The Dr. Hyman Show - Midlife Crisis? Why Life After 50 Could Be Your Best Years Yet | Chip Conley
Episode Date: October 23, 2024Is the thought of aging holding you back, or could it be your chance to thrive? On this episode of “The Doctor’s Farmacy,” I sit down with Chip Conley to challenge the outdated view of midlife a...s a time of decline. We explore how this stage can become a period of growth, from finding new passions to building deeper connections. Learn why happiness often increases after 50 and get actionable tips for staying active, curious, and engaged. In this episode, we discuss: Research on the U-curve of happiness, showing that life satisfaction typically dips around ages 45-50 but improves steadily with each decade after. The importance of social wellness and relationships as a key factor for longevity and well-being The Modern Elder Academy Overcoming the fear of aging The importance of maintaining curiosity and openness to new experiences, which are strongly correlated with living a longer, happier life. View Show Notes From This Episode Get Free Weekly Health Tips from Dr. Hyman Sign Up for Dr. Hyman’s Weekly Longevity Journal This episode is brought to you by Rupa University, BIOptimizers, Armra, and Qualia. Rupa University is hosting FREE classes and bootcamps for healthcare providers who want to learn more about Functional Medicine testing. Sign up at RupaUniversity.com. Tackle an overlooked root cause of stress with Magnesium Breakthrough. Visit Bioptimizers.com/hyman and use code HYMAN10 to save 10%. Save 15% on your first order of ARMRA Colostrum and unlock the power of 400+ functional nutrients. Just visit TryARMRA.com/Mark or use code MARK. Decrease your "zombie cells" with Qualia Senolytic. Visit QualiaLife.com/Hyman to get 50% off and use code HYMAN for an additional 15% off your order.
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Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
When you shift your mindset on aging
from a negative to a positive,
you gain seven and a half years of additional life.
Wow.
Which is more life than if you stop smoking
or if you start exercising at 50.
Yeah, I mean, actually, if you end cancer
and heart disease from the face of the planet,
you'd only get five to seven years of life extension.
I know.
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Welcome to Doctors Pharmacy.
This is Dr. Mark Hyman.
That's Pharmacy with an F, a place for conversations that matter.
And this conversation today with my friend Chip Conley is one that I think really matters
because it's about how to develop wisdom,
especially as we go through our midlife and disrupt a lot of the beliefs that we have
about what it means to get older, to get unstuck, to get free.
We had a really deep ranging conversation about a lot of my personal life story, his
personal life story, his struggle with cancer, the things he learned through a lot of the
challenges of his life that I think are going to be helpful for all of you. Chip's an amazing guy. He's disrupted the
hospitality industry twice. First, as the founder of Joie de Vivre Hospitality, which is the second
largest operator of boutique hotels in the US. And then as Airbnb's head of global hospitality
and strategy, which I'm sure you've heard of Airbnb, and that led a worldwide revolution in
travel. He co-founded the MEA, the Modern Elder Academy, in 2018 in Baja, Mexico, and opened a second
campus in Santa Fe, which I just visited.
It's a 2,600-acre regenerative horse ranch inspired by his experience of intergenerational
mentoring as a modern elder at Airbnb, where he called himself a mentor, which is a mentor
and an intern at the same time.
And he really helped build and grow
Airbnb into one of the most successful companies in the world. And now he's dedicating his life to
reframing the concept of aging. MEA supports students to navigate midlife with their new
sense of purpose, possibility. He's a New York Times bestselling author. His seventh book,
Learning to Love Midlife, 12 Reasons Why Life Gets Better with Age, is out now. It's
great. Check it out for sure. It's about rebranding midlife to help people understand the upside of
this often misunderstood life stage. So I encourage you to check his work out. And now let's jump
right into our amazing conversation together. Welcome, Chip, back to the Doctors Pharmacy
Podcast. It's so great to be here. Yay! It's great to be here, Mark. Here in Santa Fe.
We're here in Santa Fe in New Mexico.
I just had back surgery two weeks ago.
You had a struggle with your own health issues.
And you have been an advocate for something that is something that most people dread,
which is getting older and midlife and redefining what that looks like. Because
as most of us look at people around us in society, we see the process of getting older
as kind of bad news. Of course. If there's a bumper sticker, it'd be, just don't do it.
The opposite of Nike. Right. Just don't do it. And here we are. I'm about to be 65. You're
not far behind me. Yes. And we're still going strong and being creative and doing stuff. And
life is kind of different than it was for generations past at this age where I'm going to
be in an age this year where I can go on social security and Medicare. And yet I'm moving to a
new town. I just bought a new house. I just got married. You have a lovely wife. I have a beautiful
younger than you. Who is? I started a new company. I am trying to work really hard to change the food
system and be more active in ways than I've ever been and healthier than I've been in a long, long time.
