The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - How To TRANSFORM Your Life At Any Moment: The Alcoholic Lawyer That Became "The Fittest Man On The Planet"!! Rich Roll
Episode Date: June 8, 2023In this new episode Steven sits down with the ultra-endurance athlete, bestselling author and podcast host, Rich Roll. Rich was a successful lawyer until a revelation at 40 sent him down the path of ...becoming an ultra-endurance athlete, 2 years later he competed in the ‘Ultraman World Championships’, a 320 mile triathlon in Hawaii. Rich finished as the fastest American male competitor, and in 2009 he was named one of Men’s Fitness’s ‘25 Fittest Men in the World’. In 2012, he published his memoir ‘Finding Ultra’, and shortly after, ‘The Rich Roll Podcast’ which has released over 750 podcasts. In this conversation Rich and Steven discuss topics, such as: The key lessons Rich has learned after interviewing 750 guests Rich’s struggle with alcoholism What inspired Rich to make such a radical change in his life The benefit of test yourself with difficult challenges Why you should have a nourished life rather than a balanced life You can listen to the Rich Roll podcast, here: https://apple.co/3OTwuMy Follow Rich: Instagram: https://bit.ly/42r1arI Twitter: https://bit.ly/3oRmJ6U YouTube: https://bit.ly/43pa7Dd Follow me: https://beacons.ai/diaryofaceo
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. How much pain are you willing
to tolerate before you're willing to course correct? A California lawyer turned himself into one of the fittest men on the planet.
Rich role.
Globally recognized ultra endurance athlete.
New York Times bestseller.
And host of one of the biggest podcasts on the planet.
He sat down with 800 of the world's smartest people.
Is there one overall takeaway to this theme of transformation. So my story,
I graduated top of my class, the world ranked swimmer. And then I was working as a lawyer.
So on the outside, it looked like I was doing pretty well. Inside, I was dying. My first escape
was through drugs and alcohol. My family didn't want anything to do with me. Marriage that ended
on the honeymoon. Went to jail, could barely make it up a simple flight of stairs without being winded, and that was a harsh dose of reality. I needed to overhaul my
life. I needed to do something that was going to be hard and uncomfortable. You can't be a phoenix
if you don't burn in the flames first. We all want to be this idealized version of ourself,
and yet we still don't do it. We are in a culture that prioritizes comfort and luxury and the impatience
that we all have. We overestimate what we can accomplish in a year and completely underestimate
what we could do in a decade. We don't have to suffer. We don't have to be in pain. It's our
emotional lives that hold us back from accessing that potential. So how do people in that situation
take that first step in transformation? What worked for me after trying many different things was...
Why should you listen to this episode?
All in all, this conversation is fundamentally about transformation.
How you transform yourself from where you are now to where you want to be.
And Rich's life is the personification of human transformation.
This guy has been down and out. He suffered with addiction, failure and turmoil that most of us
will thankfully never have to endure. But he says in this episode, and he'll prove to you
that pressure, that discomfort can be and should be your privilege. And if you lean into that,
if you understand that pressure is your privilege and discomfort is the pathway to all the good things that you want in your life, then and only then can you reach your potential.
And one of the things I really got from this conversation is this idea that all of us
are much more capable than we believe we are. We have more potential than we allow ourselves to
believe. And also one of the big things Rich will leave you with in this conversation,
which blew my mind if I'm honest, is this idea that addiction is on a spectrum.
We tend to think of addiction as, as he says, junkies or people that are ingesting or taking drugs.
But if you think about it, we're all addicted.
We're addicted to distraction, whether that's our phones, whether it's pornography, whether it's food, whether it's alcohol, as is the case in Rich's case, whether it's our work, how do we alleviate ourselves of that addiction to
distraction? That's what you'll find out in this conversation. And most importantly of all,
Rich has sat down with 800 of the world's smartest, wisest, and most successful people.
And from doing that, he has learnt a lot. This is one of the episodes that you honestly should not miss.
Enjoy.
Rich, this is a broad question but it's intentionally broad.
Who are you and what mission are you on coming out of the gate hot
uh that's a very difficult question to answer i would say that i am
a spiritual being having a human experience endeavoring attempting to learn and grow in a number of ways. I had an experience
in my early to mid 40s where I was able to tap into potential that I didn't know existed,
and I expressed that athletically. And that experience taught me that we're all capable of so much more than we allow
ourselves to believe. And it motivated me to go on this journey to grow and expand in other areas
of my life because I realized if I had been sitting on this latent potential athletically
for so long, there must be other blind spots. And I wanted to explore those. And so my mission has
been to grow in the public sphere, learn in the public sphere by having these conversations on my
show, and then share that wisdom with other people for the purpose of elevating consciousness and
activating positive change in others.
You know, you've got millions and millions of people listening to your show all over the world.
You've interviewed, I think, almost 800 people, right? 750 broadcast episodes or something,
which is staggering. On an individual level, what is it that you hope to impart or what impact is it you hope to have on the individuals that listen to your show?
I want everybody listening or tuning into the show to believe to their core that they are capable of more than they may realize, that there is a greater possibility for every single person,
regardless of circumstances, and there are tools available for accessing that.
I think that's super important
because I think it's so easy to passively
or reactively live our lives.
We're all on some level in a routine, in a rut,
and we have blinders on
because we're in a certain social environment
where there's unstated dictates about what's okay and what's not. And we're all a certain social environment where there's unstated dictates
about what's okay and what's not.
And we're all creatures who want to feel
a sense of belonging and identity
with whatever group that we're aligned with.
And I think that that comes with very good things
of feeling wanted and needed,
but also negative aspects,
which create blinders to the greater possibilities that are available to us.
Everybody is conditioned in some way or another. And that conditioning starts fairly early.
What you're talking about there, at least in how I heard it, is to try and undo some of that
conditioning so we can live more aligned to whatever worthy cause is right for us.
When did you start being conditioned? And what was that condition?
What was the first sort of, what's the first context or moment where your conditioning
began? The conditioning that led you on the journey that you lived?
I went to a high school that was very achievement oriented. Grades were very important.
Academic achievement in my household was paramount.
And it was a situation in which no matter what I did,
you didn't quite get the validation that you were seeking.
So you're always chasing it a little bit more, a little bit more
to the point where unbeknownst to me or on an unconscious level,
I needed to escape that paradigm.
And my first escape was through drugs and alcohol. And bullying.
Bullying. Yeah.
Take me into the mind of that young guy that's being bullied. What is he thinking?
What is he? Is he scared going to school? Is he trying to escape who he is? Is he trying to fit
in in certain ways? What is he doing? And what is the experience of bullying like for him in detail yeah to take myself back i think i just i just wanted to feel like i belonged
and i always felt different than other than the sense of not being comfortable in my own skin like
other people had a rule book for life that I lacked. And just not having the social skills or the confidence to be able to make friends or feel like I was part of anything.
And then eventually you cite alcohol and drugs as being the thing that made you feel other than yourself in a good way?
Well, initially it made me feel like myself. It was like this miracle salve where suddenly all of
the unconscious anxiety and sense of difference between myself and others seemed to vanish. And that discomfort in my own skin turned into comfort.
Like I suddenly felt like,
oh, maybe this is how everyone else feels all the time.
I've discovered this thing where now I feel like, okay,
like I can exhale and I can be around other people
without feeling anxious about it.
And I can look somebody in the eye and have a
conversation or like flirt with a girl or do all these things that seem to come naturally to other
people that seemed alien to myself. And I just remember feeling so at home with that and just
wanting to feel like that all the time. And it got its claws in me. And that's how that kind of
journey begins for many people who've had their version of my experience with alcohol.
Addiction comes in many forms.
And the role that alcohol was playing in your life at that stage can also be substituted for other things, right?
So some people have it with food or with work, from sitting there and interviewing hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of people, what have you learned about the nature of really like the role that alcohol was playing
for you, but also like the role that maybe for me, like being a workaholic or for some people
eating is playing, what is it doing for us? Is it like an escape? Is it, in your case,
it was like the salve that made you feel, as you said, yourself, but what is that thing?
Yeah. I think that this is something I've spent a lot of time thinking about. As somebody who's
been in recovery since 1998, I've been to thousands of AA meetings. I know so many people in recovery.
And over the course of 10 years of hosting my podcast, I've had so many experts in the realm
of addiction, sobriety, and recovery.
And I've come to believe that this notion of addiction lives on a much broader spectrum
than we may realize. When we think of addiction, we think of the junkie or the gutter drunk.
