The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - James Smith: Become Confident In 100 Minutes

Episode Date: September 1, 2022

James Smith is a fitness influencer and the two-time best-selling author of Not a Life Coach and Not a Diet Book. His no holds barred approach to fitness advice makes him unlike any other fitness infl...uencer today, and now he’s bringing his unique philosophy to improving people’s confidence. According to James, we’ve been getting self confidence and how to achieve it all wrong. Confidence is not a surefire belief in ourselves to achieve great things, but rather confidence is being at peace with the idea of losing or things going wrong. When you know it isn’t the end of the world, you realise losing isn’t the same as being defeated. Like James’ brutally honest fitness advice, there’s no quick fix to confidence, or any miracle cure. James starts, like he always does, by looking at himself honestly - and truthfully - in the mirror, and all he asks is we do the same as well. James’ book is out today. James’ book: https://www.amazon.com/How-Be-Confident James: https://www.instagram.com/jamessmithpt Follow me: https://beacons.ai/diaryofaceo

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Starting point is 00:00:00 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
Starting point is 00:00:37 thank you to all of you that listened to this show. Let's continue. I was failing. That was the point for me where I was like, I need to do things differently. Hardest thing I've ever done. It's James Smith. Three talking personal trainers. He's helping you get confidence. Some see James' curse-filled rants as confrontational. Oh, James could be a narcissist.
Starting point is 00:00:59 James, good to see you again. Self-esteem and confidence is decaying. When you're at that place of feeling that you don't have enough confidence, it's actually a crossroads. It's a left and a right, action and inaction. Whatever you're not changing, you're choosing. Dating is such a big topic because people either don't have the confidence required to meet someone or they might not have the confidence to leave someone. We're allowed to be ignorant with these things and we're allowed to be wrong.
Starting point is 00:01:21 That doesn't mean we shouldn't endeavor to get the best possible outcome. What are you not confident about i constantly have these battles in my head why did i create this fast why did i have sweat patches from such a simple interaction of being uncomfortable i have the same insecurities the same fears feelings of inadequacies sometimes my biggest fear is losing is not the same as being defeated. You have to be audacious. You have to put your head above the parapet. I'm sure I'm going to be absolutely slammed for saying this. So without further ado, I'm Stephen Bartlett, and this is the Diary of a CEO. I hope nobody's listening, but if you are, then please keep this to yourself. James, good to see you again.
Starting point is 00:02:14 Thank you very much for having me back. It's, I've got to say, we don't have many guests back, but our conversation was so inspiring and surprising to me. When I messaged you the other day and said, if you're ever back in London, I'd love to have you back on. And then I learned you'd written a book about confidence. Why did you write a book about confidence? Well, it's kind of interesting that through my entire career, I've learned something personally. And then I've, you know, taught other people kind of the processes so the first book not a diet book i went through years of fitness industry bullshit we spoke about before
Starting point is 00:02:50 and kind of by the end of it through my own journeys i was like i could teach people about this and i didn't want to write a diet book system i was like let's you know break down everything put it into a book then the second book offer i was like i can't do another one if i'd written a second book about fitness it would have said I can't do another one. If I'd written a second book about fitness, it would have said a lot about the first, you know, and people do sequence things. I'm like, oh, you must've done a great job. And I kind of realized by accident that my work-life balance was pretty good and wrote the second book. A lot of the things we spoke about in that last podcast were based off not a life coach. Now, the kind of strange thing
Starting point is 00:03:22 that I say to people is I'm not a very confident person I have the same insecurities the same fears the same feelings of inadequacies as the majority of people but I kind of have a set of values and a way that I see these problems where I can break them down and dismantle them and in the book in first chapter, I say a lot of people sit back and they think other people are confident as if it's a trait like height or people said it's a superpower. But straight away, I actually typed that in the first part of the book. I was like, confidence is a superpower, but then superpowers aren't accomplishable by mortals. It's almost something out of your reach. And I'm a big believer that
Starting point is 00:04:05 confidence can be within people's reach. And even chatting to people in the same profession, they have a problem or a fear of judgment of whatever it is. And if I could spend five minutes with that person, I can motivate them to post on social media, to prospect more with their business, whatever it is. And I realized it's not something people are lacking it's more so the way they perceive and view their reality. What are you not confident about? People I think would be surprised to hear that you have insecurities and inadequacies and there's things you're not confident about. Everything body image which is why I ended up going down the first huge 10 years of my life with not a diet book. I was overweight as a kid. Even now, I constantly have these battles in my head through how should I look? What should I be doing? Should
Starting point is 00:04:53 I be dieting? And I think that's why a lot of people resonate with what I say, because a lot of what I say to them is also for myself. A lot of, you know, I say to people, I know this is how you're feeling because that's how I feel myself. And it's an interesting one, even with dating, with professional life, some of them, I feel like I kind of got lucky. I'm not a massive believer in luck. And I kind of tripped over some of the steps to becoming confident. And even working in door-to-door sales, where working for Empower in Gloucester, knocking on hundreds of doors a day, it allowed me to perceive issues in front of me as a numbers game. And then I had the average of knocking on a hundred doors to make a sale. Suddenly things didn't seem so daunting and people go, oh, you'd need to be really confident to knock on doors for a living.
Starting point is 00:05:39 I was like, well, not so much. If you appreciate there's a certain amount of times you need to do something before you experience success, it's not so scary. Email marketing. I knew email marketing would work. I sent emails every day for 10 months. No one bought. In 10 months, someone bought finally. So it was an appreciation of the numbers. Social media. Four and a half years. I posted near about every day before I made any money from it. Things aren't so much scary or to be feared. It's how you look at those things in front of you that really kind of break down the fear. Because we're all capable of doing things, but we like to almost push things further away than we can reach
Starting point is 00:06:20 so that it gives us a reason not to do it. One thing that really blew my mind is I had Liver King on the podcast, right? This is a man for anybody that doesn't know him who is jacked. He walks around with his top off. He's very, you know, direct and loud and apparently confident. But at the very end of the conversation,
Starting point is 00:06:42 I asked him to tell me something he's never told anyone before. And what he said blew my mind. He said, coming on this podcast today and speaking in front of people cripples me to the point that I can't sleep. And then he tells me that between the age of 10 and 14 years old, he was bullied horrifically, beaten up every day,
Starting point is 00:07:03 had no friends. And I was trying to put the pieces together that, and you kind of allude to it at the start of your book when you start talking about the different types of confidence, that he might be confident in some ways, but the social confidence was literally knocked out of him at 10 years old. So in social situations where there's a chance of rejection from the crowd, which is what happened to him in school, he is still crippled to this day. It appears to me that there's a real variance in people's social confidence, which originates from their like early self-story. And really that early self-story, i'm trying to understand how much of that determines
Starting point is 00:07:45 our confidence today because there's tricks and tips and the five second rule and all this stuff but if how do we really have to go back and fix that shit that happened to us at 10 years old in the playground no i don't think so and that's kind of the important thing i don't think it's like a trauma that we need to hold dearly to ourselves. But like you say, so for instance, if you were to say, James, there's 3000 people out there, I need you to perform a talk with no preparation, I'd be like, cool. But if you'd say, hey, there's a girl at the bar and I need you to go approach her on a Friday night and try and get a number, that would, I'd be like, that's scary to me. So it's kind of like double standards. Like you say, some situations, everyone has a certain lacking type of confidence, even the most confident of people.
Starting point is 00:08:28 And that could be because when I was 12, the first girl I asked out said, no, it could be that, or it could be because I've done more talks. And I think that at the root core of everything is a form of repetition. And people that aren't confident to do things, they need to find something they have the level of courage to do and get to that point. And for instance, that's something I don't need to work on. And as I'm in a relationship, I probably shouldn't be working on this either. But if I am petrified of talking to a girl or a guy, for any women listening, or either either, for whoever whoever's listening maybe i don't have the courage to ask for the number but i might have the courage to go say hello or to compliment them or
Starting point is 00:09:08 to you know do something chivalrous and if people can then do that then maybe from there they can move on and i think it is one of those things where everyone has like a gaping hole in their confidence and for liver king it's an interesting one at first i was actually very anti him because he is obnoxious he actually has a very similar approach to what i do like in your face this is what i believe in if you don't believe in it that's cool but i can sometimes look at him and appreciate that a lot of people are not being who they are they're being who they need to be and i feel i resonate with that side of him where as i'm sure you realized on social media, so I'm very much like, listen, mate, you know, do this, calorie deficit,
Starting point is 00:09:48 you know, fuck off, all of that. But really, I'm not like that. I portray the person I need to be. It's one of those things where a lot of the time people need to appreciate that maybe everyone around them is fearful of everything like you, but they're more focused about being who they need to be, not worrying about who they are.
Starting point is 00:10:09 In the start of this book, in chapter chapter one you investigate this idea of pain points as it relates to confidence what do you mean by pain points so we could look at this in the form of sales as well so i cannot sell to someone unless i understand their pain points and i use an analogy that probably is the one i've had most experience with with people in the gym they come they sit down hi james i want to get fitter I want to lose a bit of weight. I want to tone up. And I'm like, that's not really what you want. That's not a pain point. That is a knee-jerk reaction to what you think I want to hear. And when you delve a bit deeper, they go, oh, my husband's not fucking me. You know, every time I stand up in a meeting, I've got to pull my top down over the layers of flab that I have. I don't feel confident in areas of my life that I should
Starting point is 00:10:45 because I'm so crippled by the confidence I have with my physique. I'm not taken seriously. The pain points are deep and people need to draw on those because the day that you're getting out of bed and you feel like shit and you're tired and you want to give up, I want to be toned isn't going to do it. The fact that your real pain point is that you're lonely and you're getting older and you're worrying about the fact you might not find a compatible
Starting point is 00:11:08 companion ever, that is a strong enough pain point for you to change. Being more toned isn't. Interestingly, for some, you know, I know people that are in that exact same situation. And I've debated for many a year whether someone's, you know, the situation you described that I'm getting older, I'm lonely, I'm scared I'll be alone forever. I know people in that exact, exact same situation that are exhibiting the fear of the consequences of a lifelong loneliness, but they still don't do anything about it. Is there such thing as like wanting to want to be someone? Is it? I'm not sure to answer your question, but one of the things I would say to that person is you're in the, and I'm only using this as an example. I think dating is an analogy
Starting point is 00:11:52 I love to use. I actually use it when I talk about business talks. I say marketing is like dating, you know, and we won't get down that too much, but you look at the person at the bar, you, you feel the fear rather than counting down from five, five, four, three, two, one. Oh my God, I've got the confidence. Let me go talk to them. They could instead just for a flash of a moment, just think to themselves, I'm lonely. I don't want to be lonely. What are these two things is more uncomfortable for me? The idea of going another week, another month being single or the idea of talking to a stranger. And surely when you add and level those two things up, the pain point of being lonely should be much worse than the pain point of talking to a stranger. And surely when you add and level those two things up, the pain point of being lonely
Starting point is 00:12:25 should be much worse than the pain point of talking to a stranger. If you feel undervalued at work, the idea of talking to your boss and expressing how you feel, that's a pain point. You're like, you know, that's going to make me feel uncomfortable. But then the pain point of feeling undervalued and not being given the bonus you were promised a year ago, you level them up and you're like, there's always two directions in which you can go. And you've tweeted and mentioned this before. You say saying nothing is still saying something. Doing nothing is still doing something. And they also say, whatever you're not changing, you're choosing.