So, you know, we have to kind of begin to rethink a little bit of this whole process.
And what I'm curious about is, you know, you came from this very successful career as a hotelier.
You were really instrumental in the development of Airbnb, which all of us know and have used.
And yet you kind of turned your attention to a different focus as you've entered
a different phase of your life, which is how do we reimagine this process of midlife as
not a burden but an opportunity?
So what's the first word that comes to mind when you hear the word midlife?
What word goes with it?
Retirement?
No, what word goes with it?
Midlife.
Crisis.
Exactly. Crisis. So this is the life
stage that has the worst brand in the world. I got a new car and I did not get a 911 Porsche.
Okay. But you got something red. No, I didn't. So midlife crisis is an age old trope that,
you know, Hollywood made famous by American beauty with Kevin Spacey, you know, and a bunch
of other famous Hollywood actors who hit 45 or 50 and then
said, okay, to hell with it. I'm going to become an adolescent again. But the reality is most people
don't have a crisis. What they have is a feeling of being stuck. And, uh, Brené Brown, a good friend,
uh, says it's the midlife unraveling because around 45 or 50, your life is so raveled up to be raveled means like being stuck
in a string like so wound up that you sort of feel a little bit like you don't have any choices
and so like you've made your choices and you're stuck or you're stuck with your choices exactly
so i like to call it the midlife chrysalis because midlife for the butterfly was the chrysalis
caterpillar chrysalis butterfly. And the truth is that the
U-curve of happiness research, which has changed a little bit recently because people who are
younger are really in a bad place. But generally speaking, it has historically shown that 45 to 50
was the low point. And from like early to mid twenties, your life satisfaction declines,
bottoms out around 45 to 50. And then with each decade after age 50, you get happier and happier and happier. And so what if midlife is not a crisis? It's a chrysalis. It's a time for
metamorphosis and transformation. And so I started in my own life. I had a very rocky age, 46 to 49.
Yeah, what happened?
I lost five male friends to suicide. This, man. This was 2008 to 2010.
They were ages 42 to 52.
I had my own company, my boutique hotel company that had grown to be the second largest in
the US, but the Great Recession was coming along.
I didn't want to be doing it anymore, but I didn't have a choice because we were in
a struggle there.
I have an African-American foster son.
He was going to San Quentin wrongfully.
I had a long-term romantic partnership that was ending not by my choice. So everything was, you know,
and I was running out of cash. I mean, it was all bad. And then I had an NDE.
It sounds like a lot of fun.
Yeah, I know. The NDE was like an allergic reaction to an antibiotic. And long story short,
at 47, I was at the bottom of the U-curve of happiness. The research on U-curve happiness
had not come out yet, but I can say personally, yes, my low point was there.
And then I just said like, okay,
I've got to have a hotelier wake-up call on this one.
And I completely changed my life.
But what I recognized at that time
was there's so little in the way of resources
to help people through rites of passage,
rituals, schools, or tools in midlife.
We have a lot of social infrastructure to support people through adolescence,
but we don't have much social infrastructure to help people through middle-essence.
Yeah, middle-essence.
And middle-essence is a word that's been around for a while, not popularized,
but it basically says like, hey, in adolescence,
you're going through all these transitions, emotional, hormonal,
physical, and identity transitions.
And in midlife, you're going through the same transitions, but on the other side.
Well, I'm going to be 65.
So I think I'm right about midlife.
You are.
Well, listen.
Back in the old days, old days being like 50 years ago, midlife was 40 to 60.
Yeah.
So you wouldn't even have been in midlife.
And then it was 40 to 65, and maybe 45 to 65.
When I did the research for my new book, Learning to Love Midlife, 12 Reasons Why Life Gets
Better with Age, I found that many sociologists now believe that midlife is 35 to 75.
Yeah.
And it's the bridge between early adulthood and later adulthood.
Yeah.
And if we're living to 100, later adulthood may last 20 or 25 years
after this midlife. And midlife has these three stages, early midlife, which is 35 to 50,
the core of midlife, which is 50 to 60, and later midlife, which is 60 to 75.
Yeah. Well, it's interesting because I feel like now, like I'm back in my 20s.
Yeah.
And it has to do with the the way i think about things which
is curiosity openness exploration innovation things that you don't associate with openness
to new experiences yeah i'm constantly learning new things yeah but i think you weren't always
this way i kind of was but i i think for many years i got stuck in this in in what you call these entanglements you
know marriage kids job you know the all these identities success trying to get somewhere trying
to build something trying to do something yeah and be somebody and now i'm like and why were you
doing that who was who are you doing that for oh was it your parents oh 100 yeah oh yeah well two
things one my mom said to me there's only room at the top, which I got mad at her for many
times, but she was basically saying to me, strive for excellence.