But in between that polarity, there's a whole spectrum of addictive, and I would even weave in obsessive
compulsive behavior that ranges from continuing to get into the same bad relationship to being
unable to put the phone down, where we are seizing moments and opportunities through behavior or
substance to distract ourselves from ourselves because we are
experiencing discomfort with whatever emotion is coming up. And it's easier to divert to something
that will give us a sense of ease and comfort or distraction than to sit with that sense of
dis-ease. And I think that any kind of recurring, repeated behavior pattern that mimics
that could be characterized as an addiction. It may be mild, but I think nonetheless,
it's not, you know, it's qualitatively the same thing as the person who can't stop drinking.
And it all goes back to this inside job of trying to understand what makes us tick, the nature and
origin of those discomforts, what triggers those, and trying to find a way to not only sit with
those, but confront them and work through them so you can ultimately transcend them and liberate
yourself from the behavior or the substance or whatever it may be that is the
kind of go-to default thing that you do when you start to feel like out of control or nervous
or anxious or insecure or perhaps you know triggered or or any number of kind of emotional impulses that might arise.
What is the cost of not learning to be with myself? So I'm looking at all these things,
phone addiction, I'm definitely addicted to my phone, all of these addictions, I've got some of
them in varying degrees. So what? What's the cost? Well, time will tell, right? Maybe there isn't a cost that is so significant that it mandates that
you rectify that behavior. Again, it's a spectrum, right? So for you, you might be able to engage in
a certain behavior without having negative ramifications in your life that are significant
enough for you to redress that. For somebody else, it might destroy their life. But I think developing an awareness around those
behaviors and paying attention enough such that if you start to find yourself experiencing negative
life ramifications as a result of those behaviors, you're not in denial over that and you can make a
course correction.
And what's the upside then of just learning to sit with yourself as opposed to reaching for the phone or for the, the cake or for the beer? What is the, what is the upside of that? You know,
I say this because I think I live in a generation that have become so used to distracting ourselves
and the thought of like meditating or not having our phone on us is actually i mean
it's like a it's like a phobia um we haven't learned to sit with ourselves in silence with
our thoughts if you can't sit silently with yourself with your thoughts then you are not
living an intentional examined life and i think to be addicted to your phone
or to be living in that reactive mode
where you're constantly distracting yourself
robs you of something that we need as human beings,
which is rumination and boredom.
That is the juice of creativity.
And as a creative person,
somebody who does this show and talks to amazing people and
is writing a book and is very much in a space where your creativity is really the driver of
everything that you do, I would say to you, it is of paramount importance to protect your boredom,
to protect your quiet time, to put boundaries around those distractions.
Otherwise, you are not going to be doing your best work and you are going to be depriving
your audience of the best version of yourself. The other thing is connection. It's definitely
robbed me of connection. Well, it's pernicious in that way because at least with social media,
it gives you the illusion of
connection. And we're sitting here together because of social media. You reached out to me,
I reached out to you. So it's not a binary. There are amazing things about it. And my entire career
has been built on these digital tools. And they're very important to, you know, how I kind of navigate the world. But at what point
does that meter kind of toggle over into, you know, the red zone where I'm being used by it
and it's robbing me of my humanity and it's diluting me into this idea that I'm connecting
with other people. But in the analog world, I'm just at home all the time. And I'm not actually interacting in the real world.
And, you know, I think one thing we share, Steven,
is our show is all about the in-person experience.
Like I tried to do the Zoom thing.
I can't do it.
It's like, this is not why I'm doing this.
I'm not getting, it feels transactional and weird.
And, you know, as much as these tools,
which are phenomenal, have given us the ability to connect in a certain way, it's not true connection.
And I think in order to really feel like we're part of the human race, we're hardwired to be with people in real world settings.
When I look at your story, I see multiple chapters and there's transformation
in every chapter, sometimes for better, sometimes for worse, but it's always forward. It seems like
it was the path that you had to go on. You talk there about the first chapter of your life,
which is you're young, there's bullying, there's this feeling of sort of inadequacy and there's
isolation. What's the next chapter? Yeah, so insecure kid difficulty making friends um but i found
solace in the swimming pool and that was really my safe haven perhaps my first addiction um and
in lockstep with my improvement in that space um came uh came better grades i started to perform
better athletically so by the time I was 18 and
graduating high school, I had my pick of going to any college I wanted to. Got into Harvard,
Princeton, ended up going to Stanford, which in addition to just being a premier
university, also happened to have the number one collegiate swimming program in the country. So
basically anything I wanted to do was like laid out in front of me. I arrived in California for college. I grew up in Washington, D.C., so traveled 3,000 miles away to go to potential, not only as an athlete and as a student, but as a human being,
because it just gradually denigrated all of my values and sort of dented my aspirations
to the point where I no longer really cared about my trajectory or where I was headed with my life
and was solely concerned with
rooting out where my next good time would be.
And those were the good times.
And I would say that initially, alcohol really saved me.
It taught me how to be a social person.
Like I enjoyed going to parties and I enjoyed figuring out how to talk to people.
And it was really this fuel that transformed me from this navel-gazing, insecure kid into somebody who felt like I could comport myself in a social situation as long as I was using alcohol.
I've taken some of those skills, and I'm now able to apply them without alcohol.
But very slowly over time, you know, my life, the quality of my life just sort of declined and declined and declined.
So I was a functional alcoholic for many years. But I knew very early on that my relationship with alcohol was different
from that of my peers because I would be the last person to leave. I was immediately sneaking
drinks. I was the one who was throwing up and blacking out when everyone else knew what time it was to go home.
I started going out like more and more nights every single week.
And then fast forwarding through later years, hiding my drinks, sneaking my drinks, hiding the empties and doing kind of all the dark stuff that one does when they fall prey to this condition.
And there was nothing really sexy or romantic or
rock and roll about it. It was just really kind of sad and pathetic to the point where
at the end, I was alone, alienated from my friends. My family didn't want anything to do
with me until I sorted this out. I was on the precipice of, you know, somehow I got through
law school, but I was working as a lawyer. I was on the precipice of getting fired, was living in a shitty apartment with barely any furniture,
sleeping on a mattress on the floor. And it was, it was, it was very dark for a very long period
of time. When did you get married? The first, your first marriage in 1995? 25? 20 must have been 20. No, that was, so it would have been 95, 96, I think.
Yeah.
Roughly 20.
So I had an ill-fated marriage that ended on the honeymoon.
That's a sordid story that would take a very long time to untangle and explain.
A marriage that ended in the honeymoon.
It ended on the honeymoon.
Yeah. Incredibly painful, embarrassing chapter of my life.
That marriage took place after I'd gotten the two DUIs, but I was endeavoring to get sober.
And I think my fiance, not quite my wife, because we didn't sign the marriage certificate,
which is a whole other aspect of the story.
I think that she realized that I would be problematic as a partner,
but didn't have the courage to call the whole thing off
and allowed the wedding ceremony to take place, even though she didn't want to courage to call the whole thing off and allowed the wedding ceremony to
take place, even though she didn't want to be married to me. And it all kind of came to head
on the honeymoon, which is the last time that I saw her. And that was really my bottom as an
alcoholic, even though I drank for a period of time after that, because it was so emotionally
devastating and painful. Um, that was really the nadir where I realized that my life had hit the
skids and in, in just a, uh, you know, a way that I could have never imagined for myself.
Post that, um, that I was going to call it, I guess it was a wedding post that wedding
and everything that
happened you returned to drinking again you relapsed because of the pain of that experience
absolutely how long does that last it was a long time ago i think it was about six more months
of my life kind of circling the drain before I finally decided that I needed to really
take responsibility for my behavior. At that point, what are the people around
you that love you doing and saying? Friends slowly stepping backwards from me, distancing themselves from me.
My parents were terribly worried and concerned
and they had sought out counsel of their own
and started attending Al-Anon
and I believe they had seen a therapist as well.
And the advice that they got was like, you need to cut ties with
this guy. Like you can't will him into doing what you know is in his best interest. You have to
detach. And I recall very vividly a conversation that I had with my dad where he's like,
I know what you're doing. It's very clear, uh, this path that you're on and we just can't be
part of it anymore.
And if and when you're ready to make a change or to really entertain sobriety in a real way, we're here for you.
We're your parents and we love you.
But until that point, like we really don't want to hear from you anymore.
So that was a brutal pill to swallow, incredibly painful, but also catalytic because it snapped me out of whatever
denial I was harboring about getting over on people or them not really knowing how I was
actually behaving. And I think it was an important step in helping me realize just how dire the
circumstances were for me at that time.
When your father said that, what did you hear?
I heard, you're a failure and you are unlovable.
Do you think that was the right thing for him to say?
I think in my case, and I'm only speaking from, you know, my perspective in this particular set of circumstances, it was the right thing to do because it effectively moved me in the direction that I needed to be moved in.