Starting point is 00:12:57 And these are really important because that person, and again, same analogy, whatever it is, when you're at that place of feeling that you don't have enough confidence, it's actually a crossroads. It's a left and a right. It's a dichotomy of action and inaction. And if you are controlled by fear and you don't muster the courage to do what you need to do, especially by using the pain points to motivate yourself, you are choosing inaction. By doing nothing, that is a choice choice and people just seem to think that you know not starting the passion project not posting or expressing something on social media they seem to think if they do nothing that it's a void in our reality but it's not it's still a choice of inaction i used to think of like people ask me
Starting point is 00:13:42 about confidence a lot and it's taken me quite some time to develop my thoughts on it. Because, you know, when you I think level one of the confidence self help guru is like, look yourself in the mirror and tell yourself you love yourself. Like that's like step one. And then eventually, hopefully your thinking progresses when you find the holes in that thinking. And then I arrived at the conclusion that confidence, as we kind of like say talk about it in culture, I know there's multiple definitions and lots of nuance, but confidence as we describe it in culture is really just, is based on the evidence you have in yourself. Like all beliefs are based, are evidence-based, subjective, correct or incorrect evidence. And therefore, if it is evidence-based,
Starting point is 00:14:26 the only way to build your confidence is to go and get evidence. And I say this because there's a lot, there's a narrative that you can just kind of like write down in your book or look yourself in the mirror and say, I'm going to be confident, I'm going to be sexy, I'm going to be a millionaire, which I don't think is factually supported by how other beliefs work so confidence so when I started writing the book I wasn't sat there like I know everything about confidence I was sat there going I couldn't answer if you were to say James what is confidence when I start writing I go I don't know so that's why I was so excited about writing it but one of the interesting kind of ways that I wrote about it in one of the points
Starting point is 00:15:06 was if you imagine confidence on a spectrum with anxiety on one end and confidence on the other anxiety is predicting failure and confidence is predicting success and that is a really important thing to think about because our expectations massively influence the outcome of things and like you say there if people just go into a room and go, I'm amazing, I'm whatever, it's not really going to work. Even as one of your previous guests said about interrogative self-talk,
Starting point is 00:15:34 asking yourself questions is a more positive thing. Instead of saying, I can do this podcast today and do well, I ask myself, can you do well in this podcast today? And the answer, you know what, I did all right in the last one. It got a lot of downloads.
Starting point is 00:15:46 So it is one of those things that is in so many different spectrums and it has so many different meanings, but a lot of it points towards predicting success in things. And even if you don't have the evidence to predict success, we should be able to be wrong. If there's something I want to accomplish, I can't let my mind and my
Starting point is 00:16:06 thoughts take over i must in some sense be overconfident and predict success but if i'm wrong that's fine but what i can't do is just set every single default to being this isn't going to work because if you don't think something's going to work you're already tripped at the first hurdle and there's a guy david robson, who wrote a book called The Expectation Effect. And in that book, they got a group of people, I can't remember how big the study was, but they lied to them and said, this group have got a gene that is going to hinder their turnover of oxygen, and this group over here doesn't. And they got them to perform fitness tests. And the people that were told they had this gene mutation performed a lot better than the other people who didn't.
Starting point is 00:16:48 And even just being primed with a lie completely changed their output in a fitness test. So schools don't teach confidence. Society doesn't really breed confidence because although on one hand, confidence is essential for innovation, if we don't have confident people, you know, Elon Musk, he was confident enough to say, that rocket, we could land it back on we don't have confident people, you know, Elon
Starting point is 00:17:05 Musk, he was confident enough to say, that rocket, we could land it back on Earth. And people would go, you know, you're crazy. But society doesn't care if you're confident or not. Society doesn't care if you talk to that person or not. Society doesn't care if you get a pay rise. No one in the world is going to come along and care about your levels of confidence. It's something we need to do ourselves. In that example of them priming two, you know, there's been two groups and they tell one of them a lie and then the one that believes
Starting point is 00:17:29 that they have a genetic advantage performed better, right? Yeah. So is that not the case then for lying to yourself? So fake it till you make it. I don't particularly like that terminology in the book I write about it because what's your metric of success in that? To fake it
Starting point is 00:17:47 until you get recognition for something? I think with that and with the book and with expectations, you've got manifestation and the placebo effect and they're intertwined, but they're both separate. So manifestation, I think is a very dangerous thing where people think, oh, I'm just going to think about success. You know, I'm going to meditate about success. I'm going to get it. But then things like the placebo effect is also a powerful thing. Sham surgeries that were performed on people, they would be cut open. They would do nothing. They'd stitch them back up. And up to 50% of people reported feeling better. That's crazy. When people take, or 30% of people that took the vaccine in the trials that were given the no vaccine felt
Starting point is 00:18:26 ill afterwards because they thought they were going to feel ill. I've seen as well, I didn't put this one in the book so I couldn't find the study, the size of the pill you take as a painkiller, even with placebos, can impact the levels of pain that people, you know, report disappearing. So although we can't say, you know, I'll just, you know, pretend you're going to be confident, pretend all of this, in the same sense, we do need to instill a level of belief in ourself that we are able to accomplish stuff. And if we try and we falsify that optimism and it doesn't work out, we create another building block to step on. And behind everyone who's an expert in anything, there is a level of mastery and failure is put in such a
Starting point is 00:19:06 negative light in society but failure is the most cases the pathway to development so even if we do you know point the dial towards optimism if things don't go right that's fine we're allowed to be wrong we're allowed to make mistakes you're allowed to try that endeavor that you want and for it to all fuck up i think that i was just thinking about that then the i guess the difference is with the placebo effect you don't know that it's a lie whereas if i looked at myself in the mirror and said you are in fact jesus christ i would know that that was a lie and so placebo i guess you know the placebo effect stuff can work and even in that operation they didn't know they were being lied to in that in those two control
Starting point is 00:19:44 groups where one of them believed they had a genetic advantage, they thought it was true. The problem is we can't actually lie to ourselves. And the example I always give sometimes when I speak about confidence on stage is like, if I had your mom in a headlock and I was pointing a gun at her and I said, you have to believe I'm Jesus or she dies, everything's on the line. And all you could do is pretend. You couldn't actually believe I was Jesus. If everything was on the line, you could only believe. And so that for me was the clearest evidence I needed that I can never really lie to myself about who I am. It doesn't have to be a lie as it could be
Starting point is 00:20:17 even just a change in narrative. So I remember so many times throughout my life, just before I was about to go on a date with a stranger, which I found incredibly daunting. It's one of the reasons I drank on dates for the first 25 years of my life. But that voice in your head, you don't have to lie to yourself,
Starting point is 00:20:33 but the voice in your head goes, what if this is the worst date I'll ever go on? But all you need to do is change that to say, what if this is the best date I'll ever go on? That's all I'm saying. And that is a change in expectations. It's a different change in thought. It's a different change in thought. It's a different perspective on your reality that's upcoming.
Starting point is 00:20:49 I don't think we should ever lie to ourselves, but we should at least turn the dial towards optimism because we are inherently pessimistic with our biases. Audacity. You talk about that being one of the most important things. You describe it as being at the forefront of any of the successes you've experienced in your life. What is audacity and how do you define that and what role has it played for you? I had a lot of opinions in the fitness industry, but by airing them,
Starting point is 00:21:17 you open yourself up to a lot of criticism. You open yourself up to hatred. Five years ago, I don't think anyone bar a couple of my ex-girlfriends hated me all right you know no one now there are thousands thousands of people because you have to be audacious you have to put your head above the parapet to really you know put yourself forward even as we said before with this podcast you had to be audacious one day as someone who'd never done a podcast to go we're going to do a podcast in here and you you had to be audacious one day as someone who'd never done a podcast to go we're going to do a podcast in here and you you had to sit there and believe for a second we're going to make this the uk's leading podcast and in some respects behind anyone's level of success there was a
Starting point is 00:21:57 an audacious endeavor at the beginning whether it was to do a podcast whether it was to start a business whatever it was and i think that that again, something that's not fully bred into people. You know, or someone has an idea, you know, go put that idea out there, be audacious with it. You know, don't be afraid to be wrong. Don't be afraid of critics. And ultimately for me, something that I kind of understood was there are going to be a lot of people that are never going to be interested in what you're doing. And they're never going to be interested in a book that I release or whatever. I can't take their criticisms to heart and fully understanding that there are people out there that are going to dislike me, but I can't worry too much about that because they're never going to benefit my net
Starting point is 00:22:39 equation. They're never going to come to a talk or buy a book or anything like that. So audaciousness is like an essential element for progress in this. But you need to be armed with understanding that you're going to be haters, that there are going to be people that are going to not like what you say or what you do. And there's quite literally no one out there that doesn't get criticized for something. So audaciousness does have that dark side to it but for people again being audacious with your endeavor what if it's the worst thing you ever do then again what if it's the best thing you ever do since you came on this podcast last time i've been asking guests a similar question which which is about this ingredients list of happiness have you ever heard me say this to anybody i've heard you say it but okay just want just ask that just in case you had a premeditated response.
Starting point is 00:23:25 But the question I ask people is, if happiness was a list of ingredients on a recipe in different weights and quantities, what is missing from your list of ingredients that would make you perfectly happy? Oh, John, I haven't thought about this. I haven't thought about this at all. I don't really look at my life and go, what's missing?
Starting point is 00:23:45 And even some things I could say was, oh, you know, a permanent visa for Australia. But I quite like the fact it's not happened yet. I'm looking forward to it if it does come. And even if I don't get residency in Australia, I kind of relish the challenge of what I would have to do to then get it again. So all of the things that are lacking from my life
Starting point is 00:24:02 also seem like little challenges that I'm excited for. But honestly, I know a lot of people have a facade for happiness. I'm progressing in everything that I'm doing. And as I said before, even on the back burner, I love jujitsu. I'm competing a bit at the moment. I teach classes on a Friday evening. I have that. And so much of my values does revolve around my work, the book doing well, my professional life. But then also at the back burner, I've always said this, that I could just get a dog, open a little jujitsu dojo, my savings, put it near the beach somewhere, hopefully in Australia. And I could just teach people jujitsu for the rest of my life. And I look at that and I go, on some days, that's better than my existing life you know so it's one of those things where I don't really dwell or use any
Starting point is 00:24:48 mental or cognitive ability thinking about what's missing I don't think that's a productive way to use cognitive effort I think I am I sometimes question the balance of things in my life and I sometimes I wonder whether it's society telling me that I, that the balance is wrong or whether it's, you know, your girlfriend telling you the balance is wrong. It happens a lot. Um, or whether it's, you know, something else, but I think more in terms of the balance of things. So for example, I might be going to the gym too much, or I might be working too much, or I might not be working enough. And those are the kind of things that I think I spend some time thinking about, usually upon getting feedback. I foolishly for a long time used to say that I was fortunate that I'd never struggled with mental health problems. And in some respects,
Starting point is 00:25:36 that's true because there is a bit of a throw the dice with how, you know, our baselines of certain hormones or whatever in this trauma that can occur in people's lives. But a friend of mine who suffered with depression quite heavily, he said to me, you are not aware of your habits that protect your mental health. And you need to go away and think about the things you're doing to actually, you know, uphold this. Because the way I see mental health now, and this could be quite controversial, is like a table, like the one in front of us with many legs. And the legs can be completely am i going outside enough are my family relationships good enough how's my professional life how's my bank account whatever it is and you can kick away one of the legs and you'll be okay but people if they don't realize that legs from the table are disappearing it only takes that one
Starting point is 00:26:17 final kick before it topples over for me being comfortable not working too hard not traveling too much not stretching myself too thin is something that is really important to me. And I haven't drunken probably about six weeks at the moment. And as I'm getting older, I'm really losing and diminishing my relationship with alcohol because when I was younger, my values for happiness didn't sit around productivity. I could play Xbox all day. But as I'm getting older, my values are changing and productivity is so important to me. The drinking alcohol now inflicts that. And even now, I think to myself, sometimes drinking makes me less happy because it negates my levels of productivity. And it's only as I'm getting older that I'm starting to realize how important that is to me.