Yep.
And my father's both were, my stepfather and my father were both very judgmental.
And, you know, I'd come home from school, dad, I got a 98.
Well, what happened to the other 2%?
And he wasn't joking.
Right.
You know, and I wasn't a bad student, obviously.
And, and yet, uh, I spent a lot of time trying not to be them.
You know, because they were both serious failures.
Oh, were they serious failures?
Oh, yeah.
Both of your fathers?
I mean, my father went bankrupt.
I had to support him through the latter part of his life.
My stepfather was supported by his brother, who did well.
So your mom didn't do so well with her choices?
No, she didn't.
I know.
It took me a minute to get her.
Is she still living or no?
No, she died.
She died.
She was an amazing woman.
But the things I had to unlearn from what I learned were a big part of my growing up.
So what was the age at which you had your midlife unraveling?
You had the sense of, is this all there is or is this am i living
someone else's life yeah so it's probably around in my like around 52 when i i got my second
divorce and i'm like holy shit like what am i doing and where am i going And who are my people? And is this what I'm dealt with?
Because I don't like this.
And I was trapped.
And I think I spent a lot of time and a lot of work and met a lot of new people that helped
me emerge from this place and reinvent my life, which now is, like you said, I think
you're right.
The happiness, I've been the happiest I've ever been.
So I've only known you in the last five to seven years or so, and I've only known you
as who you are today, which is someone to me who is age fluid.
You are not defined by your biological age or your chronological age, actually the chronological
age, and you're not defined by your generation.
And so I don't know that, Mark, from before, but I also know you've had a very storied career. I feel like I'm interviewing you now.
You've had a very storied career and you worked your ass off in order to be able to accomplish
what you've accomplished. But what I've appreciated about you is that openness to
new experiences and that curiosity and openness to new experiences are two of the variables
that are most correlated
with living a longer, happier, healthier life. Well, in your book, Learning to Love Midlife at
12 Reasons Why Life Gets Better with Age, which I'm certainly finding, it's sort of, you know,
it's sort of an opportunity for us to rethink something that we previously, at least I
previously, kind of had some fear about.
You know, the fear of getting older, the fear of losing function, the fear of being irrelevant,
the fear of, you know, just kind of getting stuck in old friendships and old patterns
and old stories.
And, you know, the chrysalis is, I would say, more like a crucible.
It is a crucible.
Because I had to burn off a lot of the old stuff that kind of kept me from actually being in a happy place now as I've gotten older.
We call it the great midlife edit. So there's a Richard Rohr, famous Christian mystic,
is teaching at our Modern Elder Academy campus here in Santa Fe right now. I just jumped over
here for this interview and I'm going to go back there. He says that the first half of your life is about accumulating. And the second half
of your life is about editing. And it's around midlife that all of a sudden you start to realize,
oh, wow, there's another world out there beyond my ego. And you start to actually shift. And
there's a lot of shifts that are happening, but nobody gives you a roadmap to say like, oh, you're in midlife, guess what? And so what I've just loved about writing the book and
then for now six and a half years running the World's First Midlife Wisdom School is to help
people to see that, yes, there are a bunch of things that get worse with age. Our short-term
memory, sometimes our bodies, although you're in great shape and a lot of, you know, I'm in good shape, but not great shape,
partly because I'm dealing with some cancer issues, which we'll talk about.
But long story short is when you look at the things that get better with age,
your emotional intelligence and emotional moderation your ability to actually be socially
have social capital social wellness you value relationships more your ability to edit things
your wisdom your crystallized intelligence yeah uh your ability to get off the treadmill and say
you know what i don't want to be on that fucking treadmill. That's someone else's treadmill. Your curiosity about spirituality.
All these things to get better with age.
So we live in a culture, especially in the U.S., where the primary way we define each other is based upon how we look.
And it's okay.
Nothing wrong with that.
But there's other playing fields that are getting better with age.
And so I wanted to sort of say, okay, well, there's a lot of anti-aging products
and services out there.
Most of them, let's be honest, are anti-women products.
They're about the natural,
like making women feel badly
about their natural process of aging.
And I wanted to create a pro-aging product and service
because Becca Levy at Yale has shown
that when you shift your mindset on aging
from a negative to a positive,
you gain seven and a half years of
additional life, which is more life than if you stop smoking or if you start exercising at 50.
Yeah. I mean, actually, if you end cancer and heart disease from the face of the planet,
you'd only get five to seven years of life extension.