And they had tried the other way, which is loving me and being supportive and kind of offering up a soft landing pad.
And that was not working.
And I think they needed to do that for themselves to protect themselves as well.
And I respect that choice.
You know, I've been in many situations trying to help people get sober.
And it's a very delicate, difficult thing to do.
It's just really challenging because if somebody is not ready and they don't want to get sober,
there's very little that you can do to try to create that epiphany in them. Willingness
is a self-generated response that you can't instill in somebody externally. And until somebody's really willing
to confront their demons, you can't compel them to do so. So that's why I think sobriety or
addiction is so baffling and so painful for the loved ones of people that suffer who can so clearly see
you're killing yourself you need to do this and yet that person won't make that choice
it's not just addiction and um sobriety in that sense that i was thinking about when i asked that
question because i've got people in my life that I've tried to help in various ways.
And I've got one friend who has struggled with pretty severe addiction.
And your natural inclination is to try and jump in there and give them advice
and help them and pay for this and sort this out, et cetera, et cetera.
But after, you know, years and years of it never working,
what do you do then?
And I'm thinking of one particular example of a friend of mine who
struggled with addiction and slowly everybody has just fallen away the person's management
has fallen away their friends have fallen away um and i wonder sometimes i wonder to myself
is that what you have to do is that do you have to basically give them a void enough space
and stop holding them up
in like sort of artificially suspending them uh and let them go to the bottom let them go to that
rock bottom there is a logic in that you know you don't want to coddle that person you certainly
don't want to be codependent in their behavior in other words making excuses for them that makes it
easier for them to continue down that destructive path.
And there is wisdom in just saying, hey, man, I love you. I'm available when you're ready to get
help. But you're on your own thing, man, and I can't be part of it. So call me when you're ready.
But until then, good luck to you. Because the addiction elevator is always going down. It's a progressive disease.
It only moves in one direction.
The best case scenario is that person's life stays the same.
But in almost every case, it continues to decline.
And it will decline to the point where the pain experienced by the person who is the
addict or the alcoholic becomes more unbearable than the fear of the change.
And that is where willingness is born.
And again, it's not something
that you can instill in that person.
You could like hijack your friend
and throw him in the back of a car
and drop him off in a rehab,
but he might escape from the rehab
or he'll sit in the back and just bide his time
until he or she gets out
and they can go back to whatever they're doing. That's why this is such a difficult problem to solve. It is an internally
generated thing. The people that I know that have been able to get sober and stay sober are the
people that shoulder responsibility for their own sobriety. You can't get sober for somebody else.
I'm getting sober for my spouse or
my kids, or I'm getting sober because if I don't, my boss is going to fire me. You might be able to
do that for a short period of time, but for the true addict, unless you're doing it for yourself
and you're making it your number one priority, chances are you're not going to last over the long haul. And it's confusing. And when
you love that person, it puts you in a very treacherous position. Because if you do create
that boundary and that person goes off and something terrible happens, will you feel
responsible? Or will you feel like you didn't do enough? Or if you had just done this or that,
that wouldn't have happened? And that's a very real
predicament to put yourself in. There's something quite counterproductive in the sense that
when you're trying to help that person, what often happens is your relationship with them
becomes strained. And then when your relationship becomes strained and you become frustrated with
the lack of sort of effectiveness of your support, then arguments start. You might say some things
that you regret.
Further, you're tarnishing that person's self-esteem, self-worth, or whatever's triggering
them to try and escape themselves through whatever addiction they might have. And it actually can
make their situation significantly worse. Sure. Destroy the relationship. Right. Which is why
it's important to interface with that from a place of neutrality, right? To not get emotionally agitated or activated by it.
And a good way of kind of recalling that
or reinforcing that is to understand
that there is the person, your friend,
and there is this disease, this addiction, right?
And if this person is acting in their disease,
that's not the person.
They're not a bad person.
They're afflicted by something so powerful that they're unable to override it and be that friend that you remember.
And I think when you kind of approach it through that lens, you can have a little bit more compassion for that person rather than take it personally.
Because they're not acting out of
animus towards you. They're suffering from something that's so powerful that they're
unable to control it. Okay. So this was a quote I found about your opinion of balance. He finds
balance extremely difficult and believes that if something is good, then the more the better. He
believes balance is for ordinary people and he wants to be extraordinary. He says this can be Yeah, definitely a blessing and a curse.
I am hardwired for extremes.
This has been both a superpower and an Achilles heel.
It's the thing that has fueled me and allowed me to achieve some pretty cool things.
But it's also been the thing that has almost killed me.
So it's that love-hate thing. But I think behind it, this notion of living a balanced life,
that we get served up. You need to be balanced. And the best way to pursue your life is in a
balanced way, everything in balance. And the social conditioning around that idea is so powerful that for years,
I just felt like a terrible person or like less than because I just could never figure out that
equation to make everything feel like it was even adequately balanced because I feel most alive in
those extremes. And that's part of what addiction is. Like you're just searching for those peak experiences in unhealthy ways and also in healthy ways through athletics and, you know, and through creativity and other avenues.
But I always felt guilty about that.
Like other people seem to be telling me that I shouldn't be doing this.
And yet,
this is where I feel like myself. And finally, I got to the place where I was like,
fuck this whole balance thing. This is who I am. And I decided to embrace it.
Now, that doesn't mean that you just blindly pursue these obsessions to the point of self-destruction, what it means is for me, again, not giving advice,
in my experience, when I allow myself to immerse myself in something that fascinates me, whether
it's an ultra distance race or writing a book or whatever it is,
giving myself permission to really focus on that and take it all the way to the wall
is where I do my best work.
But that is only acceptable as long as that pendulum that's swinging all the way up over here
swings back, goes this way and comes to the center. Because we all have
buckets in our life of values that we need to nourish. So a creative project, for example,
I'm going to go, I'm going to do that. And that's fine. As long as I come back and my family is
nourished, my relationship is nourished, my friendships are nourished, all these other areas that are important to me don't fall by the wayside
for too long.
So balance in the macro, but not balance in the micro.
So on a day-to-day basis or a week-to-week basis, my life is wildly out of balance.
But if you look at it over the course of a year, you telescope out,
I think it's much more imbalanced than one might suspect.
Super interesting. I think using that example of the swing, is it called the pendulum?
In society, we started by glorifying hustle culture, I guess, and being out of balance.
And then there was kind of a movement towards that's toxic.
Right.
And now I feel like...
The new pride is like, I don't set my alarm clock.
Yeah. And I feel like a little bit, it's coming back the other way where people are going,
fuck work-life balance. Balance is such a subjective thing. And work is completely different for everybody.
Like this is my work.
This is not,
I'm not,
you know,
for someone else,
their relationship with that work might be tedium.
It might be depressing.
They might be doing something that really doesn't fill them up.
But I think there's needs to be nuance in the fact that all work is different.
Every individual is clearly different and it is wired to find the fulfillment in different ways.
So work life balance in and of itself is a pretty ridiculous concept to think that there is a balance
there really must be a as you kind of describe a subjective balance where there's a balance for
steve and as long as i don't fall in sacrifice social connection isolation and all the other
things then i'm balanced my balance could you know much different from yours. For whom and when, right? If you're 22 years old and you've got this idea for a startup and you're
a coder and you want to code like a maniac, knock yourself out. You have no other responsibilities.
You have the time, you have the freedom to do that in that moment. But that 22 year old,
20 years later with kids and a
mortgage and whatever, it's a different time. That person's in a different place. These things,
you know, can't be, they have to be contextualized, right? And yes, if you want to achieve something
great, you are going to have to work very hard and you're going to have to get out of your comfort
zone. You may even need to be obsessed. If you're living an entirely balanced life where you're home at five o'clock and you're always at dinner and all, it's like
you're making it very difficult to achieve something extraordinary. That extraordinary
thing is going to require an extraordinary commitment, which means in the social construct
of balance, you are going to be out of balance. If you're going to feel uncomfortable with that
because you have other priorities in your life,
then maybe that's not for you.
And being out of balance to pursue something great,
in my opinion, is perfectly fine.
Again, as long as you allow that pendulum to swing back
and those other things in your life that are important
are nourished and attended to.
So it's a very specific thing.
It depends on who you are,
what stage of life you're in, what you're seeking, and having the self-awareness to understand
that you can't be everywhere all the time. And you can't be 100% for all of the things that are
important to you in your life in every single day. So it's about conscious awareness and
intentionality about where you're
rowing that boat. You can only row your boat in one direction. Are you rowing the Stephen boat
towards Stephen today? Are you going to row it towards your girlfriend? Well, you're going to
have to do a lot of rowing in a lot of different directions. It's just knowing that you're making
a conscious choice and doing that with that understanding and appreciation, I think is really important.
