And, you know, let me just,
I don't even know where to start with this.
Can I say thank you?
Because honestly, the reaction to the Diary of a CEO Live,
which is the first ever live event we're doing in Manchester with a special guest, Umar Kamani,
it's going to be much more than what I think people think it is.
I think people think I'm going to walk out and do a podcast live.
Not the case, okay?
I wouldn't do that to you. But the event sold out instantaneously. We had about 800
tickets go on sale in three different waves and every wave sold out instantaneously and it blew
my socks off, right? But one thing I didn't do for the loyal people that listen to this podcast
week in, week out, is I didn't give you
a chance to get tickets. And so before we put the tickets on sale, I said to my team, just keep 50
tickets back, just keep a couple of tickets back. And when I do my podcast, after the Diary of a
CEO Live tickets have sold out and gone on sale, I will give the podcast listeners that didn't get
a chance to buy tickets, a chance to get some tickets that are held back. And so I created a special website, very secret website, just for you and me listening
to this podcast called thediaryofaceounlocked.com. If you go to that link, you will find a private
link to buy tickets. There's no thousands of people waiting at 9am to get tickets on that link.
It's really just the people that listen to this podcast. And if you didn 9am to get tickets on that link. It's really just the people that
listen to this podcast. And if you didn't manage to get tickets, you can buy tickets there. And
there's only about 50 tickets available there because the capacity of the venue is about 8,
900 and we're pretty much already sold out. But there you go. If you didn't manage to get tickets
and I've had tons of messages from people that didn't, there's your chance. And I can't wait
for the event. I really, really can't wait for the event. I'm going to give it my all and I'm going to meet everybody
that I possibly can. I will stay for hours after to be able to shake your hand, to be able to talk
to you, to be able to take photos and do all of those kinds of things. And that's my promise to
you. That's what I always do as well, if you know me. Thank you for listening. If this is your first
time listening to this podcast do me a massive favor or
if even if it's not and even if you listen to them time and time again but haven't subscribed
do me a huge favor and just hit that subscribe button it means that you'll get the podcast first
when they come out and i'm going to continue to use that link the diary of a ceo unlocked.com
to seed out special things to just this audience so being a subscriber and if you do listen quickly
when the podcasts come out,
will make you susceptible
to some awesome prizes going forward.
I'm incredibly, incredibly tired.
I've got one of the most incredible weeks coming up
this next week.
And for those of you that were OG fans
of the vlog that I did every single day,
I've got a major announcement to make to you
that I'm only gonna make here.
And we've
started filming again for the vlog, which means that every day of my life is going to be filmed.
We're going to release it once a week, but we're going to film everything. And the big difference
between this series and the series we made before, which I know a lot of you loved, is this, the theme
of this series is real, realness, which means you're going to see everything. In fact,
there's a camera recording me right now, sat here in my boxer shorts, speaking into this microphone.
You're going to see everything. And I mean that. You're going to see me in the bathtub. You're
going to see me packing, getting ready. You're going to see the 4am. So you're going to see
the everything. I want to experiment and I want to show you that so stay
tuned I hope you have an amazing amazing amazing week thank you as always for listening to this
podcast and I'll see you again soon you