I know. So this is really remarkable. And her research has been done over the last dozen years,
but it hasn't gotten a lot of attention. And we, you and I both know there's a lot, a lot of attention on biohacking and on longevity right now, but it's
mostly on the physical science side. And I think it's interesting and I'm, I'm glad. And I, you
know, I hats off to you and Peter Atiyah and, and Peter Diamandis and all of the people who are
helping us to see like, we can actually with proper interventions some of which are actually really
fun and easy um we can actually live a lot longer yeah because of what we do physically um to
ourselves and how we feed ourselves as well but what's not gotten a lot of attention is the social
science of longevity yeah the social wellness piece bob waldinger's work at harvard showing
the number one variable for people living longer, healthy, happier lives.
It was how invested were they in midlife and beyond in their social relationships.
Absolutely.
Dan Buettner, who's our faculty from Blue Zones.
Yeah, Dan, I love Dan.
In fact, I think when we first met, we might have been actually with Dan.
I don't even know about that.
But long story short, at a ypo event but dan you know his work in blue zones is very much
focused on the natural process of the things you can do even if you're living on sardinia on a on
a mountain that is good for you where they don't have gyms or anything else like that they don't
have keto diets but like people live to 100 yeah um and and of course becca levy's work on showing
how shifting your mindset on aging has such a profound impact on not just living longer, but living happier as well.
So let me ask you this, because I've been through a lot.
You've been through a lot.
You've had cancer, prostate cancer.
You're still dealing with it.
You've had lots of loss.
You've lost your friends.
You've lost relationships.
You've had a lot of sorrow and heartbreak physical challenges i've
had you know three divorces i've had many many illnesses you just had two weeks ago back surgery
i just had back surgery which you know is a little bump in the road i'll be back don't worry
and and in some ways you know those kinds of life experiences can kind of make you hardened yeah and bitter and closed down
and and the question i have is you know all of us go through that because you know when you're born
you know everything's great everybody's alive but then people start dying your parents are dying
your friends are dying you have losses you have successes financially you have losses financially
you have all these good things happen you know all these bad things happen to you and it sort of accumulates and in a way you
know it can weigh you down i see a lot of people as they get older being weighed down by the weight
of all the story the old stories that they carry around with them from their life and so the
question is how do you get free because in a sense from the chrysalis is a liberation, right?
Yeah, it is.
And so that liberation process, it's almost a modern elder liberation academy, right?
So how do you enter that process of liberation from all that weight that we've carried around?
Yeah.
So how do you move from the weight of the world to the wonder of the world?
Yeah, good way of saying it.
As my friend Dr. Keltner, Dr. Keltner's on our faculty and teaches people about awe.
You know, part of it is I like to say that our painful life lessons are the raw material for our future wisdom.
For some people, though.
For some people, it doesn't.
I agree.
The raw material.
So you can have good raw material, but if you don't do anything with it, you cannot be a great chef in the kitchen.
You might have all the ingredients and even a recipe, but if you don't know what to do with it, it's going to taste really badly.
Or you'll never even cook it.
So the key is to figure out how do you take this raw material and metabolize it in such a way that it becomes wisdom as opposed to just something that kicked your ass?
Bitterness.
Yeah, or bitterness.
So I've been doing an exercise practice for 35 years now.
Every weekend.
I started doing this when I was two years into starting my boutique hotel company.
So I was a CEO of a boutique hotel company at age 26.
Wow.
Who knew?
I had one hotel in the Tenderloin of San Francisco.
And when I was 28, the company was having some troubles.
And so I started to practice.
Every weekend, I'd come home and I'd take a journal off the wall.
And I didn't journal, but I actually created what I called my wisdom journal.
My wisdom journal.
And I would write four, five, six different lessons I'd learned that week.
Generally painful ones.
Personally or professionally.
I'd say, here's the lesson I learned.
And then I would ask myself, how will that serve me in the future?
I've been doing that every weekend for 35 years.
That explains everything.
That is not an easy thing to do.
Because it means you have to stop, to look at yourself.
20 to 30 minutes.
Yeah.
Honestly.
You do.
And not lie to yourself about who you are.
But guess what?
It accelerates your ability to cultivate and harvest your life lessons.
Yeah.
And guess what?
If you do that, you have wisdom.
All right.
Well, I'm a little late for the game, but I'm going to start that because that's a great
practical tool.
Oh, it is a really great practice.
And when I was the CEO of my company going through the Great Recession, I'm a little late to the game, but I'm going to start that because that's a great practical tool. Oh, it is a really great practice. And when I was like the CEO of my company
going through the Great Recession,
I went back to the dot-com bust in 9-11
and said like, what did I learn then?
Because I was going through something very similar
and I went back through these journals.
And so I now do that with my leadership team.
So one of the best things you can do with this
is to take it to an organization.
So at Joie de Vivre, my hotel company, at Airbnb, where i was helping the three founders as their modern elder and they called me
the modern elder because they said a modern elder is as curious as they are wise it's like okay i'll
be that yeah and then at mea my midlife wisdom school that stands for modern modern elder academy
yep we do a leadership lesson lesson exercise once a quarter.