But all of this is to put the lie to the idea that anybody is living a balanced life on a minute to minute, hour to hour, day to day basis.
It's like a, it's a construct that I think makes people feel guilty and bad about themselves because none of us are adhering to that idealized version of a balanced
life that we have a mental picture of you can't have it all you you left rehab in september 1998
um and earlier on when you're talking about transformation you described someone who goes
from being a fairly ordinary person to running a marathon that was one of the sort of examples you
gave of something that intrigues you like how did they do that that's pretty much in many respects what you went on to do upon leaving rehab is you
your life slowly moved towards ultra athletic sports yes and no i mean i think that uh
the the shorthand kind of google version of my story makes it look like all this stuff happened in a very compressed period of time.
But actually, when I left rehab, which is where I lived for 100 days, and resumed my life in Los Angeles, I spent the next 10 years trying to solve the dilemma of my life that I had self-created.
I had to repair my relationships. I had to become trustworthy to other people again. I had to be somebody who was reliable
and would show up on time when they said they would, all those sort of like normal things that
normal people do. I had to rebuild for myself. So for 10 years, I immersed myself
in the recovery community in Los Angeles,
and I tried to become that corporate lawyer
that I thought that I wanted to be,
to be kind of approved of by my parents and by society
without really grappling with who I wanted to be. Because I was so caught
up and so ashamed of my past and embarrassed of how I'd screwed my life up that I wanted to prove
to myself and to everyone else that I could be that person that I was at 18 when I had all of
these opportunities and choices. And I was blind to kind of the inner
journey, despite sobriety, the blind to like really trying to figure out like what made me tick and
what I might want to do for myself that felt like an indulgence. And so the ultra stuff came much
later that came like, so I got out of rehab at 31. It wasn't until I was turning 40 that I had another bottom where I had to reckon with
my lifestyle choices with diet and movement, et cetera, because I'd put on 50 pounds and
was just pursuing this corporate life to the point of illness, honestly.
Like I was, although I'd been this this athlete i just could barely make it up
a simple flight of stairs without being winded tightness in my chest heart disease runs in my
family and just had a second situation in which i realized i needed to overhaul my life so there
was a whole 10-year period in between those those kind of moments of awakening that 10-year period
is a 10-year period that a lot of people
listening to this right now can relate to, where you found yourself in a professional context or
professional endeavor without asking yourself the question of like, who am I and what am I
actually interested in? And you might be doing it because your mom wants you to be a doctor,
or you have Indian parents and they came over here and they want you to be a lawyer, whatever
it might be. I hear that story a lot. What is the question people in that situation should be asking themselves? And how do
they take that first step in transformation from becoming the banker that's in the city with a suit
and tie on right now listening to this, to the person that like would make them whole and full
and love themselves in their life? Like what is the first step? Is it a question?
Is it a retreat they need to go on?
Yeah, it's a great question.
I think that question is probably different for everybody,
but how about just asking yourself, who are you?
And I mean that in the broadest sense,
perhaps the most unanswerable spiritual sense, but I also mean it in the very tangible sense of like, what are you doing?
Are you really on the path that you want to be on? Did you choose this path? Are you here because of
external pressures or expectations that you didn't ask for? And I think when you turn inward and start exploring your interior to try to grapple with what is
making you tick, what is impulsing the decisions that you're making, the big decisions and the
small decisions, and developing a latticework or an understanding of what those mechanics are
sets you on a trajectory to making better decisions for yourself. So it's not like
maybe that banker is supposed to be a banker, maybe super happy. That's fine. I'm not here
to tell people they should quit their jobs. I'm just saying that an examined life, meaning
that inward glance into understanding why you're making the decisions that you're making.
Historically, you know, the way in which
you were raised that might have set you up to make decisions you think you're making for yourself,
but are actually in reaction to unconscious, you know, kind of triggers that are built into you.
I think developing an awareness of that is really important in trying to understand that question. And it took me a very long time to untangle that knot. I don't think it's a simple process. I think developing an awareness of that is really important in trying to understand that question.
And it took me a very long time to untangle that knot.
I don't think it's a simple process.
I think it's different for everybody.
It can come in the form of talking to a therapist or meditation.
There is no one modality for that. the commitment to try to understand that, I think, is the process of
gaining that understanding to help you make more intentional decisions for yourself. And maybe it
starts with an easy prompt, like, what did you enjoy doing when you were eight years old that
you don't do anymore? And why don't you do it anymore? Re-engaging with, you know, the childlike nature that is perhaps lost as we grow
older and kind of get into the flow of our professional lives. One of the most important
questions I think I would add as well is, how do you feel? We very rarely ask ourselves that,
and I think we all have this sort of internal compass which we've
been given by life which is like how do you feel in this situation how do you truly feel not like
how do you feel in the context of is your mother happy or is your father happy or is society
impressed by you but like how do you actually feel you know and i think that sometimes for me
has sat apart from the accomplishment so i could be achieving something great and know that people
are impressed and happy but really i'm going through a fucking shit time internally. Right. And I'm tuning into that voice
of like, how do I feel? And tuning out of the, like, how do people feel about me? Right. Um,
has, has really helped me in those moments where I've got to make a big decision to quit. And I
don't think people ask themselves that question enough. Well, they may ask themselves that
question, but the answer is flippant right it's like i'm good
cool i feel good you know i feel i slept good last night no like how do you really feel
and then continuing to peel back the layers until it gets really uncomfortable and then you know
you're in the you're in the sweet spot right that's where the juice is i've peeled them back
i've and i've done you know raised my
awareness i realize i'm in the wrong place but i'm 39 years old and i've got kids i've got a house
we live in this part of london so i can get to work quickly we've built our lives around this
you know person i thought i wanted to be and I'm held in place by the, my friendship group
and my mom lives down. People have that fear. They think, how do I, how do I break out of that?
How do I shed? Yeah. Yeah. Well, first I would say to that person, congratulations. Like you
created a life for yourself. Like on some level, even if you want to leave that career path or
you're unfulfilled in that, you still are somebody who
is deserving of acknowledgement for building something. And that's an amazing thing.
So it's not about casting that aside or disrespecting it. For me, I would say to that person,
what is it that gets you excited? What is it that you feel is unnourished in your life? Do you have a creative itch? Is there something calling you or something again that you used to do as a kid
that you really enjoyed? And for some reason unbeknownst to you, you don't do it anymore.
Maybe it's like, yeah, it could be music or, or stand up or you play football, right? Like
being on a football team or doing something, you know, just having coffee with your friend or what
have you, finding a way to build that back into your life in a way that isn't going to derail
your current life. But I think just breathing on that, like giving space to the things that bring
you joy in the most primal sense, like the simplest things that just you remember made you happy,
that you've forgotten and recapturing that
and finding a way to respect that, protect it, nourish it, and inject it into your life.
And I think the more that you kind of tend to that garden, suddenly, oh, a little opportunity
over here pops up or something is telling me I should move this way. These are very subtle energies that
you have to be present for in order to notice them when they appear. But I think those are
the subtle energies. Those are the waves you want to be surfing. And you can do that while you're
working at the bank. They don't have to be mutually exclusive. And over time, maybe you start moving a little over
this way. Five years later, your life is unrecognizable. And I think this goes to
the impatience that we all have. We all want to be this idealized version of ourself, happier,
fitter, thinner, richer, whatever it is, overnight. And we overestimate what we can accomplish
in a year or maybe in a couple of years and completely underestimate what we could do in
a decade. We're not wired to think in decades. It seems too intangible. But if all you do is
make tiny little changes to build in habits into your life that bring you joy or fulfillment
or happiness or purpose in incremental micro allotments that don't disrupt the rest of your
life. You do that for 10 years straight, your life is going to be different. And I can promise you
that. 10 years after rehab, you have what you describe as your second rock bottom.
You're a workaholic.
You're trying to sort of appease
the perception of people in your life
to make them proud, I guess.
Just before your 40th birthday,
this is when that sort of reckoning
in your life takes place.
What is that reckoning in your life?
What did you realize?
And what did you see as the solution to that confrontation? Yeah, so I had spent the better
part of 10 years, people pleasing and doing my best to be successful, living somebody else's life,
unbeknownst to me, doing all the right things, checking all the boxes, becoming successful.
So if you were on the outside looking in, it looked like I was
doing pretty well. Inside, I was dying because my soul, my spirit was unheard and undernourished.