Starting point is 00:27:01 And I think that when we're younger, we don't quite see it that way. We kind of look to use alcohol, especially in the context of confidence. People can buy bottled confidence and they buy it in the version of alcohol because it breaks down those social struggles that they have. It makes them feel more confident or more importantly, it makes them care less. And as long as we have alcohol available to us, people don't need to work on their inadequacies when it comes to social interactions or having the confidence to do things. When you talk about productivity in that context of, you know, you value it more now than ever, do you mean professional productivity? In all sense, whether it's having the energy on a Sunday
Starting point is 00:27:41 morning to go, do you want a game of tennis? You know, I'm rubbish at'm rubbish at tennis but I like you know you know when you throw a ball for a dog how happy it is that's me chasing a tennis ball around the tennis court I'm awful but I enjoy just doing that or productivity with work where so many times I'll be in the shower and I'll have an idea and the idea really excites me and people around me know that when I do have an idea and I want to do it you have to leave me alone to kind of hash it out. Especially if I have a video idea, we could be going for breakfast. If I have a video idea, I'm almost like, I can't enjoy breakfast while I've got the idea in my head. When I'm hung over or tired or, you know, on the road with tours and book signings or whatever, if I'm trying to burn the candle too much, I lose that spark to be able to have these creative ideas
Starting point is 00:28:25 and four or five days into a stretch of not having anything creative come in I feel the pressure I haven't posted in a few days and to me that's important that I stay on top of those things and you know be creative and come up with new ideas and I even have a set of standards that's pretty peculiar where I do look through my comments sometimes although I know comments are the most poisonous place to go the weight of one negative comment outweighs 100 positive but when someone says that's your best video yet I've accomplished something that's what I want so when I do go these long periods of time without being productive in that sense it starts to drain on me and I'm starting to think what am I doing that's making me happy, that's taking away happiness from other areas of my life? Professionally, would you consider yourself a workaholic?
Starting point is 00:29:10 No, but that could be denial because I like working and it's a difficult one now where I do have to distinguish things where I can't watch a film on my own because I don't see it as productive. But if I watch a film with my own because I don't see it as productive but if I watch a film with my girlfriend that's fine because I'm it's almost like I've blocked out on the calendar professional time but then at the same time I do like having downtime to train jiu-jitsu skateboard to the beach have a dip I'm not like on my phone all the time I do like leaving my phone in my car when I do stuff but I couldn't think of anything worse than retirement. This is why I kind of feel everyone is not brainwashed because I can't expect everyone to have the same values as me.
Starting point is 00:29:49 But when everyone's like, oh, you know, buy a house, pay off the mortgage in 50 years, you can retire with that. And I'm sure that's great for some people. My dad loves being retired. But me, that's my idea of hell. To wake up with nothing to do or no problems to solve. I think people underestimate that human beings for thousands of years have been problem solvers with much worse problems than what we have today. And the idea of just stopping that at a point in time just drives me crazy. But then I'm not sure if I'm just potentially wired differently to other people. And you talked about your girlfriend that you've been in a relationship for how long now? Over a year.
Starting point is 00:30:30 So, John, I've always been very skeptical of talking about relationships on podcasts because by the time they go out, I'm no longer in a relationship. So, it's one of those things. But yeah, I'm incredibly happy. And I think that there has to come a point where I actually did a magic mushroom trip probably two years ago. And about eight of us, we sat by the beach um we just thought shit out and what was crazy was if we went and got trollied on alcohol and you know were absolute caused chaos that's legal but for eight of us to take some magic mushrooms and sit and think about life and share what we're experiencing
Starting point is 00:31:02 people that was illegal and i had time to reflect on i do see different areas of my life like races and i like to be in competition with people that don't even know i'm in competition with them for years i'd have a list of social media competitors that i'd never spoken to and i'd work tirelessly to beat them uh yeah and you know what and then there was an element of envy and bitterness and that fueled me in some respects but i sat there on the beach and i thought to myself what if you win the race of having the most money and the most notoriety and the most you know fame but your friends that did the nine to five and worked to retirement got the wife and the kids and the happy life and also my mom and dad my family is is very, you know, traditional.
Starting point is 00:31:48 I thought, what really are they going to prefer me coming home in a Ferrari or me coming home with a family? And that was a really big insight in my mind to what's important to you that I impressed my family. Yes. Because I want them to think that their investment of, you know, even now 33 years is going to pay off. And I want them to one day sit back and go, we did a good job. So it's very important that I please my parents. And I thought, I've really got to make sure that I don't finish the race of life and have the money and the fame and realize that I was in the wrong race. And that was such a big epiphany for me. And I realized at that point that I was going to have to work harder in relationships. How many relationships did you have? Give me a history of your sort of dating track record. Someone just sighed in the background over there. No, I never really
Starting point is 00:32:29 respected them or took them seriously because I thought that my young twenties and even my mid twenties were more important to accomplish other things. And it was only as I got to my late twenties that I realized, hold on, maybe these values might be good for professional life, but they won't be good further down the line in 10 years time. In Bondi, there's a lot of wealthy older men that have got the sports cars and the young girlfriends. I don't envy them at all. I don't ever think, oh, I'd love to be 40 with a 25 year old girlfriend. I don't ever think like that. But I think it's just been one of those things where Carol Dweck in her book, Mindset, talks about having a fixed mindset and an open mindset. And I appreciate that for so many things, you could
Starting point is 00:33:13 come in today with so many problems in the business. And my mindset is let's do this, let's do this, we'll do this, we'll turn this up, we'll do better on this, we'll be fine. But with relationships, I was very fixed where if something went wrong, I was like, oh, this, this is your fault and we should stop this right away. And you can appreciate in some people's lives when things get tough, they either take the option of developing and becoming better or they blame other people and discontinue. And I was fixed. And I only kind of realized that when I was older and the negatives in your twentiess a fucking a relationship aren't that severe if anything I was like oh I get to work more you know I have more time to myself how long was your
Starting point is 00:33:50 longest relationship probably about a year okay so the the current relationship is up there with your longest ever don't tell either but extra pressure on it but yeah it is and I think that especially there's some crazy things going on in society where there are more women over 30 without children than under 30. And I think that that's a statistic that Chris Williamson brought up on Jordan Peterson when they had a chat. And I was like, we're all not appreciating family life like the generation before us. And I don't think it's important that we take their values as our own. But I think it's very easy, like a kind of rip in the sea to get taken out without realizing that there's so much in our lives
Starting point is 00:34:32 that we can prioritize that aren't the most important things. And my friends have got married and had kids and families very early. There are some that feed the confirmation bias or don't get married, mate, or, you know, but the majority of them are very happy. And just before we started talking,
Starting point is 00:34:47 I was going to mention like the, I think it's called the inner citadel, where if you can imagine that someone, for whatever reason- Is this in response to the question I asked about monogamy? Yeah. Okay, so before we start recording,
Starting point is 00:34:58 I asked James if he believed in monogamy. So imagine you've got someone who injures his leg and they have to chop his leg off. I might butcher this when I'm saying it he then might end up being angry at people that have two legs and make up his own reason actually do you know what two legs is waste of you know you don't need that you only need one leg and because something didn't work for him or his his surroundings didn't suit what happened to him he decided to tear everyone else's down so when we talk about monogamy where there are people that are in open relationships i often look at them and you know i was going to say without
Starting point is 00:35:29 causing offense fuck them who hurt you you know like at what point did it is a societal structure being monogamous but it's because there's a huge benefit to doing that you're talking about sacrifice you're talking about you know primitive urges or whatever it is, but the base of that, you get to support a family better. So I believe monogamy is good for loads of reasons. I do believe in it. And also my mom and dad are still together. They're each other's first girlfriend and boyfriend. But I do find that people that come along and try and tear down your beliefs of monogamy, they're the people that it didn't work for them. So they want to burn the system. Same in the dieting world, where you've got plus size models promoting body positivity. I think there's some absolute credit to that. I'm a personal trainer sat across from you that six pack, but I think to them,
Starting point is 00:36:13 they got fucked over so much in the pursuit of trying to get in shape that they decided to tear the system down for everyone else, you know, because it didn't work for them. They have to go around and influence the way you see it. So I think that's one of the kind of ways that I see things like monogamy. I think for the majority of people, it's perfect. But you're still going to get, well, I'm assuming here, but going to get temptations. And, you know, when we think about the monogamy discussion,
Starting point is 00:36:38 I had this conversation with my friends the other day. There is, I'm going to stitch them all up, I don't care. There's six of them. And it's split down the middle, whether they believe in monogamy or polygamy um or whether they believe i wouldn't say polygamy is necessarily that some of their beliefs it's more like is one partner for life the right thing is marriage the right thing or do you have like a child with somebody maybe and then the future you're probably gonna end up up with somebody else. The stats around this are showing, I believe, that people are struggling to stay in marriages as society develops.
Starting point is 00:37:15 How do we not, like, are you not scared that you'll lose the thing? How do you not lose the spark? So remember we said about the expectation effect. If you go into a relationship expecting that you're going to cheat or you're going to break up, I don't think that sets a good foundation for it. Again, I would like to go into a relationship and potentially a marriage or whatever,
Starting point is 00:37:37 fully believing in it, but being happy to be wrong. And if I get divorced later on in life, as long as I tried my hardest and I committed, I can take that. I could take that as a loss or whatever it is. But somehow in this debate, we've lost the ability to try your hardest at something. And you know what? If 10, 15 years down the line, you do lose it, be amicable about it. Don't destroy someone's life and make them feel like a piece of shit because you cheated on them or whatever. Instead, just call a spade a spade and be like, look, we might not be the same people we were when we met. I think people should try the
Starting point is 00:38:08 best and try and build a stable home to bring up a child because that's what I've been exposed to. And if it doesn't work, it doesn't work. I also don't think that people should force the marriage at the point that it's broken. Because I think that two people under a house that resent each other, trying to bring up a family, they'd probably be better off just having parents in two different households and get more gifts for Christmas or whatever it is. But- Do you think cheating is a lack of discipline?
Starting point is 00:38:30 In some respect, do you know what? The majority of it, yes, because we do get urges. And I think, you know, we're monkeys in suits, right? We are chimps at the end of the day. We are organized apes. We have come from a lineage of fucking each other up for so long like you go back a hundred years a thousand years the wars that we've had all humans
Starting point is 00:38:50 have ever done is get territorial on bits of land and kill each other right savages you know you watch braveheart you're like wow imagine being a imagine being a soldier back then or you watch 300 and you're like wow these guys were spearing each other and going for lunch. So, you know, we are forcing our DNA and who we are into this kind of preset mold of, you know, do you take you to be a lawful? Of course, there's going to be a lot of people that don't do that. I think at the moment as well, there's so many options.
Starting point is 00:39:18 There's so much availability, so many secret places to slide DM, LinkedIn, private message, or your Soho House app that could be used like tinder whatever it is no idea you could do that on so house app neither did i yeah bullshit so like uh there's there's so many different places that and avenues people can go you know back in the day if you wanted to take someone for a date when you've got a wife you could be seen out you could be seen you know talking to person. I think the repercussions of being a shithouse are probably a lot less severe now.