So the leadership team comes together and we have each of the people, let's say there's
eight people on the team.
Each person says, here was my biggest lesson of the quarter.
And then they say, and here's what it's going to do, how it's going to serve me and the
company in the future.
And each of us do that.
So there's candor and authenticity, but also learning a growth mindset of like, okay, I'm
going to improve and get better as a result of this.
And then we finish the meeting with each of us saying, what was our biggest lesson as
a team?
And then we arm wrestle over that one to say like, what did we learn from it?
So this thing I've been doing for 35 years, I now do and have been doing for 20 years
with all these leadership teams I've been involved in.
And it's beautiful because what it does is it helps create a wiser organization because do and have been doing for 20 years with all these leadership teams I've been involved in.
And it's beautiful because what it does is it helps create a wiser organization. Because we're living in an era right now where artificial intelligence has made knowledge a commodity.
So we talk about knowledge workers and knowledge management. You know what? Bottom line is we are
now in the wisdom era. Because when knowledge is a commodity, wisdom becomes scarce
and a value. And so how do you create wiser people, wiser leaders, wiser organizations?
It's true. And I think about what you're saying and I'm thinking about this process that I've
seen happen to so many people, which is as we get older, things fester, resentments,
grudges. And I saw this even with my own father who kind of withdrew from life and he was this vibrant guy who
traveled Europe for 11 years and
was a journalist and was
you know worked for Ready for Europe and smuggling
you know after the war
watches and cameras across
borders helping the Jews
who'd hid in the forest to sort of make
some money after the war and you know he just
was an incredible guy and a dreamer
and a pilot.
And I just saw him start to contract
and to get hardened.
And what you're saying is this,
you know, it sort of reminds me
of one of the Supreme Court justices,
I forget his name, a long time ago,
said the greatest disinfectant is light.
Yeah.
And I think, you know,
we have to disinfect our own thoughts
so we don't fester in those old patterns and old
stories that keep us from actually being free as we get older. Because I think what you're doing,
Chip, is creating a structure where we can actually build this process of wisdom generation
through bringing light to the darkness. Yeah. And that light comes in the form of community.
It comes in the form of lessons and learning and school.
I mean, part of the reason I created the Modern Elder Academy, MEA, was because I lost those
five friends to suicide.
Part of it was because I was at a very low point during that time.
So you weren't far away from that either.
No, I wasn't.
You know, one of my friends who took his own life is named Chip. Like how many friends do I have named Chip? And he took his
own life. And so I'm at the memorial service and I'm going through my dark night of the soul,
or now what I call the dark night of the ego. And I was thinking, because in fact,
that's what's happening. That's good. It's not the dark night of the soul, it's the dark night of the ego.
Your ego is starting to disintegrate. Meaning there's things that you built your life upon believing that that was who you were.
And it's not working out the way you thought it was.
And you think, oh my God, everything is going downhill from here.
And so that's why we need support.
Because we need programs and rituals and rites of passage and education to understand transition.
So MEA was created six and a half years ago with a campus in Baja, not too far from a
property you used to own in Baja, in Pescadero, about an hour north of Cabo.
And then we have a 2,600-acre regenerative horse ranch here in Santa Fe that has two
retreat centers on it.
Wait, you have horses?
We have horses. We have horses.
We have a dozen horses.
And long story short is we do programs that help people reframe their relationship on
aging and understand longevity from a social science perspective, navigate transitions,
because we're going through all kinds of transitions from menopause to divorce to
retirement to starting a new company or selling a company to parents passing away, empty nest, lots.
So navigating transitions is a piece of it.
Cultivating purpose, which is a really important piece of living a good long life.
Part of the reason people actually lose a sense of momentum in their life is when they retire and lose a sense of purpose.
And then finally, owning wisdom.
What if wisdom was this superpower you have as you get older?
And guess what?
It could be.
So our average age of the people who comes, 54.
About a little over 60% are women.
We've had 5,500 people from 50 countries come.
5,050 countries. countries i know it's a lot
and um love it we have financial aid for people who can't afford it and it's great
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better aging at qualialife.com slash hymen so how do you how do you help people move towards the
wisdom piece towards towards the freedom piece towards the liberation from those old patterns
and stories and kind of enter into a place of possibility and renewal. And, you know, like I'm sort of shocked at where I'm at in my life.
You know, I thought, okay, 65, I'm going to slow down.
Maybe I'll kind of play more tennis.
And, you know, I took a little break in Maui and rode my bike three hours a day
and did a lot of that.
It's not for you.
Well, it was for me.
But I also feel like I'm in this moment.