I didn't know how to pay attention to myself or the signals of my soul who were telling me,
I don't think you're that happy doing this and repressing that year
after year after year to the point where I couldn't do it anymore. So I was harboring a bit
of an existential crisis about how I was living my life, being this lawyer and kind of showing up in
the world in a certain way that always felt like a costume that didn't fit me. Meanwhile, although sober from drugs and
alcohol, I sort of transferred a lot of that addiction energy into food and was eating a
terrible fast food diet, gained a lot of weight, was inactive, even though I'd been a swimmer in
college, wasn't really moving my body in any meaningful way for a number of years.
This existential crisis that I was
having collided with this health scare shortly before I turned 40, where I was going up a flight
of stairs after a long day at work and couldn't even make it all the way up. Had to stop halfway
up the flight, winded, out of breath, tightness in my chest, like wheezing, you know, thinking I swam at Stanford. Like I was a world-ranked swimmer.
I can't, I'm like 39 about to turn 40. I feel like shit. I'm fat. And it just broke that spell
of denial about how I was living where it became intolerable to continue along that path. And it
was very much like the day that I decided to go to rehab,
like this moment back to willingness,
like suddenly out of the blue,
I was blessed with this realization,
not only that I needed to change my lifestyle habits,
but that I had the willingness
to actually take action on that.
And because the decision that I had made 10 years
prior when I went to rehab had been so transformational, like I could have woken up
that day and made a different decision. What would my life look like? And I had this palpable sense
that once again, this was just such a moment where if I could make a decision like I had 10 years
ago, maybe I could change
the trajectory of my life. And I know that these moments are fleeting and they require kind of
immediate action or they pass, right? You could say, maybe I should eat better or go to the gym
once in a while. Like I'm tired of feeling like shit. That's so vague. I knew that that wasn't
going to work for me. And I needed to do something immediate that was also difficult that would mimic the experience of going into a
treatment center for drugs and alcohol. Like I needed to have a structured situation that would
snap me out of my comfort zone and kind of create a new trajectory upon which I could build something different.
I think about this a lot in like businesses and organizations. They almost need to stage a crisis,
I call it, to make change happen. Because when you're in an organization and there's maybe
thousands of people, and let's say it's AI or an innovation comes along, people will go,
yeah, it's a problem, but you know, it's fine fine and then they'll kind of carry on keep on keeping on the organization almost needs to stage a crisis like get everyone
in a room and say we're changing today and really sort of terrify terrify their team about the the
prospect of not changing it's almost like staging a rock bottom because it will be the frog in the
frying pan it will slowly creep upon you if you don't,
at some point,
as I call it,
like stage a crisis,
which is to really get clear on where this is heading and where we're sleepwalking ourselves into,
whether it's with our health,
our relationships.
I actually had this conversation with a friend of mine in his relationship because he's now in a sexless relationship and he's really unhappy,
but he's not saying anything about it.
He's kind of bringing it up
sort of quietly once in a while.
And his unhappiness in the relationship
and resentment is coming out in other ways
in the relationship, like arguments and fighting,
where he needs to stop and like stage a crisis,
like not allow it to be brushed under the carpet anymore and sit down
and say, listen, if we can't solve this, I have to leave this relationship. And like,
I want to solve it with you, but it's a deal breaker for me. See what I mean?
Yeah. I get what you're saying. Basically short of, of like sleepwalking yourself towards the
cliff's edge, staging an intervention on your life by, you know, like concocting a crisis that's going to
compel you to confront the elephant in the room that is the thing that is holding you back. That's
obvious to everyone else. And yet you're refusing to look at it. Yeah. Because we, as you said
earlier, we want to avoid discomfort. So if we can just sweep discomfort under the carpet and
procrastinate it into tomorrow, we do. We do that in businesses.
We do it in our own lives.
So how do we maximize the discomfort today by presenting what the future will look like if we don't take action right now?
And there is often a point of no return in relationships and in business, for sure, for sure.
So, yeah.
Yeah, I think that's a very kind of pragmatic, you know, three-dimensional, actionable way to look at it.
Perhaps a more mystical way to approach this is to say that when you are living your life out of alignment with your best self, the universe comes knocking and it knocks gently.
Maybe you're out telling lies or whatever it is.
Like you're not living your life in integrity,
like in alignment with your own values.
And we all do this, right?
We're not all living perfect lives.
And so when you do that, like there'll be nudges
and those nudges will be very graceful at
first.
And if you ignore them a little bit louder, right?
Yeah.
Yeah, that's fine.
I can, you know, I can deal with that.
The knocks start to get more intense, more intense, more intense, more intense.
And then you get two DUIs in six months and you're in jail or your partner leaves you
or whatever it is, right?
Like how much
pain are you willing to tolerate? How loud does the knock have to be before you're willing to
course correct? Change is very difficult. We don't want to make change. Or look, if change were easy
or it was a logical thing, like here's the answer, do this. And if everybody just did it, there would be no self-help industry.
There wouldn't need to be any books.
You just tell somebody what to do and they do it.
So why don't they do it, right?
We don't like to be out of our comfort zone.
We have a certain way that we live our life.
And until that is so disrupted, we're going to continue on that path, right? So the question becomes, how much pain do you have to be in before you're willing to
walk through the fear of the unknown that the change presents?
How loud does the knock have to be?
How low does the elevator have to drop?
And I think that that answer is different
for everybody. But the amazing and confusing thing about it is that the possibility of change
exists in all moments. We can make that choice at any time. We don't have to suffer. We don't
have to be in pain. And yet we still don't do it. So that mystery yeah i mean well there's your book
you can answer that question well i've been playing around with this idea in my book there
was a chapter i was going to write about time right so i wanted to write something about time
and time management so i thought the best place to start is talking about death because that kind
of puts time in context it's finite um so i started writing about that you know if you're 35 years old you've got 17 000 days left
i'm trying to you know find all these ways where people can visualize the con because because of
what you said people can't think of decades we can't think of finality we can't think of infinity
we can't think of long periods of time i also at some level don't believe we know we're going to
die we don't live our lives accordingly yeah We think it happens to other people. Yeah, exactly. Yeah. Deep down, we're like,
somehow I'm going to sidestep this thing. It's not actually going to happen. Yeah.
And you see that in our decisions, like the things we pour our attention into. Clearly,
we don't think we're on a clock here. A clock we can't see. So that's how I started the chapter.
Then I went into time and I was like, okay, time management techniques. I looked, I was thinking
about my own time management techniques. I then was like, I it chat gtp went on chat gtp talked to me about time
management techniques there's so many of them and I thought to myself the reason why there's so many
is the same reason there are so many fad diets because none of them work unless you have
discipline so that people just keep making new ones and they keep selling because none of them
work without this thing called discipline so what causes discipline and then i arrived at this sort of discipline equation in my head where
i kind of believe when you want i'm going to say this in a super vague way broadway
when your perception of how meaningful the goal is plus the enjoyment and psychological engagement
you get from the pursuit towards the goal so for me i really want to be a dj i've played around with the idea for a long time. I finally made the decision I wanted to do it.
Why do I want to do it? Absolutely love music, love the thrill and how energized I am from
performance, plus the psychological engagement enjoyment I get from the pursuit. It's like
meditation DJing and the practice of it, right? So you go upstairs into my kitchen, I spend hours
listening to my favorite music and merging it with other songs i love for hours forgetting about the whole world minus the
perceived psychological cost of the pursuit so what does it cost me to pursue djing and i think
that is roughly my discipline equation so if you think about these three elements how bad you want
it how enjoyable it is what does it cost you can kind of think of why people might or might not change. And it somewhat fits into what you said about when the pain of staying the same becomes greater than the pain of making a change, then people make the change. When they really, really want it and it's more enjoyable than it is painful to go in that direction, behavior changes.
Right. Well, I would take it one step further, but first let me say this. I would say that
you're already a DJ. You're making an assumption around what it means to be a DJ or to pursue
DJing. That comes with a lot of baggage. It means success.
Maybe you're envisioning a big crowd of people who are listening to your music,
but the fact that it brings you joy and you found a way to carve time out to nourish that,
it doesn't matter how far it goes or doesn't go as long as you are kind of cultivating that
out of that purity of spirit because it nourishes your life.
So that's what I mean when I was talking about the banker, right?
Like just DJ at your kitchen table.
Like it doesn't have to be any more than that.
If you're finding so much joy in it, then you can recalibrate that equation about how
much energy, resources, and time you're going to invest in it.
But right now, if it fits into your life and it's
making your life better, then the question would be, does it need to be more than that? Do you need
it to be attached to some external validation or monetary reward or recognition in order for you
to believe that you actually are a DJ? So I'm not saying there's an answer to that question,
but it's something to think about. The reason I gave the DJing example is because
it was something I was able to stick at. I was able to quote unquote, essentially change.