Starting point is 00:39:47 And I think that the way society is going, it is worrying. It is definitely worrying that there are so many options. And what was that website? Was it Ashley Madison? It was a dating site for married people. All right. So if you wanted to be like,
Starting point is 00:40:01 look, we need to be hidden away at a bar and have millions of users. So straight away, I think it was brought down by that hacking group, Anonymous or whatever. I could have got that wrong. But so there are so many people. It could also be other things like a lack of confidence in your partner. It could be a lack of confidence in your relationship. It could be all these things.
Starting point is 00:40:18 But in my mind, I think better that you go for something that feels right. If you're someone that sits here and goes, I do not want to get married. I'm not saying you know, it's going to fit everyone but I think if you're someone that Importantly there are sacrifices and when I look to get married. It's not just about the relationship I have with that person. It's about creating a stable platform to bring up children. But again We're almost bred in society like we can never be wrong Ignorance is not a bad thing. We are all ignorant to so much The majority of people couldn't tell you anything really substantial about history you know we don't know that much
Starting point is 00:40:50 about so many things i don't know what the motorways are called in the north all of these things so we're allowed to be ignorant with these things and we're allowed to be wrong but it doesn't mean we shouldn't endeavor to get the best possible outcome i am i remember my girlfriend said to me one day in it you know when your girlfriend says something you kind of rubbish it at the time you deny it and then later you're thinking about it it's one of those things she said to me one day you know when your girlfriend says something you kind of rubbish it at the time you deny it and then later you're thinking about it it's one of those things she said to me she was like do you actually want to be in a relationship
Starting point is 00:41:11 or are you doing it because you know it's the right thing to do it's a very important question and it's funny because a lot of what you're saying was related to you know you should it's the right thing to do etc but deep in your core you know you talked a little bit about the fact that we're all monkeys and what's the right thing to do etc but deep in your core you know you talked a little bit about the fact that we're all monkeys and what would the monkey want to do would do you
Starting point is 00:41:29 actually want to be if you could have an alternative option would you choose the alternative option where you have the upsides of the relationship and also the upsides of being single is that what you believe most most people would choose i could be getting this wrong as well but there's something called the hot cold empathy gap i think that's what it's called where when we're angry it's very hard to imagine being calm when we're hot it's very hard to imagine being cold when you're in one state of consciousness the opposing state feels very hard to reconcile so when you're single and you're fucking strangers and you're feeling very numb afterwards and thinking why the fuck did i do that post nut clarity uh as a lot of people call it you're thinking what i do for a relationship
Starting point is 00:42:09 what i would do to fuck someone and want them to stay you know but then when you're in a relationship you get the opposite when you're in a relationship you're thinking oh it could be nice to sleep with a stranger or whatever it is i think that we're always they say grass is greener it is very you know cliche but we're always looking at that opposing sense of feelings how we're always they say grass is greener is very you know cliche but we're always looking at that opposing sense of feelings how we're feeling now and almost curious about it but I think there are dangers of you know say you do want to open your relationship you're opening the door to catastrophic things should they happen and I think that there is definitely like a a hard hard wiring side of things where, you know,
Starting point is 00:42:45 if you want that sense of freedom on your side, cool, but they're going to probably need that sense of freedom on theirs. And it might seem like a good idea now whilst you're in the position of only slept with one person for five years. But then when you experience the polar opposite realization and reality, what if you realize you made a grave error you can't undo seeing or knowing or experiencing that so again i'm not i'm not that this guy's been in a relationship but yeah he's giving us all advice no i get it i i think i've arrived at the same conclusion i read the game that pick a part is book and then i read his sequel to it where he realizes that like much of what the way he'd chosen to live and live was wrong you know he becomes the best pick best pickup artist in the world he then tries polygamy and realizes polygamy is actually not
Starting point is 00:43:29 the right approach and doesn't lead to happiness and then decides on monogamy and generally when I think about all the things that are worth it in my life they come at a sacrifice there's something else I have to choose instead if I want a six-, can't choose waffles every day. If I want waffles, I don't get the six pack. And so the six pack itself is in fact just a story. It's a story of sacrifice, of discipline. It's a story about who you are. And that's why it's perceived to be valuable. I think for me, a relationship is valuable
Starting point is 00:43:58 because it's a story of commitment and all the other things you said no to, to say yes to this. That's part of what actually gives it its intrinsic value. So- And the six pack is valuable because it's hard to obtain. That's why we give it value. And the relationship is the same.
Starting point is 00:44:12 Yeah. They're hard to obtain. They're difficult. It requires work. Like a six pack. Exactly. And you've got the temptations, whether it's a chocolate cake or a single person,
Starting point is 00:44:20 or maybe not even single, but you need to really have like a clear set idea on what you want. And again, to lean on your values. And it's interesting to say about the book, the game, you realize in the first, the call to action wasn't so much a system, but a belief in a system. And there is every chance that the systems I've put in that book might not actually hold any weight, but if someone believes they will will they could end up working a bit like the game you tell someone this is how it works they have full faith in it and it's an interesting one that some people just need to know that it can happen and for instance i talk about the link we spoke about confidence and anxiety confidence and inspiration also sit on a parallel
Starting point is 00:45:02 with each other because to get inspired by someone, what we really do is getting confidence from seeing it happen. So you think about someone like Joe Rogan, started off with being audacious. He then inspired us by allowing us to feel more confident about the chance that that could happen. And there are two trails that people go with this. And this was really interesting when I wrote about it people see your success This success of the podcast they go two ways one They're bitter and they fucking want to hate you for it or two They're inspired and you without knowing it are projecting confidence into the lives of hundreds of thousands because you're showing them it can be done
Starting point is 00:45:38 I think it was nelson mandela that said No one believes it's possible until it's done and a good friend of mine lucy lord she bought me a little card that had it on it and gave it to me and i stuck it on my window when i first got to sydney and it's so important that people do try their hardest endeavors like relationships because without knowing it they're going to be friends even your group of six people in that group that you're inspiring them without even knowing it and inspiration doesn't mean you have to be the best relationship in the world but you're showing people it works. So I think that the buck doesn't just stop at sacrifice.
Starting point is 00:46:10 It also, my parents would have inspired me. My dad said the key to a happy marriage is accepting you're wrong even when you're right. You talk a lot about dating in the book at different times. Chapter six, you talk about dating apps again and your relationship with dating apps and how uh you've been you've had kind of like an on-off relationship with dating apps when i was thinking about writing my next book one of the topics i was going to write about was modern
Starting point is 00:46:33 dating because it appears to me that there's a generation that have kind of been caught in the trend the technological transition almost so see what i mean? It's really, it's a very big topic. And when I was writing the book, I was thinking, fuck, this isn't a dating book, mate. There's going to be a lot of married people reading this. And I say to them two things. I go, one, there might be something in there that doesn't change your life,
Starting point is 00:46:56 but it could fucking change someone else's, right? And even if you don't have many friends, you could instill that in your kids or whatever it is. And dating is such a big topic because it is actually an incredibly big pain point because people either don't have the confidence required to meet someone or they might not have the confidence to leave someone. And when I spoke about the sunk cost fallacy, people remaining invested in something purely based off their
Starting point is 00:47:18 previous endeavor, whether it's time, energy, resources, there are so many people out there that if you ask them why they're with their partner they give you the amount of time they've already invested and i've been with them four years yeah don't want to throw it away so you're already giving people confidence to leave a relationship and if you think you've got professional life home life and health as three things a lot of advice we need to give people is around dating and it's been maybe three years since i've touched alcohol on a date because I realized how much alcohol skews the dating scene as well. And even my girlfriend won't mind me saying this, but it got to the point where I would drink to kill nerves before a date and you might meet someone
Starting point is 00:47:56 and straight away, look at them and go, oh, this isn't going to work. But then three drinks in, you go, oh, kind of all right. And then before you know it, you shagged a stranger on a weeknight, you're hungover at work and you put yourself off dating again because you know that when you first met them you didn't want that and the next day you did and you're you're painting dating in a negative light and even how i met my girlfriend now i would say to people let's meet and do something whether it's going for a swim in the sea going for a walk have you got a dog do you want to get a coffee and i actually like the idea of moving with someone. The two places I find the most organic conversations are driving and walking. Driving, when you're not sat facing
Starting point is 00:48:34 each other and it's not quite so interview-esque, people really open up. And they're also in a place that's very relaxing for them. And when you go for a walk and there's movement involved, I feel it feels less interview-esque. You say to me, like like let's remove dating out the context i want you to sit with a stranger and drink alcohol with them with a small chance they'll be compatible but no imagine you know that's ludicrous i don't want to do that but when you break it down again like the fear and insecurities whatever okay if a date is too much what about getting an ice cream at the beach okay that's something i can do and as long as you're not trying to lose weight doing a swim on a Monday an ice cream on a Tuesday a coffee on a Wednesday people will think you're a bit promiscuous but you know I mean then you can
Starting point is 00:49:14 get more dates in and again we're going back into my marketing analogy surely seeing five people in a week for 20-30 minutes each is going to be better for your general building of prospects than it would be getting smashed on a Thursday night and shagging a stranger you're never going to talk to again. So even the way people perceive dating can be hugely changed. And you talk about dating apps, there's one in London, it's called Thursday. Where was that when I needed it? Because there is so much small talk on social media where, oh yeah, what are you doing this weekend? I like that idea, but it's giving us one of many walls we can hide behind because dating is difficult and it removes, sorry, I've got a boyfriend, fake numbers, which I must've given my number wrong.
Starting point is 00:49:59 People are hiding behind that and confidence isn't like an award. It's not like a trophy that I give you to go on your wall. Well done, see about it. You're an award it's not like a trophy that i give you to go on your wall well done see about it you're confident it's more like fitness where if you stop training it you will lose it and you will lose it a lot quicker than you probably would expect so people don't realize that with so many things they're paying into this bit like fitness but like going to the gym or going for a run and when you put up this massive stop like i'm going to use dating apps although some people do find love and meet their forever person on there without realizing it, they are reducing them, their ability to train that area of them. A bit like when you maybe don't do work for a week,
Starting point is 00:50:35 you go back and sit in front of your laptop. How does this work again? So there is a negative, definitely that goes along with the positive, like Newton's laws, where you've got all this convenience on one side, you're definitely breeding weakness on the other. What is it that you, when you know that someone isn't going to fulfill what they say they want to do, what are the cues of that? Like, I was just thinking, because I'm thinking about a particular friend who continually says they want to go to the gym and they continually say they want to change their life but there's just no um there's but there's been no change in like 10 years and as a friend I'm getting like exhausted by you know sometimes I'm like I talk about it a lot in the podcast with when I have psychologists and stuff when I'm like am I overstepping my mark for even wanting to
Starting point is 00:51:19 help them it's a difficult one I'm the same where i've actually found myself turning into an arsehole yeah i don't want to be an arsehole with my friends because i i feel like maybe there's that point i'll get to where i finally will click and then i realize i'm actually ruining the relationship a little bit amen i'm like are my friends now resenting me because i'm trying to help them and yeah it i had a bit of a not falling out actually we're having a chat with a friend and he said to me, oh, it's all right for you. And we were living together at the time. And I said, well, I didn't live with someone who had a fucking million followers when I was starting my business.