It just feels so new.
And it kind of makes me laugh because I look in the mirror and I'm like, I don't think I look 65.
You don't.
And I don't feel 65.
You don't.
And I don't certainly act 65.
You definitely don't.
And actually, most of my friends are in their 30s and 40s. Because what I find is that people who are in that 50, 60, 70 age group, not all of them,
obviously, but a good bunch of them, kind of are starting to get calcified, ossified.
So yeah.
So the key is, if midlife lasts 40 years, let's say, 35 to 75.
And let's also say, who knows?
There's a woman in this week's workshop who's
91 years old. She's the oldest person who's ever come to a workshop. That woman is like-
She's getting a 30-year mortgage.
She's, yeah. And she acts like she's 45 or 50 and she looks like she's 65 or 70. So,
you know, we all age differently. You know, there's lots of, there's a chronological age, there's a biological age, there's a cognitive
age, there's a sexual age.
And on that one, you're still a teenager.
But the bottom line is we-
We won't talk about that.
We won't go there.
Okay.
The life we live, we can curate.
But if midlife is a marathon and we are carrying all of this excess baggage
from earlier in midlife or from childhood, there's a point at which we need to actually
learn how to let go of that. So we do this thing called the great midlife at MEA. You can do this
at home. I write about it in the book, Learning to Love Midlife. It's actually a practice of saying,
what are the things I have a fixed mindset about?
Where do I have a limiting belief?
And it doesn't have to be just about age, but it could be.
It's like, oh, I'm never going to meet.
I'm 60 years old.
I'm never going to meet my soulmate. Or I'm 50 and it's too late to start a company or whatever it is.
We give people the opportunity to identify and acknowledge
what it is that's holding them back.
And then we give them the opportunity to throw away in the fire.
Or there's other kinds of rituals you can do.
So basically, you help them see it.
Help them see it.
Help them to see that the fixed mindset is something
that you tend to hold on to.
And a growth mindset, and you can focus on proving yourself and winning.
And a growth mindset is focusing on improving yourself and learning.
And we need to help move people to the growth mindset.
Because if you only play games that you can win, as you get older, your sandbox gets smaller and smaller.
And there's a lot of people who live that way.
And they wonder why they're so bored.
Or they wonder why they're so bored or they wonder why they are so
Actually, I did you know what I kind of wish I could have more time to be born
Me too
Something like the world is such a fascinating place
Yeah, well that's and and that will serve you well the rest of your life
You know one of my favorite films ever saw was you might have seen it was about the this comedians Norman Lear
It was Mel Brooks and Carl Reiner.
What was it called?
I forget the name.
And they were all like 90 to 100 years old.
And I actually got to know Norman Lear pretty well before he died.
And it was funny, I was at his 100th birthday and Rob Reiner was at the dinner.
And Norman Lear gets up, he's 100 years old and he just goes on and on and on. was at the dinner event.
And Norman Laird gets up.
He's 100 years old.
He just goes on and on and on.
He's talking.
He's sharp as a tack.
And Rob Brown goes, shut up or this is going to go on until your 101st birthday.
It was very funny.
Well, a sense of humor is also something that is correlated with living a longer, healthier
life and growth mindset.
But that movie, the thing about the movie was that they were all still working.
Yeah.
They were all still creating.
They weren't.
George Burns used to say, I can't die yet.
I've got a show tonight.
And so he would book himself a year or two out because it was sort of the mentality of
I can't die.
I've got to be on stage.
That's right.
Yeah. But humor is important.
Humor is very, humor and humility. Both of those are really important pieces of the process of living a longer, healthier life and a growth mindset. When you have a fixed mindset, you
have a tendency to be self-conscious. You have a tendency to have that voice of your father or
mother in your head, you know, saying like, you know, you didn't do well enough. And so that all that does is create a perfectionism that actually stunts you and means
that you're not going to try new things. How do you, how do you get people practically,
you mentioned one editing piece, but give us some of the other tools that you use to help people
move from this chrysalis to this liberation and becoming sort of a butterfly
in the last part of life and really tapping into that wisdom and happiness and joy and
engagement that's possible for us.
Well, I'll give you a few.
I'll be brief with them.
First one is there's three stages to a transition.
And for those who want to learn more about this, on the MEA website at the bottom footer,
there's something called the anatomy of a transition.
It's just a free resource that actually talks about this. So there's the ending of something,
there's the messy middle, and there's the beginning of something. And once you sort
of understand that, that there are three stages to any transition. Ending, you want to ritualize
that. Messy middle, you need social support, and you need to find the through line of how you're
going to get to the other side of this and have some hope and belief in that as victor frankl showed in the concentration camps in world
war ii um and then on the other side of it the beginning of something new you have to have a
growth mindset so we really go into depth about how to help people improve their tq their transitional
intelligence and tq is very important so we we came up with that as a trademarked MEA term, but we came up with
that partly because we are going through all kinds of transitions as is the world, but nobody helped
us to learn how to master and navigate these transitions. So that's one piece. A second piece
is, I love this question. What is, and I'm going to ask you this question. So what is something
that you know now or have done now,
Mark, that you wish you'd learned or done 10 years ago? Think about that.