And my health was the same thing. It fits into that discipline equation of at some point in my
life, I saw this pandemic happen. I saw the fragility of this thing called health that
in my young 25 years, I'd never even knew knew was there i never even knew i had health because mine had fortunately always been well and then upon seeing
the pandemic play out and hearing the doctors and scientists say that your current health how you
know obesity is linked to your chances of um suffering having sort of worse effects of this
disease that was enough for me to put me in the gym for the next three years and i haven't missed
more than two days since pretty much in a week for the last three years. That was my behavior change. Before
then I was the guy with the fast food. Right. So that was the moment. That was the line in the
sand moment. That piece of information created willingness in you. Which is the first part of
that equation, which is the why. Like, why do I care about my health? It added so much weight to me caring
about my health. But discipline is easy when you have that why answered, right? So if it was just
that easy, I think that more people would be able to make positive changes in their life. But I
think where it gets more complicated is when we understand
beneath the surface that it's our emotional lives that are truly the things that hold us back from
accessing that potential. You can be incredibly disciplined, but if you think you're a piece of
shit or you don't deserve good things in your life, or you're being impulsed by some trauma
that happened to you, you were abused as a young person,
that's going to show up in your life as a barrier or an impediment
from you doing the thing that you know you need to do
to become the person that you could potentially become.
So the head discipline can drive us so far,
but if we don't sort out the heart and what is making the heart
beat, what is making us move in one direction versus another and untangling or detaching or
transcending the emotional baggage that is the true impediment to our growth, discipline is only going to take you so far.
So you became an ultra endurance sports athlete from that point of where you couldn't walk up
the stairs without losing your breath. What was that transformation?
So after that moment, I decided to take responsibility for my well-being and thus began a pretty long and inelegant and nonlinear process of first trying to figure out how to eat in a way that would allow me to feel good in my body. that I did, not because I felt like I needed to detox anything, but I needed to recreate the experience
of detoxing off alcohol that I had in rehab.
Like I needed to do something that was gonna be hard
and uncomfortable and not eating and just drinking juice
seemed like a good way to accomplish that.
I'd never gone a day without eating food before.
And that was an experience where I was incredibly
uncomfortable and I felt horrible for a couple days. But on the seventh day, I felt amazing. And I couldn't believe that only drinking juices for seven days could result on day seven in this boost of vitality and mental acuity that I hadn't experienced in a long time as somebody who was eating cheeseburgers every day.
And that made me want to figure out a way
to feel like that all the time.
And so I ended up trying a bunch of different diets
and what worked for me ultimately
after trying many different things
was going entirely plant-based.
I'm not here to tell everyone
that that's what they should do,
but that's what agreed with me. And that's the way I've eaten for the last 16 years. And,
you know, this approach to nutrition restored my vitality and gave me a renewed sense of energy,
so much so that I had difficulty sitting still and finally wanted to like move
again and pulled out an old pair of running shoes from the closet and just started moving my feet
again. And I went back to the pool for the first time in a very long time and was just connecting,
frankly, with these things that brought me joy as a young person. Like I was a swimmer and I
hadn't done it in a long time and I'd forgotten what it feels like to jump into a swimming pool on a sunny day and feel the water and
connect with my breath and, you know, move my legs on a trail at dawn. And I really loved it.
I felt like that was a journey towards answering these questions that I was having on the
existential front about what I was going to
do with my life because I had a lot of confusion at that time. And just the mental space of like
being alone with my breath in the pool or on a trail running was very healing for me. And I had
no aspirations of becoming a competitive athlete with it. I just wanted to feel good. I wanted to
like lose this gut, you know, frankly, for vanity
reasons. I didn't like how I looked in the mirror and the weight came off really quickly. And I felt
like I was making incredible progress athletically week after week after week. Um, and then one day
I went out like maybe six months into this experience and I was just going to run for like
an hour. And I had one of those days, you're an athlete,
you know, those days where you just feel like you just are bulletproof and you can go, go, go.
And I just kept running and ended up running the better part of a marathon that day, like 24 miles. And I'd never done anything like that before. Despite having been a swimmer, I'd never been
a runner. And that was a real watershed moment where I thought, wow, like I feel really good.
I didn't know that you could feel this good, certainly not at age 40. And that got me thinking
about potential. And I had never really realized my potential as an athlete in college because
alcohol really destroyed my swimming career. And so there was a sense of unfinished business there, but I just wanted to see what I was capable of. And so that set me on this journey to find experiences where I could
tap into that. And that's where I discovered this whole world of ultra endurance and these crazy
races. And I became fascinated with that and ended up competing in this race called
Ultraman, which is a three-day double Ironman race. And that's the race that I ended up
distinguishing myself in. And really the instigating point in that was reading an article
where David Goggins had done that race back in 2006, I think. And it was the story of how he
got through that race that really inspired me.
And because he wasn't the traditional endurance athlete triathlete, I was able to convince myself
that if he could do it, that maybe I could. And that set in motion me training for this race and
competing in it a couple of times. I've had two guests come here and tell me
that we're in a comfort crisis.
And what they mean by that is they say
that we're kind of optimizing our way away from comfort
in every sense of the word.
We're like, you know, we live in these sort of
room temperature rooms where we can go on a piece of glass
and get someone to bring us our food in a metal car
right to our doorstep.
And in fact discomfort
and pressure is where our growth our health and all of these things are fulfillment in many cases
comes from doing an ultra endurance race is for me you know the one of the epitomes of pressure and discomfort and sitting with that and accepting it.
Do you believe that more of us
should be making ourselves uncomfortable
in that context more often
and that there's tremendous value in that?
I think about it when I hear like,
I fucking don't see why not get on my bike
and just ride and just see and push myself.
See where I can take it.
A hundred percent. You don't grow unless you go out of your comfort zone. And that's in every facet of your
life. If you want to become smarter, you have to read books or go to school. Like that's not
always comfortable. There's a million different varieties of this, but yes, we are in a culture
that prioritizes comfort and luxury. and it's all about making our
lives easier.
Ironically, what makes us happy is putting ourselves in difficult situations, not so
difficult that they capsize our lives, but difficult enough that we're testing ourselves
and we're grappling with obstacles and we're overcoming them.
And on the other side, we feel a boost in self-esteem.
We feel more ourselves.
We feel more alive.
And we experience growth and connection with self and connection with other people.
This is the stuff of life.
And yet it is not the way that society is constructed.
We have to go out of our way now.
We have to seek the, it used to be,
this was everyday life just to survive, right?
And now we actually have to pay money
and travel to places to have these experiences.
What's so amazing is that, you know,
when I started doing these ultra races,
they're all very kind of like low key, under the radar.
There's not a lot of media attention on them. It's a subculture that has been around for a while.
But in the last decade, we've seen an explosion in interest in doing 100 mile races. There's
lotteries now to get into a race where you have to run a hundred miles.
Like if you told somebody in 1800 that this was going to be the case, they would think
you were insane, right?
So what does that say?
It tells us that we feel nourished by doing hard things, that we are extracting value
from those experiences that we don't get in the mundanity of our everyday lives.
And yes, we have to consciously extract ourselves from the comforts of our environments and put
ourselves in those positions. But the good news is there's lots of those things right now. It's
insane how many marathons, the London Marathon was the other way, like how many thousands of
people ran it. And then there's a Spartan race and there's just a million of these things now
that didn't used to exist
because the human spirit needs it, it demands it.
And we have too long deprived ourselves
of these types of scenarios.
That doesn't mean that you wanna be unsafe
or put yourself in peril,
but I just don't see any other way
or any other path towards becoming the better version of yourself without placing yourself in scenarios in which you're tested.
Because succeed or fail, you have an experience that's going to teach you more about who you are, what your limitations are, and what your capabilities are. The popularity of these endurance races and even things like ice plunge pools and stuff,
all of these things that make us feel really uncomfortable. Again, it reminded me of what
I said earlier about the, because there's been a real rise in sort of social media and the digital
screens and all of these things. Now people are looking for places for community. So bowling
alleys and in real life events have increased. in the same way because we've optimized our lives to be
more comfortable and easy now there's a booming industry around things that make us feel
uncomfortable you said i didn't get into ultra endurance sports to win races beat others or stand
atop a podium i got into it because it's the perfect template for self-discovery what did
you discover about yourself and also i think it's probably perfect template for self-discovery. What did you discover about yourself?
And also, I think it's probably important to say to people,
you're really, really good at this ultra endurance stuff.
Like we haven't quite gone through your CV yet,
but I mean, I've got a list of accolades that you've achieved
and you're one of the best at this.