Starting point is 00:51:53 And you know, I can, I said that to him and I said, when I was starting out as a PT, I didn't have any friends that I could lean on to do stuff. And I was trying, I said, I'll do anything you want for you to start this business. I'm here here for you you can have my Instagram for a week and promote your business whatever it is like but then you say yeah the the talk and the actions don't always add up and then you get to a point where you're like do I want what's best for them or do I preserve the relationship in that situation what do you think the blocker is belief belief yeah I think they want it but they don't really think they can do it confidence. Is that the similar? Yeah, and they they portray confidence in some areas of their life tremendously But I I think the main thing is belief. I think they want to believe they can do it, but they don't truly believe it and
Starting point is 00:52:34 unfortunately Action must come first and you must actually prove to yourself that it can be done And that requires a lot of work without any gratification. People don't realize that you say about everyone knowing how to lose weight on the outside, it's almost like a macro cycle, but really the micro cycle is the tiny habits in between. So someone can go, I need to eat less and move more. But like you said, that's nuanced. Really, we dive that down. We go, okay, let's go no food till 1pm. Let's go, you know, two big meals, maybe one snack, whatever. And then we go, okay, 10,000 steps a day. Although that does attribute to the macro of the big thing that's
Starting point is 00:53:11 happening, we still must give them the small steps, whether it's with a business where you say like, you know, their big macro strategy is to post more on social media, but the micro is one post every day, answering someone's questions, doing this, doing that. I think that if people's first stepping stone to where they think they need to go is too big, they'll never take the step. And what I do as a coach in many facets of my life is to make that first stepping stone so small, they have no other option to take it. Super interesting. Cause what you said there, you know, the start, the start of that was, about how you in essence people people want evidence in order to start but the truth is when you start you get the evidence and i see that a lot in people
Starting point is 00:53:52 you know people coming up to me saying i've got this business idea they'll come up to me in the gym all the time and say i've got this business idea and then you'll hear the next thing they'll say is all the excuses that they've put in front of them starting and i really mean mean that. Like, it literally is like, I've got this great idea. I think it's going to change the world. But, and then they explain all the things they're imperfect about timing or funding, or I just need to wait for this or this or whatever. And really underpinning all of that is a lack of belief. And like, you're right.
Starting point is 00:54:22 Like when I started, I'm sure when you started, I didn't have evidence. I didn't have sufficient evidence that I knew what I was doing, but I gained the evidence which resulted in belief from stumbling forward in a very messy way. For some reason, a lot of people need the evidence first. And we have this as well with imposter syndrome.
Starting point is 00:54:41 And some people rebuke imposter syndrome, but we need to realize that every single person is going to feel like an imposter syndrome and some people rebuke imposter syndrome, but we need to realize that every single person is going to feel like an imposter. You get someone macho going, no, not me, but we will. And I like to point out to people that you will at some point be an imposter objectively, even being a parent for the first time, you have no previous experience bringing a child into the world. So the beginning, you need to pretty much lie to yourself and go, I'm a good parent. And then after three months and your young baby or child hasn't got any bruises on his head, you're like, well, I've got evidence. I'm a good child. You know,
Starting point is 00:55:11 he didn't fall over and hit his head on a table or whatever. And the same in any endeavor, your first podcast you did on Diary of a CEO, you would have had to say, I'm a good podcaster with no evidence that you are. But then a hundred episodes in, you go, fuck, I'm actually all right. You are very good, by the way, as a podcaster. I think I just acted like one. But then again, you're being the person you need to be. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:55:31 And that's a massive part of confidence as well. The first thing that people need to have a real clear vision on is who they need to be. And that was the first thing that projected me from not being an inherently confident person. Should have seen the sweat patches I had from the last episode, you know? And I'm not trying to masquerade that fact.
Starting point is 00:55:47 I'm not trying to hide it up or be, you know, dishonest with people. Instead, I have so many internal conversations with myself about who I need to be today because we do need to become a persona in certain situations, like being a father for the first time, like doing your first business sales pitch,
Starting point is 00:56:03 like starting your first podcast or your first day day as ceo when you get promoted for in a business you might go from director to managing director there is an element of you having to be an imposter but you have to take it upon yourself with beliefs that you can do it because you can't get the evidence that you're good at it before you start. If I spoke to your girlfriend and I asked her, I said, what does James need to work on? What would she say? Oh, yeah, nice. Patience. Interesting.
Starting point is 00:56:34 I have a very active mind. And I'm actually in the process of trying to arrange getting an ADHD test as an adult. Because people I know that have been diagnosed in their older life say it's really benefited them understanding how their mind works. And sometimes I get so excited of doing things that will please me. I have blinkers on to other people, whether other people want to relax right now or other people, you know, don't want to be in the room while I'm filming content or whatever it is. And I feel that sometimes I need to be more patient and go, okay, here's the idea, write it down and do it tomorrow. That's one of the things that
Starting point is 00:57:09 it's only after I've done it where I think I have no consideration for anyone else then, because I created a pain point in my head that I wanted to action that. And I always break down our personalities. And this could be a really weird way to think of it, like a tribe, you know, whether you've got lefties and, you know, people on the right, whether you're aggressive people or calm people, we're all part of an ecosystem that we need the audacious people that, you know, are going to be impatient and do things. We need the critical thinkers and people that are more logistic with that. But if you look at the 16 personalities, none of those personalities are confident. Confident isn't a personality trait. You've got debater, entrepreneur, all of these things. So people need to appreciate that even
Starting point is 00:57:50 though as an ecosystem, we all need to be vastly different. Confidence doesn't sit as a personality trait. It's almost like a set of values that each and every person can have. Because some things that we have are predetermined. Like height, and yes, height can be influenced by the amount of nutrition you get growing up or whatever. But ultimately, it doesn't matter if you're introvert, extrovert, whether you're patient, impatient. Everyone really confidences your almost set of beliefs
Starting point is 00:58:17 you have surrounding something based on previous experiences. I could get you the most least confident person ever. I'm a shy, timid sat here. I go, what are a drive-in? 93% of people say they're above average at driving which doesn't make sense. This is a statistic human beings are I'm massively capable of being over confidence machines most uh Exoneration cases are from faulty eyewitnesses
Starting point is 00:58:40 So whenever anyone's exonerated, I think 70 the reasons why from 14 hour witnesses if i said was that guy wearing a red top you go yeah it definitely was so we do have the ability to be overconfident we're just not utilizing it in all the areas of our lives that we should that kind of brings me back to that point about um about evidence when you said the thing about driving because if i've never crashed a car i would i think i've got evidence of being good at driving. But then in other facets of my life, I might not have that evidence. I'm really trying to understand that point about evidence. Is confidence just a result of the evidence we do or subjective evidence, whether correct or incorrect, that we've gained in different areas? Like I could be,
Starting point is 00:59:21 you know, if I'd crashed my car every day, I could be really confident on stage and on podcasts and in dates and whatever, if I've had loads of positive reinforcement in terms of evidence there, but really unconfident in cars. So in part of the book, I come up with my own kind of theory with this. And I say that we must take into account
Starting point is 00:59:38 that the history of someone will have an influence on how they perceive the world, but that doesn't mean it's fixed. So you might have, you know, asked some people on a date and never got a successful wave face to face, but that doesn't mean you're doomed forever. You know, you might go, oh, you know, my ability to talk to someone to get the number, it's just not that good. How many people have you asked the number? Oh, three. It's not something fixed that we can never develop. On the other side of things
Starting point is 01:00:03 where people will be overconfident in certain scenarios. It's also something fixed that we can never develop. On the other side of things, where people will be overconfident in certain scenarios, it's also the availability bias turns into this as well, where we make decisions based on the information that's available to us. So I had a fun deep dive with this, where people have a fear of flying. Much more people have a fear of flying than they do a fear of driving.
Starting point is 01:00:22 But driving that same distance, as far as fatality, is much more dangerous dangerous your chances of dying driving are tremendously higher shark attacks again in australia everyone goes oh do you go in the sea it's really dangerous i go mate you're like so many times more likely to drown than you are to get bitten by a shark but no one's getting in the water being afraid of drowning and that is the biggest cause of death i believe on bondi beach where i live so much of what we perceive the outside world to be is really created and curated by what's available to us. And our friendship circles are massively, you know, influenceable in that as well. Even you having three out of six of your friends that don't believe in monogamy, that's
Starting point is 01:00:57 going to influence your availability bias of what you think is capable in a relationship. There's so much more to the topic of confidence than just your history. It's also your current and who you're with. I guess even that friendship circle, that is a form of evidence as well. Like if my friends are telling me that I am a useless scumbag, whether they're saying it directly
Starting point is 01:01:17 or just with a facial expression, that is adding somewhat to my self-story, which is this formation of evidence I have about myself. And that could lead me to be pessimistic in my endeavors or optimistic. Are you saying to like, are you advising people to chop these people out of their circles? The term I use is picking your passengers,
Starting point is 01:01:37 where if I said, you're going to drive eight hours tomorrow, that's one thing. But if I say I'm putting someone in the car with you, that's something completely different altogether. And for eight hours, you would be so meticulous on who you go with. I'm sure that if it was someone you didn't really get on with, you'd be like, can we not just get him a driver and drive him up? You know, your space in your car is so, you know, private to you and important to you. And again, even when you are traveling around or whatever it is, having people with you that are going to drain you of energy becomes almost like a cost. And by going on your own or with someone better picked, you're going
Starting point is 01:02:09 to be able to improve your productivity, your sense of the way you see things. So we do need to appreciate that people we surround ourselves with are either going to be a headwind or a wind in our sails. They can be the neutral lot, but we must take note of that. And I'm not saying that if anyone causes you any issues, get rid of them, but you need to weigh it up in the long term because if you're with someone who's got a pessimistic outlook on life in the world and they're not going to change irrespective of how much you help them they will hinder your net position so the values of how much your net position is important to you and your family and people around you you might have to make the decision to let that person go in the the book, you reference Jordan Peterson.
Starting point is 01:02:45 You talk about this utility of deprivation concept, a word, a phrase I've never heard before. Please explain it to me and why you felt it was contextually relevant to this topic. I went down a rabbit hole on Jordan Peterson. You know, I don't agree with everything he says. That's the term of 2022, isn't it? Disclaimer, I do not agree.
Starting point is 01:03:08 But I do agree with the majority of things he says. And masturbation is something that we kind of just, you know, porn and OnlyFans, we're kind of like, oh, you know, let people live. But, you know, there are some OnlyFans models being murdered by their fans. Whereas some of us might think, oh, it's good for society.
Starting point is 01:03:23 We've got porn where men can access more naked women in an hour than a man could ever access in a life 20 30 40 years ago that again newton's laws are opposites uh every action opposite reaction that's going to be doing things to people and if i'm in a bar and i'm like you know i really want to talk to that person again i'm using a data knowledge it could anything. If I go home and masturbate to some really hot people in porn, I'm gonna be like, oh, now I'm just gonna have another beer with my mates, you know? So having that utility of deprivation, and if you abstain from, and I'm not saying I'm not anti-porn or nofap or whatever they call it. I'm just saying to people to consider the implications. If you stop, if you're someone who's lonely and you're single single could abstaining from masturbation improve
Starting point is 01:04:05 your net position fucking probably because you're going to be in a position where you can't just get the gas out the release valve every now and then that suits your purpose because even some people are getting desensitized to sexual intimacy because of the amount of time they're spending watching porn that's not good for anyone imagine you get to 40 and the idea of actually fucking someone doesn't seem as good as the idea of watching porn. And this is something, especially with young people, the reality of having sex when you're 16 and what you've watched on porn is vastly different. So we cannot say that this is just a net benefit or a net positive thing for people. So the utility of deprivation is to appreciate that sacrificing some things in
Starting point is 01:04:43 your life has a positive effect. To stop drinking, for instance, will have a net positive on other areas of your life. To stop eating junk food, or at least reduce the amount, or reduce your adiposity with the amount of body fat you have, there is a utility to depriving yourself. Although porn is great, fast food is great, and all of these things, although that's great, there is a utility and a benefit to depriving yourself of them. Have you deprived yourself of masturbation? Masturbation in general, I'm in a healthy relationship.