Well, I think I look at the patterns of choice I made that were focused on trauma that I had from my childhood of being a people pleaser that undermined a lot of my
ability to have healthy relationships that undermine my ability to even be more successful
in the world and to be more effective at and when I mean success I mean to to be more effective at
achieving the mission of helping heal people through functional medicine yeah and I wish I'd
I'd kind of crack that one yeah but it But it was locked inside like 10 Russian dolls.
Or maybe it was like a diamond in a huge rock quarry that was just impossible to get to for me.
And I tried for years.
And I went through a process.
I've talked about it.
Actually, I talked about it on the Dye of a CEO, about how I actually did that.
Yeah. Well, so now I'm going to ask you the next question. So that was beautiful. about actually i talked about in the diary of a ceo about how i actually you know did that and
yeah well so now i'm going to ask you the next question so that was beautiful first of all thank
you for your authenticity on that now 10 years from now at age 74 almost 75 what will you regret
if you don't learn it or do it now you don't have to think you don't know no no i i i actually been thinking about it because I'm in a process right now which is forcing me to look at this.
Which is, how do I be more of a warrior king in my life and in a kind, benevolent way?
And so often I've been not able to stand up for myself in the ways that i need to
i'm not able to tell the truth in the ways i need to tell it i'm not because it's going to
disappoint someone because it's going to make you look bad well mostly because it's going to
maybe get disappoint someone because you know when i was a kid my father my stepfather was a
rageaholic so if i told the truth i would come at me with rage and violence and
physical violence and so i've learned to kind of you know navigate the world in a bit of a
tentative way yeah which i really kind of overcome over the last you know 12 14 years yeah but i feel
like i still have a lot to learn there and i feel like i i i feel like i'm at this moment in my life
where like i know beyond a shadow of a a doubt that there's a scientific revolution that's happened that hasn't reached the public in medicine to help people really transform their health through what we call systems medicine, network medicine, functional medicine, whatever you want to call it.
It's a paradigm shift. And, and I know that, that, that my job here on the planet is to help steward that
in. And if I don't act in the right ways, that's an integrity, that's telling the truth, that's
standing up to the forces that are pushing against me as a warrior King, that, that I will regret it.
So you just answered your question beautifully. And I think
the question then might be, and again, the question is 10 years from now, what will you regret if you
don't learn it or do it now? The thing I would say to you, if, if you were in an MEA workshop
right now, and I was feeling like I'm in a workshop and if we were working together,
I'd say like, okay, so what is it? That's the, what's the tangible of that? What's the specific
that actually you need
to do in order for you to know that you've done that you don't don't answer it because i want to
actually take give people another perspective on this for me when i asked myself that question when
i moved to mexico eight years ago this is before mea opened but i knew i loved baja i loved pescadero
and tode santos the neighborhood where I bought a home and renovated
the home. The thing that I said to myself, well, gosh, 10 years from now, I will regret. At that
point, I was 56. I will regret 10 years from now if I don't learn Spanish now or if I don't learn
how to surf now. And yet I had a mindset, a fixed mindset saying saying i am too old to learn a foreign language i am too old
to learn surfing i started learning surfing when i was 62 well exactly but so but for me the thing
that got me off my duff yeah and gave me that was the sense of like the anticipated regret yeah
10 years from now i will regret especially the thing that's physical you know because it doesn't
get any easier and And also mental.
Like, foreign languages are not easier as you get older.
So anticipated regret is a form of wisdom.
Anticipated regret is a form of wisdom.
And it's a catalyst to take action.
So that's a question I would ask.
Sort of like the Chinese.
You're going to need a 10-year plan.
Well, yeah, or at least this idea that, OK, am I comfortable with the fact that 10 years from now, if I
don't do that, am I going to be okay with that regret?
And if the answer is yes, then there's no catalyst at all.
You're comfortable with that.
So these are the kinds of questions we like to ask at MEA, including questions like, okay,
once a year, you should become a beginner at something
so that you just i when i go to a cocktail party now that's the first question people usually say
like oh what do you do where where do you work it's like my first question is like so what are
you a beginner at these days right and you're like oh my god they walk to the bar like i need a drink
they're like i need a drink like who the hell are you? But helping people to see it's okay to be a neophyte, to be not very good at something,
but to be learning it.
Peter Drucker was famous.