So I think that's worth saying before we proceed.
Yeah, thank you for that.
I mean, I,
I've, I've learned so much. The amazing thing about
endurance athletics is you have to spend a lot of time with an elevated heart rate. That's not
so uncomfortable that you can't perpetuate it for hours and hours and hours, but is just uncomfortable enough where you're sitting in that discomfort and you have to develop a tolerance for that.
So what it does is it teaches you how to suffer, how to manage pain, but also how to be with yourself.
Like when I was training for these races,
I would go out like all day alone
and it's just you, your breath and your mind.
And at that time, I really was trying to figure out like,
I can't be this lawyer anymore.
Like, what am I gonna do?
Like, all I know is I really like doing this.
This is not a career path.
This is not, I'm not gonna support four kids doing this thing that I love.
But it is bringing so much value to me that I just know I want to keep doing it.
And I'm going to pay attention and pull whatever threads show up.
And what I learned through this journey of training, most importantly, the training,
the races are just,
you know, a demonstration of what you put into getting to that point, um, was on a surface level
as an athlete, I had a lot more to say, uh, than I, than I ever believed that I could,
I was able to do things I never would have thought possible and do it in my 40s, which is an age
where people think you're way past your prime. So that was huge. And like I said earlier,
that opened up the possibility of tapping into potential in other areas of my life. But I also learned that when you cultivate and nourish that thing that is bringing
you joy and you pay attention to the subtle voices that are telling you this feels right,
when you commit to that completely, that will set you on a journey that will lead you to a place you can't possibly
imagine. When I put on the running shoes for the first time and just thought, I love doing this,
could I have imagined that I'd be sitting across from you right now having a conversation? It's
ridiculous. It's preposterous. So what I learned was the power of connecting with the heart as somebody like yourself who
lives in their mind and prides themselves on their intellect and their analytic abilities,
understanding the limitations of that and finding a way to really pay attention to to those kind of more ephemeral, ethereal messages that one will receive when you're
really quiet, you're really honest with yourself, and you're committed to taking actions that
are in alignment with that in a way that maybe you never prioritized before.
And that has been a path
that I've blazed for many years at this point that has caused suffering and hardship, but also
beautiful, creative offerings and, you know, a life that I could have never imagined for myself.
Metaphorically, it sounds like you almost ran away from your little career in law.
Yeah, I guess so. Yeah, I guess so. I guess so. You know, the law and me, like,
how did that, I don't like conflict. I don't know how I became a lawyer in the first place. Like I
just, you know, I, I, I could will myself to be, be the lawyer that I was, but it never felt right
to me. And I knew that I wasn't in the right situation for myself.
And it took me a really long time to walk away. Like I probably walked away from it over a very
extended period of time. It wasn't a very dramatic split. I was trying to figure out from the point
of when you start doing the ultra endurance racing to the point where you get into sort of
financial hardship, 45 years old, you launch your Rich Roll podcast.
You've got this law job, you start ultra racing,
there's financial hardship.
Is that because you quit the law job or is that because-
No, so, because I was a bad lawyer.
Oh, okay.
No, no, no.
What happened was, so I did exit like the big law firm thing,
but I continued to practice law as a solo practitioner
and then in a couple different incarnations of partnerships
with a couple people.
But as I got more and more immersed in the ultra world,
my enthusiasm and interest in my law practice
continued to dwindle.
And I was my own boss at that point practicing law. So
not a lot of new clients coming in. I was still doing it, making just enough money to get by,
but wasn't doing great because I just wasn't into it. But I held onto it for a very long time. And
when you're holding onto it, it's hard to get into the new thing until you're really willing to let
go of the other thing but making that transition was
very challenging even you know after finding ultra came out uh i i completely severed my ties with
the law at that point but the phone wasn't really ringing that much and there wasn't a lot of
opportunities coming my way and it took a lot of patience and faith and i did the podcast for years
before we were able to monetize it or do any kind of
ads or anything like that.
I just did it as like a fun hobby or project.
What was it like for Julie during that period between sort of 2008 and 2015?
Things are really tough financially.
You almost lost your house, couldn't pay a lot of your bills, had your cars repossessed.
Yeah, it was very difficult. She was really the strength in that equation because there were
multiple occasions where I couldn't take it anymore. And I thought, this is ridiculous.
I need to go back and get a law job. What kind of head of household or man of the house
am I if I can't even pay the bills and I'm chasing this fool's errand in this direction of trying to
do these creative projects or be this athlete? Who the hell do you think you are? And Julie was
the one who was like, no, we've come too far for you to move backwards. And the answers that you are seeking
and the solutions to the problems we face are only going to be found by continuing to
blaze the path that you've established for yourself. And she had a conviction and a belief
and an ability to see the more kind of developed, actualized version of myself that
I couldn't at that time. And without her strength, her faith, her conviction, I definitely would
have abandoned the path. But she was in all the way. And she would say, these things are just things. You're definitely on a path that you should be on. I can see that and I want that for you. And if we lose the house, we lose the house. Cars are cars. This stuff comes and goes, but we're together and we're going to walk this path. This is what we're here to do, which is a fucking amazing thing for a partner to say to you,
to have that kind of belief in you is such a gift.
So I just can't emphasize enough how powerful she has been like in this this whole thing of all the things you've accomplished
in your life of all the things you've done what does she mean to you
i mean she's she is my you know partner in all things she's my north star she's my spiritual counsel um she's my mirror yeah um
and you know we're normal people with kids who you know bicker and argue and have the same kind
of issues everyone else does um but she's a really special person, really special.
It's really something when someone can see the potential in you in a way that maybe you can't
see it at that moment in time, or maybe you don't quite believe it.
It is such a gift. You know, they say the greatest gift you can give somebody is your attention. But if you have somebody in your
life who believes in you so thoroughly that they can see past whatever situation you're in or
whatever faults you have or things that trip you up and holds a vision for that better version of
you and not only holds it for you, says, I believe in you. They're not
telling you what to do or how to do it. They're saying, I believe in you and I trust you to find
your way towards that person. And I am holding that for you in my daily consciousness, in my
sleep, in my thoughts, in my prayers. my thoughts and my prayers they're manifesting
a very powerful energy yeah so it's a curious idea that someone else can manifest your life
for you in a kind of inadvertent way i've experienced that as well there's been moments
in my life where my partner has said something to me i've heard what she said i didn't believe it necessarily myself
but because she believed it that i could do that
maybe it did change something in me maybe it did make me go i trust her and she's smart and she's
usually right and she's telling me that i can do this thing. So maybe it is possible.
I can remember so many conversations over 15 years where someone said something to me
about what my future will look like.
And because I trusted them,
I think it helped that future become a reality.
Sure.
I mean, just imagine the young person
who has the opportunity to be with a certain teacher
and that teacher says,
you can do this. You're good at this. There's countless stories of people who win Oscars and
get up and thank their whoever who said, you should keep doing that thing. And those are
really powerful gifts that we can give to other people.
He believes that if you follow your true path, the universe will support you.
Quote I read about you as well.
Yeah, I do. I do believe that. That's been my life experience. I've seen that
manifest in many people that I know over the years, a lot of people in recovery.
And that doesn't mean that it's easy or convenient or on your timetable.
I would say that the path that I've pursued has been the hardest path I could have imagined.
It's the most meaningful and fulfilling, but it didn't happen overnight.
It happened over the course of more than a decade, and it required a lot of conviction and faith and patience and pain.
We have to, you know, we had to lose a lot, but there's that adage, like, you can't, you know,
you can't be a Phoenix if you don't burn in the flames first. Right. And I feel like we had to
burn in the flames or burn off, you know, the residue of whatever in order to be reborn to do something
different and i think when you have run that type of gauntlet and you emerge on the other side of it
what you have to share with other people is all the more kind of poignant because it's your own
lived experience and it's authentic and real so many chapters in your life rich
so many of them we've been through pretty much all of them so far and we arrive now at today
now if i was to ask julie what the next chapter looks like or or you i know you know it's funny
because when people ask me this i my instinctive answer is i don't know but i'm gonna you know do
my best at what i'm doing now but if you were to try and if you think back to your mission the
mission you described at the start of this conversation what do you think the next chapter
is for you that's a great question i think for me the challenge and the opportunity comes from learning how to let go of striving and step into a place of allowing rather than
being this animal of self-will who's pursuing and achieving and pushing and
um and and and really kind of in their ambition to manifest something for financial security, for legacy, whatever it is, to ease off that gas pedal and just be in a place of ease with everything where it doesn't have to be hard. And what would it feel like if you didn't push,
but you still did the thing? Would you still be you? Would you feel like you left something on
the table because you didn't suffer to create the thing that you share with the world. And I imagine might be a difficult thing for you to digest for yourself, right?