Starting point is 01:05:10 So I haven't really got the time to do it as I did before. The urges are there sometimes, don't get me wrong, because it's also a form of escapism. You know, people might fantasize about sleeping with other people. And I think that if any-
Starting point is 01:05:22 You haven't got the time to do it, that's bullshit. No, but like, that is bullshit. You're right're white that's my I'm kind of trying to fill the gap there with like some kind of defense you could probably do it now and I wouldn't know now you said not to make the table make a noise so it's one of those things where you know I'm not saying make it illegal get rid of porn I'm not saying that I'm saying that we need to take note of the the conveniences in our life. I completely get that. I'm just asking from a personal perspective.
Starting point is 01:05:46 It's the thing that I've been thinking a lot about because I'm in a relationship as well. And I do believe that my intimate relationship with my partner will not be as good if I masturbate all the time. My desire won't be there. So if I masturbated at 9 p.m. and then I got in bed with my partner at 10 p.m.,
Starting point is 01:06:02 I'm going to want to sleep. And especially if you've somehow misinterpreted where you're at in the day and then an arm comes around and goes hey babe and you're like fuck yeah so there'll be a lot of female listeners that can't appreciate to the full extent what it's like to be a man once you've ejaculated and they call it post-natal clarity and all these things I'm sure I'm going to be absolutely slammed for saying this but it is a change in in psychology. Like instantly, there's no other way that you can experience it.
Starting point is 01:06:29 Again, the hot, cold empathy gap. When you're horny, you can't imagine not having a sex drive. And when you've not got a sex drive, you can't imagine being horny. But, you know, it's one of those things where we just need to take it into consideration. And for someone, if I was to sit opposite someone today and go, could your life be better if you stopped drinking as much? They say, yeah, you should probably fucking not drink as much.
Starting point is 01:06:47 Could your life be better and your day-to-night be better if you stopped wanking to porn? Yeah, well, maybe stop wanking to porn or at least do it less. I think my entire life would be better if I stopped wanking to porn. I do, because I think I'd have a better relationship. I genuinely do. I think you would look forward to the intimacy way more if you knew the only way that you were going to get it was with your part I mean there's me saying masturbation is intimacy
Starting point is 01:07:11 but you would look forward to it a lot more um if you weren't getting the releasing the valve in your hotel room while you're in London promoting your book I agree what did you have cameras but you're right It is one of those things where it's a complex topic and I'm not coming at it from a position of expertise. When you said that, I thought I've never heard it put so succinctly that there is a benefit to abstaining from things that you like. And liver King, exact same philosophy. He goes, we don't eat the liver because we like the taste. We eat it because it's good for us. And he's like, no one likes training, but we do it. Do I sound like him?
Starting point is 01:07:46 It's like he's in the room again. But yeah, so it's one of those things where we must appreciate some things, you know, pure net benefit aren't going to benefit us in the long term. Now, if you're in a relationship and you're masturbating, I would say that maybe isn't as severe as being single and masturbating.
Starting point is 01:08:02 Because being in a relationship and say you masturbate here and thereating because being in a relationship and say you masturbate here and there or you have a long shower and enjoy yourself that's one thing but if you're single and doing it you're preventing yourself from going down the path of doing something you need to do which is to you know be more proactive in meeting a suitable life partner and again someone could say i'm brainwashed or this guy's monogamy brainwashed or whatever at least if you're in a relationship you're not hindering your potential quite to the extent of inaction on this side what is your goal like what is your do you have a goal
Starting point is 01:08:30 in terms of your life when you think about what you're trying to achieve right now from being here from what you've done over the last month what is it what is it you're trying to do i was i got to shoreditch uh this morning about quarter to seven couldn Couldn't get a coffee. So I'm walking down the road to try and find something. And I ended up going down the road and a lady just said, thank you. And I said, what for? And she goes, you've changed my life. And I was like, thank you.
Starting point is 01:08:55 And I was talking to her and she started crying. And I get very awkward. I get awkward when someone gets me like a birthday present. When people are like, oh, get the cake out. I'm like, for fuck's sake. Even at Christmas, it feels weird to be given gifts I just feel very awkward and I feel like me just going thanks for that isn't enough so then I find myself putting it on like guys you didn't have to that's fake I just it weirds me out so when people compliment me in real life I get very awkward and my friends laugh about it. They're like, you know, relax, mate. She's just saying thank you. And then she started crying and I was like, what have I done? And to me,
Starting point is 01:09:30 this is still a very, very strange thing that a stranger would cry seeing me when I've never met them, spoken to them on the phone or messaged them. So from that interaction, it's apparent that there is a net positive effect for what I'm doing. And I do take pleasure in that, even though I do find it incredibly awkward. So for me, that small interaction there kind of pays into this pot that this little crusade I'm on of trying to eradicate bullshit. And I'm definitely roughing up some people on one side, but on the other side, I'm making people's lives better. I think, fuck, that makes me feel good. That's a selfish endeavor. I'm helping people because it makes me feel good. i'd like to continue that and at the same time i live i live a great life you know
Starting point is 01:10:09 it sounds really cliche people go i have something that other people will never have and that's enough and that's how i feel all the time so yeah it's a bit crazy what was the worst day of your life 13th of march 2017 i went to i was in sydney i've been there and personal training in the uk did well earned good money uh lived with my parents moved out moved back in for a bit my mom and dad were heroes for me when i was doing the long hours and you have to do i remember someone saying as a personal trainer get your first thousand hours under your belt. Cause once you've done that, everything else is easy. I just focused on that and it went really well. My mom and dad helped me. My mom would leave leftover food for breakfast. So I'd literally be eating like Yorkshire pudding and roast potatoes at nine o'clock in the morning, cold out of Tupperware. And then I'd come home from rugby at like nine
Starting point is 01:11:00 30 in the evening. My mom would be like, give me a wash in. You know, you go to bed. So then when I went to Australia, that's what I wanted to do again, just face-to-face personal training. But I went into a gym with 32 other personal trainers. Dieran, who's listening somewhere here, was the only person that introduced himself to me at 32 PTs. Whether it was because he saw I was struggling
Starting point is 01:11:19 or the fact that I was English, he was just a nice guy. And he was like, hey, mate, you want to get a coffee? And I'd pissed off so many of the other personal trainers by prospecting so hard on my first day that one of the trainers said, if you talk to my client again, I'll take your head off. And I was like, wow, this is a competitive gym. And for the first six weeks in that gym that I met Duran in, I was failing. I was not creating a client base. I was doing 25, 30 hours of PT a week in the UK. I moved to paradise and I was struggling to do six hours. And this is a crazy thing now. I'm in Sydney and people go, Oh, James, I love your stuff. I go, well, in 2016,
Starting point is 01:11:55 no one loved it. I couldn't even get people in for a free session. I would say to people like, Hey mate, can I give you a couple of tips with the exercise you're doing? They'd be like, nah. And so I've gone from this stage of my life where that was demoralizing because at least if someone told me to fuck off when they're doing a pec fly, in my old gym, I could go into the PT room and have banter with the other PTs. We'd pick ourselves up and go, oh, don't talk to him. Mr. Grumpy Guts doesn't want any help, even though he can't contract his chest or whatever. But in this gym, I kind of had nowhere to go so on the 13th of March I sat in an area called Australia Square and my two housemates said how's it going and I was like
Starting point is 01:12:31 not good I was like I was thinking about the fact I might have to move back home to my parents and I've just moved into paradise the week before I had to borrow about 500 pound off my dad to buy a sofa I still have that sofa now and like being at the time, messaging my dad and asking him to PayPal me 500 quid so I could buy a sofa and some of the Ikea stuff. I was like, this doesn't feel good because I had everything I wanted in the UK. I was doing well. I went to follow my dreams and then suddenly I was borrowing money from my dad at fucking an age where I shouldn't have to. And that was the point for me where I was like, I need to do things differently. So there's a street called Pitt Street. I walked down it and there was an Officeworks and went into Officeworks and I bought a whiteboard and some markers.
Starting point is 01:13:15 And it was only 2pm in the afternoon. I was like, I'm done. Went home 3pm. 3pm in Australia is 6am in the UK. So I set up a tripod, got my iPhone. I didn't know how to edit, didn't know how to record. I had to do a speech for three minutes. I had about 3000 followers live on Facebook with the use of whiteboard. The first one got maybe like a hundred likes. And I was like, I've gone fucking viral. And I decided that I was going to do my six hours of PT, try the best I could, which wasn't even enough to survive at that point. But then I was going to do my six hours of PT, try the best I could, which wasn't even enough to survive at that point. But then I was going to go home and do everything I could to build an online following and to build an online business. And that was in March. By May, I left the gym,
Starting point is 01:13:56 still had to pay rent for a year, but I had one remaining client. It actually, I made more money staying at home than I did going to the gym. And I had one client and she said to me, she couldn't afford to go to a festival. So I said, instead of paying me $120, which is like 65 pounds, I said, just bring me a gift. I like training you. We have fun. Just bring me a gift. So she'd come in and she's like, I got you a Lululemon hoodie. I was like, sick, cost less than the PT session. So I'd go in, I'd skateboard in and I would literally just go in to train this client for free, but she'd have a gift for me. And all the other PTs were like, is it your birthday? I was like, I don't charge money to my clients anymore. I have an online business. But if it wasn't for that day where I literally
Starting point is 01:14:31 had the lump in my throat when I was messaging my mates and I was like, I'm not good at work. I'm failing a PT business, which is the only reason I came to Australia. If it wasn't for that, I wouldn't have got the whiteboard. I wouldn't have got the markers and I wouldn't have gone home and gone live on Facebook, which just so happened to be the beginning of a compounding effect to build a following. It was then 50,000 followers. I bought a camera, learned how to edit terribly. My first video that I ever filmed without an iPhone was one that I did on Aloe Vera. I didn't know how to wet the camera. I didn't know how to edit properly. I did one long piece that I put on Facebook. I was like, aloe vera? Isn't that fucking sunburn?