Because we both know if I go out and I push really hard, I can do something and I can make
it great. And I'm pretty sure what the result of that is going to be. But what if you created out of a sense of joy and you didn't
have to exhaust yourself in doing it and you could enjoy your friends and your family and live a rich
life without the stress that you place upon yourself or the pressure or the people pleasing or the need for any kind of external
validation. So that's the mountain that I'm trying to climb right now. And I would say that I'm not
doing it very well. Why do you want to climb that mountain though? Because I think that there's a lot in being more in flow as opposed to willfulness.
And I think that there's a peace and a happiness
to be found there that I'm probably missing
in my life right now. And because it's new territory to be explored.
I know what it's like to do this other thing and it's exhausting and it's not sustainable.
And I believe that there is a better way over here. So am I in enough pain with this where I'm willing
to entertain the possibility of trying something different? Or am I holding on too hard to this
old modality and unwilling to embrace the possibility that the result and the fullness of life could be better
by this different way of approaching? Sure. Yeah. Uh,
I have tiptoed up to burn out a couple of times with the podcast and that's been ameliorated by
now having a staff of really talented people to help me because I was a control-free perfectionist who tried to do
everything myself for too long to the point of it just being completely unsustainable
to now having people that I empower to do a lot of the work that I used to do
and who now do it very well, which has freed up my time. And I still find myself with this sense that
success has to be earned. And the only way to earn it is to inflict pain on yourself.
And if you're not in pain, you didn't try hard enough and it would have been better
if you suffered more. And I think that's a lie.
And I want to find out if it's a lie or if it's true.
Thinking back to endurance racing, it seems to be that it might be true.
You know, you achieve that through pain. Sure. Discomfort seems to be the first hurdle to
all the good places we want to go. But actually, that's very comfortable for me the real discomfort is to
see what it would be like without the suffering
that's harder to do yeah it's harder to do for me and you
i i often ask my guests are you driven you being dragged? Because saying you're driven is a nice way to frame yourself.
That's like an intentional person.
But so often we're actually being dragged by the insecurity, the shame, that desire to be enough.
We're like, we're strapped to the end of the lorry and it's flying down the highway.
We think we're in the driving seat, you know.
And I think in so many facets of my life right now, I know'm well i suspect i'm being dragged but i think i'm
being driven and i'm portraying so what would what would an example of that be even the podcast
you know do i do i have to be so like neurotic and obsessed with everything and every detail
you said it before we started you're very obsessed about the detail the fact that when we do the
podcast in la we have every book is the same in the same order you know that's insane I mean it's a great
story it's very entertaining but it's fucking bananas dude but for me it's I mean I'm probably
going to try and justify it here but for me it's about I know that the small stuff is the stuff
that most people don't think about so it's my place it's where we find the opportunity but
generally of course I think about all the things I do all the businesses all the details to the
point of some level of suffering.
There's definitely a cost to my personal relationships when at Sunday, when I'm on a date with my partner and I get a message and something's not quite right.
And then I lose 30 minutes in despair, like silent despair to myself in my head.
I just kind of I leave the dinner table.
That's not a great way to live.
Right.
I relate to that deeply.
So I'm right with you and lockstep with that.
But what if you were to say, okay.
But then, okay, so let me try and justify.
Then everything, the whole house of cards caves on top of itself
and all the good things in your life disappear.
Yeah, that's what I think.
Right, yeah.
I know.
And I'll say well all
our ancestors they built these skyscrapers and this ai stuff and these cameras that we're using
so we're innately meant to struggle forward that's hardwired into us it's why i'm here my ancestors
struggled forward they built buildings and civilizations and they left that in my genetic
code as a little message saying you too shall struggle forward steven you too shall be wired to climb upwards
do you feel that uh
to enjoy your life is an indulgence that's fine for other people but you're on a mission so you can uh you can like have a different relationship with those aspects of life
that other people find important i think so yeah yeah yeah is that do you think i'm bullshit no i'm
like i'm just i'm just seeing if you see the world the way that i do you know what I mean? But what are you, 30? How old are you? I just turned 30. Yeah. So
I'm 56, dude. You know, so check in with me. What advice would you give me? We've got the same
mindset. Look, I think it's great that I'm all about the details. And I just want to say for
the record, I shared it with your team earlier. I think that what you have built here is extraordinary. I have so much
respect for not only the show, the way you comport yourself, the way that you are curious about the
people that you talk to, and the fact that you've built this incredible audience in such a short
period of time and the integrity and the quality is fantastic. So I've been a fan.
And a lot of that is because you are attuned to the details. And I see that in you. And I think
there's something beautiful and wonderful about that. The trick is to not allow it to become
toxic to the point where it starts to denigrate the quality of your life.
So can you, you know, toggle it such that you're still pursuing what's important to you in a way
that's sustainable? Because you want to be doing this for a long period of time, right? So after
five or six years or 10 years, like what is your relationship to this thing going to be? And if it's not sustainable now where you feel drained at the end of the week rather than energized, then maybe you're a brilliant business person.
Look at the model and figure out how you can tweak it so that you can stay in love with the process. And I think for me, it's all about enjoying it for what it is and detaching
from all the externalities. Like if I start looking on Spotify or Apple, where are the
ranking, all that kind of stuff, like I know that I'm in a dark place, right? I shouldn't be
comparing myself to other people. I should just be present for the experience of having these conversations and trying to deliver value to the people who are taking time out of their day to listen.
And that's it.
It doesn't have to be any more than that.
When I get caught up in that other stuff is when I start to make decisions that begin to become out of alignment with the mission.
Thank you. Thank you for that advice. And thank you for such a rich, wonderful conversation.
I think especially that closing piece of advice is something that will resonate
with everybody.
And I've thought a lot, actually, starting out my career as an insecure young man that wanted to make millions and thinking that life was this kind of sprint where you can sack everything else can wait, including relationships, social relationships, romantic relationships, family.
Well, I get this thing, getting the thing and realizing that the kind of the thing
just moves forward off into the distance like a mirage um then i've read simon's book about
infinite games and thinking okay how would i design every system in my life so that i could
run those systems for 40 or 50 years in a sustainable way and this is one of them this is
one of the ones this is one of the systems this podcast is one of the ones where i need to continue
to remind myself that i need to design it in a way
that is sustainable for 40 years of my life, including the period where I have seven kids
and a mortgage and a wife that needs me to be there. And also not just for me, but for all the
people that work here as well. And everyone can relate to that, especially people that are being
dragged. Sure. In some way some way beautiful we have a closing
tradition on this podcast where the last guest leaves a question for the next guest not knowing
who they are leaving the question for
you get a 60 second phone call with a previous version of yourself what do you say
you then get to pass the phone to someone who is in your life at that moment
and you get 60 seconds to speak to them too what do you say what do you say
hmm i think i would call up the 18-year-old version of myself
and tell him that it's okay to be who you are,
that you don't have to live up to anybody's expectations,
that you don't need to earn love.
And the best gift that you could give to yourself
would be to find out what you love,
to discover the animating force within you,
and above all, to nurture that,
to mute out all the noise of the external world,
the social and familial pressures,
and to just find a way to be comfortable with who you are
because who you are is 100% fine,
and you don't need to be anyone else
in order to be accepted or loved.
And the corollary of that would be to not get caught up in trying to make decisions about the
rest of your life or your career path at such a young age, but to instead explore and invest in as many
experiences as you possibly can to live lean and to be adventurous. And then I would say,
put your mother on the phone. And I would tell her, I know you love your son, but you got to leave him alone and let him be him.
Why would you say that?
How many hours do you have?
I understand. i understand rich thank you so much for an incredibly very life-changing conversation
in many ways but for your honesty and your vulnerability and for all the work you do
because it's people like you that pave the way for what i do here and we're big fans of yours
i mean that's why i reached out to you and wanted to have you on the show so i'm so privileged and
honored that you said yes um i freaked out a little bit when you responded because I've spent a lot of time watching a lot of your episodes. I love
the way you do what you do, the integrity in which you do it shines through. And everything you've
said to me today about authenticity and being more aligned with yourself now makes perfect sense.
It makes sense as to why what I've seen from your content and the way you've lived
and the man that I've met today, I see the alignment. So thank you for the inspiration and thank you for the kindness and generosity today. I really appreciate that,
Steve. And that means a lot. I have crazy respect for your mission and what you guys are doing here.
And I've loved watching your trajectory and it was a real honor to come and talk to you today. And
man, you're good. You're really good at this, man. I was like, wow. What did we talk about? Bye.