Starting point is 01:15:09 What, are you drinking it for fat loss? Oh, you're an idiot. And although that was kind of like, not even that bad, like no one died. But in the same respect that all wins feel the same, all losses can feel the same. So it's not competition. If you sell a business for $5 million and someone else sells one for 500 million, you don't get a different dopamine and serotonin. You're not on an Uber surcharge. You're not waking up like, oh my God, I feel amazing. But the same with pain. For me to struggle in my business, which was very important to me, someone might go, well, yeah, my dog died. And I said, well, we're both fucking sad. This isn't a competition. But to me, that was really
Starting point is 01:15:42 one of the times I was like, this is shit. But I'm so grateful to the version of myself back then that took action from that. Because one of my favorite quotes in that book was from one of the most famous martial artists full time called Hickson Gracie. And he goes, losing is not the same as being defeated. And that was massive. He said it on my podcast where he goes, you can lose, but if you turn up and you go again, you've not been defeated. So if someone competes in jujitsu and they lose a match, that's cool. But if you lose and you never compete again, as far as I'm concerned, you were defeated that day. So for me, social strategy, whatever it is, if people can appreciate whether it's asking for a number, asking for a pay rise, starting a business, losing is one thing thing, being defeated is something completely different. One of the quotes you said in chapter three in
Starting point is 01:16:28 the book is, the key to confidence is being happy to lose. I thought that was a really simple way of saying a lot. People seem to correlate confidence with success, but that's completely wrong. Confidence is much more of a relationship to failure. And I stumbled across that by accident with the door knocking. I was completely fine. Someone told me to fuck off knocking on their door to sell Empower. I was like, cool. One in a hundred is a sale. That's one of the 99. So, you know, it becomes that point on the PT, even on the floor, trying to help the guy with his pec flies, him telling me to fuck off. I was so fine with that because I knew I'd have to talk to a finite amount of people to get a sale. So when people can be truly happy with losing, not being happy with being defeated, very different,
Starting point is 01:17:09 then you build a sense of confidence. And if we all imagine our friend that's got the most confidence in the world, they're just beaming with it all the time. If something doesn't go right for them and they fail, how much does it affect them? Often not a lot because they're not caught up with failing. They're caught up with what or how many times they would have to fail to accomplish success but if i've got a self-story based on this goes back to one of the points i raised earlier based on the fact that when i was eight years old i did public speaking on stage and it went so badly that when i got off stage all the kids on the playground abused me one of them threw an apple at my head. You know, the girl that I was dating
Starting point is 01:17:45 with my little playground relationship dumped me. When I grow up, my self-story around the consequence of public speaking failure will be trauma-centric. And so for those individuals, presumably confidence is much harder to attain in, if confidence is evidence, you've got a pretty big mountain of evidence to overcome with positive evidence um in order to change your your belief and that's why i'm trying to understand the role of trauma in in confidence and belief so what i
Starting point is 01:18:20 would say to this is if we can try and develop a sense of gratitude towards these inadequacies, because those inadequacies, even from eight years old public speaking, show you the path to progression. Without understanding and really dialing down to where you're inadequate, you can't have a path. And so many people that are kind of lost in life, they're like, I don't know what I should do in my life. Cool. Well, can you identify something that you're insecure about? And can you work on it on it? Again, I'm insecure about how I look naked. Can you work on it? Yeah, then fucking work on it. Because, you know, again, I think it was Simon Sinek who sat opposite you and he goes, passion comes as a byproduct, not reason to start something. It's a reason you remain invested in something. And people need to appreciate that passion may not exist in their life right now.
Starting point is 01:19:04 And it might not exist for another five years because you might do another career for two years and you fucking hate it. And then you do another three and you'd love it. Three years in, you feel passionate about it. So if you're five years away from truly feeling passionate about your work, what can you do today? You can work on your inadequacies, whatever it is. And it doesn't have to be this huge mountain of, you know, oh, I'm going to ask a supermodel on a date. It doesn't have to be that. You don't have to double your salary asking for a pay rise. You just need to do something that you could do to develop your inadequacy.
Starting point is 01:19:31 Would that be your tip? Because there's going to be people listening and I can almost, sometimes when I'm recording this podcast, the way that I decide what question to ask the guest is I just go down the lens. I go through the lens into the person that I know is listening. And I know that there'll be a Suzanne walking her dog this morning who's got a confidence issue as it relates to just herself and her life generally. Maybe she might characterize it as low self-esteem.
Starting point is 01:19:55 She struggles to take action against the things that she calls her ambitions. What is the actionable place for Sue? If there was one actionable thing to take away from this, what would that be? What does Suzanne do today? I'll be taking this one from Tim Ferriss. I'll fully credit him. Fine, we'll cut that out.
Starting point is 01:20:12 You can just own it, steal it. So there's an exercise online, which is very popular in asking 10% discount on a coffee. And everyone's like really attacked this because they think it's about the discount. It's not. It's about looking fucking stupid. So the next time you order a cup of coffee, you're to ask for a 10% discount, not because you expect to get one, but because it's a really fucking
Starting point is 01:20:32 uncomfortable situation. In many cases, you're asking someone who can't give you a discount. It's completely out of your control. There are people around you and it is just a weird thing to ask. So I wrote the chapter, I'm in Sydney and I thought I'm a fucking hypocrite if I don't do this. So there's like a little cafe near where I work. I was like, I'm going to do it. And there's no one there. I was like, sweet. No one's in the queue. And as I get there, it got to the point where I just didn't get served. And then there's two people behind me. I was like, fuck, don't do it. And I was like, well, it's going to feel very difficult writing the next chapters of the book, feeling like fraud so I was like can I get a 10% discount
Starting point is 01:21:05 on my coffee please and she just looked at me like what and I was like I'm such an entitled little prick right now this is how I must seem and she was like what do you mean I was like can I get a 10% discount and at this point I was like this is the most uncomfortable I've been I was like I would rather go out 5,000 people in a crowd no Nothing pre-organized i'd rather do that than do this situation right now And she turned around behind and they had like a stamp card where you get your 10th coffee free And she was like when you buy 10 you can get 10 off And then I walked away i was sweating from that and I realized why it was such a great example because It's not about the discount discount it's about putting yourself in
Starting point is 01:21:45 a situation that makes you feel very uncomfortable and then when you leave you realize why did I create this fast why was I sweating why did I have adrenaline why did I have sweat patches from such a simple interaction of being uncomfortable and I felt very accomplished and I won't lie when I got back to writing I felt invigorated I'm never going to use that stamp card. To me, I'd rather not worry about the card and pay for extra for the coffee. But I was like, wow, I was like, what else can I do? And I only did it as an exercise to help me with the book writing process. And I was like, wow, I get it. I get why people would tell other people to do that because people seem to think people are paying a lot more attention to us than they actually are. Mark Manson, he said, as his favorite quote on your podcast, people wouldn't care what other people thought
Starting point is 01:22:28 of them so much if they realized how seldom they do. I had to Google seldom, I didn't know what it meant. It is little and not often. And I was like, fuck, that's a really good point. And there's been studies on this where people turn up to class late, they think everyone's looking at them. They are students at the end if anyone came in late. The proportions were much lower. And even people that wear t-shirts with embarrassing characters on it, they think that half the people they interacted with would remember and the percentage is much lower.
Starting point is 01:22:57 We seem to think that we're in the Truman Show and every single action we take that the world cares about us, but they don't. They don't even notice we're there half the time. The chances are the people I was petrified of behind me didn't even listen, or they were too busy. They're on their phone checking TikTok. The person behind probably just thought I was a weirdo and never remembered my face again. Maybe you inspired them. Maybe. Maybe they're going to go do it again. So there are little things like that, or at least if you
Starting point is 01:23:21 have something in front of you that is really petrifying you, is there some way you could break that down into an actionable step? Say, you know, if someone out there wants to express their opinions on topic, maybe they're a physio, maybe they're a PT, maybe they're an investment bank or a mortgage broker. They're petrified of putting their opinion out there because they're worried about what other mortgage brokers or PTs are going to think. They're worried about the people that are never going to give them money. That's the fucking craziest thing.
Starting point is 01:23:47 PTs are petrified about what PTs think. I go, how many fucking PTs sat in your consult? How many? Oh yeah, I'd like to hire my PT. Could they post something? Because something is better than nothing. Is there, they don't have to be controversial. Is there one step they can take?
Starting point is 01:24:00 And if people can identify that one small step, it's too big break it down and I just don't understand why people can't set themselves that mental exercise I think the most amazing thing about the coffee example as well is the fact that you actually got you found a path to getting 10% and it's funny because so many times I reflect on my own story just asking a question was actually the catalyst it was that was the inflection point in my life where everything changed. And people don't have the confidence to ask the question. And it sounds like such a trivial thing, like when you're just asking for 10% on coffee. But for me, that was so profound that she was like, what, what? But then if she turns around and actually opens the door to 10% off, you think about that in your life generally, you talk about it in the book about asking for a pay rise or asking for promotion or asking for whatever. I think if you zoom out on your life
Starting point is 01:24:50 and you are the type of person who develops the habit of asking, your life will have a completely different trajectory the further you zoom out. Because I can tell you that the pivotal moments in mine where I asked a simple question and it seemingly changed everything or you know like you think about how things compounded over time the compounding moments were these moments of asking for something which most people would have you know you talk about personality types in here you say you know the need to achieve or the need to avoid failure I think a lot of that is is kind of interlinked with what we're saying here because i've always had the i feel like the need to achieve has outweighed my my need to avoid failure so i'm much more likely
Starting point is 01:25:31 to ask for shit from people especially when i started out just email a guy would you invest in my company the weird thing which i don't think i ever talk about is the first email i sent became my first investor and i bet your relationship with him saying no would have been fine. I had nothing to lose. I was shoplifting pizzas. I was stealing pizzas to feed myself. I emailed this guy and asked him for 10 grand and he said, yeah.
Starting point is 01:25:55 It's crazy you say that. This point you had before about asking the question, I was visiting in Split. They have these in Croatia, they have these like waterfalls and you go out in like minivans and you go and explore them. Usually we did did yacht week so after we were like dying a little bit let's go to a waterfall do something wholesome there's a guy on a laptop at the back of the
Starting point is 01:26:12 minivan and i was like what are you doing and he was like oh i have an accountancy business in miami i was like okay but what are you doing here he's like i'm working i was like what you're working on a laptop from miami right now now and i was like being inquisitive and he's like i'm working i was like what you're working on a laptop from miami right now now and i was like being inquisitive and he goes can i recommend a book and he recommended the book four hour work week and i got home and i read through it and there were some things that just didn't apply to me at all but then the one sentence summarized exactly every single emotion i'd felt for the last year and it said the opposite of happiness is boredom. And within three weeks, I flew to Australia one way. That was my inception moment. A book recommendation from a random guy in a minivan in Croatia sent me to do what is arguably, no,
Starting point is 01:26:54 it is the best single decision I've made in my life also. And I don't, I look back now and I'm like, whoa, the universe, the butterfly effect. If I had picked a different seat on the minivan i don't know where i would be today the opposite of happiness is boredom so sometimes when people experiencing almost like a bit of malaise or they're not experiencing happiness and it's full emotion they think that and this is only one spectrum of it they're not sure of the emotion they're experiencing and for me i realized although I was successful in the UK in PTing, I was bored. I wondered what this weird emotion was,
Starting point is 01:27:30 why I wasn't feeling the same motivation to go to work. I wasn't enjoying the same transactions. And I realized that my growth had shunted without realizing because I was comfortable. I was earning good money. I was, you know, everything was, I was the highest paid PT in my gym. It was easy to just remain there.
Starting point is 01:27:46 Were you lacking a sense of purpose? Probably, looking back now, but I was... Meaningful purpose, like you've got a purpose, you know, going to the gym is a purpose, but like meaningful purpose where it really has an intrinsic, you know, meaning to you. You think it's a worthwhile endeavor. The way I feel now, I didn't think was possible when I was younger. So when I was 27 and made this decision, I didn't know that I could have purpose in that respect. I was very happy just being a PT in the gym, but I never realized I'd always up until this point of, I'd gone 26 out of 27 years, never earning enough money to really
Starting point is 01:28:22 get by. You know, I'd never really succeeded in business. At 27, this is the first time I've actually accomplished anything. All my jobs and relationships before I'd just been failed at. At 27 years old, I'd done nothing remarkable with my life whatsoever. Rugby career, average.
Starting point is 01:28:37 Grades, average. Job performances, average. At 27, I was actually excelling in something for the first time in my life. So being bored was a very strange emotion I couldn't decipher so what is this feeling because I'd never succeeded at anything really I didn't think it was possible to be successful and bored at the same time and then flying to Australia I was never bored again and I haven't been since I think a lot of
Starting point is 01:28:59 people are successful and bored you know what I Successful in the context of someone else, of the social definition of success, right? You're not truly successful, I think, if you're bored, but you are in the eyes of maybe your parents that wanted you to be a doctor and now look at you smashing it as a doctor, but you, you know, but you're, you're bored. Another tough thing to take into account was the fact I was servicing about seven hours a day of PT, which is like seven one-to-one meetings. And I mean, it's quite hard because at least when we do a podcast now, if it's two hours, we can go hard for these two hours because we know there are going to be millions of hours listened to. But for me, that one hour I spend with a client, it's just one person. If we were to record this and only one person would listen to it,
Starting point is 01:29:42 you'd be like, I'm not sure this is really cost efficient so those seven hours a day although i had a purpose in those lives it almost got to the point where i was like i could be helping more and that's why i enjoyed doing social media although it didn't pay off for the first four years and that's the purpose piece though that's the that's it would be even more meaningful and worthwhile for you to do to do more and people say this now they go would you would you PT someone for 2000 pounds an hour? I go, it's tempting, but that one hour I could spend making one video that could... I get that all the time.
Starting point is 01:30:13 People say to me, you should be like a life coach where you should do coaching sessions. And I'm like, yeah, but I get to do coaching sessions on here by bringing on people like you and Simon Sinek and whoever I bring on. This is the coaching session and millions can listen versus one-on-one and it almost seems like a bit of a bit of a waste not no disrespect to my clients that before they were the people that enabled me to sit here right now and i'll be forever grateful for them but it did get to the
Starting point is 01:30:37 point where i was like i almost take more happiness from helping thousands than i would one and the financial implications are obviously very different but it's amazing to see a video where so many people, the video might take me 15 minutes to make an edit and put out. I still, I do my own editing. It's probably the happiest moment of some of my days. I love the creation phase. Like I've had an idea, it's been born, I've recorded it, run to my room, I'm editing it, getting all perfect. And then I put it out and I check the next day and I'm like like i can't comprehend the amount of people that might have benefited and especially when something gets a lot of views and i'm sure say you put this podcast out i'm not sure i did this the other day i was watching england play rugby i was in a stadium
Starting point is 01:31:18 with 50 000 people and i was like there's a lot of people here. And if someone asked me to go into the middle and be like, James, here's a microphone, chat shit, I'd be like, that's a lot of people. My story views were a quarter of a million the same day. And I was like, how is this real? How is this real? And when you think about the amount of people you can talk to, I can't comprehend it. What would you say to those people
Starting point is 01:31:40 that are currently bored in their lives? Sometimes my biggest fear is setting my sights on a mountain where I could reach the summit. And I think some people haven't realized they've reached the summit. And it's very important that you get to that point and you set a new height to accomplish. So again, I always talk about jujitsu,
Starting point is 01:31:59 but for me, that is something that will never be finished. I will never conquer that. And it doesn't have to be martial arts for people, but there should be something that you never be finished. I will never conquer that. And it doesn't have to be martial arts for people, but there should be something that you move away from your business because someone can take away your business. Someone can take away your social media. Someone can take away everything, but they can't take away that. And having something where you know, you'll never master it. I think now I've discovered that I'll never be bored. And I love that because if I break my leg tomorrow training, can teach and if I can't teach I can
Starting point is 01:32:26 study and if I can study I can pass on the information to other people I feel like stagnation is like my biggest fear and I think a lot of people just haven't realized that they're there so they just need to set their sights on something anything now it's interesting it's interesting that everything you've said resonates a lot there because I realized at some point, maybe when I completed the first set of goals I had at 18, that the only goals worth having in this phase, in the next chapter of my life, were those that are incompletable. So in like every facet of my life, the best goals I have, the most intrinsically fulfilling are those that I know I can't complete. So I posted on my Instagram the other day about the gym. Every year I wanted to get a six pack for summer.
Starting point is 01:33:05 That was the goal. You know, it would maybe last four months and then I'd fail. At some point, my goal became consistency, something that I can never really complete. It's something that I can, you know, achieve every day, but a goal that can't be completed. And it's the same with this podcast. The reason it's so enjoyable
Starting point is 01:33:19 is because there is absolutely no end. There's no conceivable end in sight. It's the journey itself. And it's the process that I think is going to be rewarding. And then I tried to change all my businesses at one point when I started reading about Simon Sinek and Infinite Games and Finite Games. So I said, what would I have to do to create a business
Starting point is 01:33:36 from top to bottom that was designed to not have these goals of like, let's be number one or let's make a hundred million, but was infinite. And it completely changes everything. And then it has a really impact, strange impact on how you treat people as team members. So you start designing the organization to be sustainable in every way. That is where I'm at in my life now. It's trying to fill my life with these incompletable goals because completed goals let me down. You know, I said about the anti-climax, seeking inspiration from people that have done it from our last conversation I didn't realize how much our conversation had
Starting point is 01:34:09 impacted me until I got home and I was like I'm not producing a good level podcast I was like I need to get proper microphones I need to invest in better cameras I need to do a better job editing and then your social strategy as well just every facet of it i was like i was inspired by you doing better than me and that was something that i three months later i went fuck sitting down with you i was like that really like rubbed shoulders in a way that benefited me and i was like it's one of the first times i really felt the impact of what even just sitting and talking someone can do for and i found it such a shame that some people won't be inspired by other people's success i feel like it's a shame that so many people see success and see as a reason to be bitter and yeah for me it was it was great
Starting point is 01:34:57 i left feeling for a start i think you forced a lot of people that didn't like me to listen they i know a lot of people that didn't like me to listen. I know a lot of people would have gone, why the fuck did Stephen sat down with him? Yeah, yeah, yeah. And they've gone and probably listened to, and I got a lot of people messaging me going, I thought you're a dick.
Starting point is 01:35:15 We have a closing tradition on this podcast, as you know, of your question, funnily enough, has been left by the liver king. Oh, snap. I didn't think about that. When you said he was the last one on, I was like, oh, that oh that's really cool i was like i kind of would have liked to have met him and just to be in his aura not because i'm a fanboy but like i always look at him and i'm like i want to know how he smells yeah he smells bad but and i'm only saying that because he said it so he walked in and said by the way i smell bad because i don't use any deodorant but um i don't actually usually tell
Starting point is 01:35:44 people who's written the question, but I'll make an exception today. What is the hardest... I'm nervous. That's a question I feel like is, you know, when you're at an interview, like ready to get a job, you're like the last question, if you want to get this job. What is the hardest thing you've ever done in life?
Starting point is 01:36:04 Your rite of passage. God, I've got to try and answer this. That sounded like a pussy. Rite of passage. Hardest thing I've ever done. All the things that come to mind are like jokes I can make. Like putting up with Darren's disorganization or something, you know, but I've got to think about a serious answer.
Starting point is 01:36:30 He talked a lot about this concept of your rite of passage so his hardest moments in life he sees them all as a rite of passage for getting somewhere else the only real thing that I would say has been hard or even noteworthy would be the ability to fall in love with repetition of dull tasks it sounds like a really weird thing to say it's the only really painful thing i've ever done in my life really where there are things you need to do every day consistently for years without any form of you know instant gratification and evidently not enough people have that ability and there have been so many days where i've just not wanted to do anything but you do it anyway and you kind of fall in love with these very small minute repetitions and it's the only thing that I've ever really found hard in my life and it definitely sounds
Starting point is 01:37:14 like I'm coming from a point of privilege I feel like I've done a disservice you probably expected a lot more battle-hardened people I wish I could say it was a tour of Afghanistan or working in a ward during COVID or you know saving someone's life but I probably haven't I've probably done never came dirty a little bit there those small disciplines you're talking about though those small things where you know we all have them every day but it could be as small as just going getting to the gym avoiding eating something that's tempting whatever those small disciplines end up defining us over the long term as one of my favorite books the slight edge um describes what is driving those small disciplines on a day-to-day basis why are you doing those small those small repetitions if there is no instant gratification i think one thing it's difficult to credit yourself with stuff but
Starting point is 01:38:00 i've always been very good at seeing long-term benefit of short-term actions. And, you know, for me, even little things, I've got a strange insight in life where so many people are focused on doing things now for a better life later on, where I'm completely inverted. I'm so focused on having a good life now. My life isn't that stressful. Everyone's like, oh, you should buy a house or buy 10 houses. And for me, I'm like, it'd be good financially, but it's stressful. And for me, I know if I turn up and do these little things every day that future life future relationships future family can benefit from it something that my parents have definitely done my dad commuted into London for 50 years the same business every day it's about an hour and 25 minutes from where
Starting point is 01:38:41 we live there and back every day he never pulled sick days he was never lazy my mom was also incredibly consistent with the upbringing of me and my sister and i look back at the amount of sacrifice that they made short little things like putting up with my behavior or my dad going into work on a train every day and i think he only really ever did these things not for himself but for people that didn't exist yet almost like confidence is predicting success in the future we is predicting success in the future. We can create success in the future by doing these small things.
Starting point is 01:39:09 So I think it's definitely stemmed from that where it's not so much about me because I'm happy now, but if I keep doing these things, I can create happiness for people further down the line. We talk about privilege as well. Like we could talk about any form of privilege, whether it's racial, economic, whatever. We need to take some ownership
Starting point is 01:39:25 that the reason someone like me can take an experience privilege now is the fact that people before me were long-sighted with their goals and ambitions and the people before them were as well my parents made very smart decisions for me to be able to be able to go to australia at 27 that was a privilege for some people they have family members that rely on them they have professional if you're a police officer you work in a hospital you don't have the luxury of just leaving your precinct to go on a jolly to the other side of the world as a pt i did so yeah i think i do the small things now so that in the long term in the future someone else can reap the benefits that i did of them i have to say well done and thank you for writing a book on this topic because it is a topic that so many people,
Starting point is 01:40:07 I think I'm right in saying that confidence is the single biggest topic that I'm peppered with in terms of questions. People are trying to figure it out because it is this great inhibitor of all they believe they can be. It is a great inhibitor of so much happiness and health and fulfillment and all of those things.
Starting point is 01:40:24 So it was also one of those things so when I it was also one of the things that I did consider writing a book about one day but after reading your book and understanding how nuanced and truthful and honest and appreciative of both sides of the coin it is I don't feel like I ever have to write a book of confidence again
Starting point is 01:40:40 because I think you really covered it so well done thank you people are going to love this book for sure thank you very much and you know that as well I think because I'm you know I asked that first question at the start about why you wrote about confidence assuming it was because of the because the fact you also get peppered in various ways even even as you say with those pain points if they're not saying it directly at the heart of it they are trying to figure out how to how to to achieve their goals um ultimately by this word that they believe is confidence. So well done. Thank you. Thanks for coming back here. I love these conversations. I do them over and over
Starting point is 01:41:09 again just because half the time I'm doing it just to try and develop my own thinking. And it's also a huge honor that you even listened to this podcast. I find that really awesome because you're an incredibly smart person. You're an incredibly nice guy. And those are the kind of people that I love spending time with. So, thanks James, hope to see you again soon if you'll ever come back on. Of course. And I hope this book tour goes incredibly well. Thank you very much. Thanks for watching!

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