He was a management theorist, lived till 95.
He had a practice.
And his practice was every two years, he would study something to become one of the world's
leading experts on it and something unrelated to being a business school professor or business author.
He wrote two-thirds of his 40 books after the age of 65.
And so this is a man who said like-
That's insane.
Curiosity and learning are sort of like the fountain of youth or an elixir for the soul.
Totally.
I don't like to call it lifelong learning.
I call it long life learning, how to live a life and how to curate a life that's as
meaningful and deep as it is long.
Because I think we're going to get better and better at the longevity, the length of
a life, but the depth of a life is also important.
Well, I mean, it's true.
I mean, I've written 19 books.
Is that right?
Yeah.
Oh, my God.
I've written seven, and I think that's a lot. And the reason is because I want to learn something? Yeah. Oh, my God. I did seven, and I think that's a lot.
And the reason is because I want to learn something.
I know this much, but I want to really become an expert in this topic and do the research
and the hard work.
And I find it so invigorating.
It's like, I was talking to my wife the other day.
I'm like, we both want to go back to college.
And she's like, we can't go to college.
I'm like, yeah, we can because they have summer courses.
Oh, they do?
And there's three-week courses.
And so I actually used to be at Cornell where I went to undergraduate.
Oh, my God.
You should have gone to the hotel business.
No, no, no.
Major hotel school.
I did go to the hotel school for lunch because they had to practice all this gourmet cooking.
So I would go there for their cafeteria. But I actually want to go back and take courses in different topics that are academic because I love learning.
I want to learn.
I want to be forced to learn.
And the reason I've written books is it forces me to learn new things.
I'm now forced to learn new things.
I'm learning about AI.
I'm building a new company, and I have to learn about AI and I have to learn about tech
and I have to learn about user experiences and things that I never really understood before. I
mean, I know how to be a doctor. I'm good with biochemistry and all that shit, but like, this
is all news for me. So, and, and how to work. So there must be a part of you though, who is,
you don't, even though you came up with parents who were a little tough on you, somehow you've gotten to a place where you may not be as self-critical as you used to be.
Is that true?
I think.
Because otherwise you might shut yourself down when you're trying to learn something new.
You know, I think two things happened.
It was like this paradox of things that happened as a kid.
One was my stepfather and father were both very hard on me and judgmental and were both
failures.
So it was kind of a weird dichotomy of them pushing me down while they were down, right?
Yeah.
My mother basically said to me, you can do or be anything you want.
The sky's the limit.
Yeah.
You have this intelligence, the capacity, capacity you work hard you can do whatever you
want and she never and she never put a limit on my thinking you know except for one thing
because my sister was very musical she says your sister's a musical one you can't sing or do music
and that made me so one of my one of my things that i i i would regret in 10 years if i don't do it is to learn
how to sing well my wife and i are talking about taking singing lessons i don't know how it's
gonna go but i i got a guitar oh yeah from bob weir an electric guitar signed for my birthday
bob weir for those you don't know is part of the grateful yeah and is one of my heroes and he
signed a guitar for my birthday and i want to learn how to play the guitar.
You know, that's so funny.
I learned how to play the guitar at age 40.
And it was one of those things,
I didn't ask the question of what I regret.
And I loved it until I got all these calluses on my fingers.
You'll get used to it.
But I loved it.
But I haven't kept it up.
But I think it's great.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I worry about the calluses, because then I want it's great. Yeah. Yeah. I worry about the calluses because then I want to feel things and then, yeah.
Yeah.
But anyway.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So, so it seems like you've created a, uh, sort of this revolutionary new framework for
thinking about how we age.
Well, it's a bit of a movement.
Um, so, you know, this idea of how do we help people see that purpose and community and
wellness are the foundational pieces of living a
good longer life after age 50. And so we have 60 regional chapters around the world, MEA does.
So we have two campuses and we have online programs, but to have 60 regional chapters
means that it's become a global phenomenon. And the idea of how do you help people to actually
feel better about aging? And, you know, we could arm wrestle a little bit about the idea of how do you help people to actually feel better about aging um and you
know and i we could arm wrestle a little bit about the idea of like is aging a disease or is it not
and i you know i physically there's no doubt you know senescence and and the telemeters and things
get changed all of those things are very important the problem that that I have with the Brian Johnsons of the world in Venice Beach and many of the
people in the longevity movement is that they're fixated on only one part of life, the physical
side of life.
And they want to cheat death.
And it's like, fine, go do that.
But if Brian seems like a nice enough guy, I've never met him.
But when I listen to him
in his podcast
I feel sad for him
his life is so regimented
it feels so rigid
and like to the fact
like when could he have an orgasm even
and like what time
is he going to go to bed
and there's
it feels like there's a
there's a joyless striving to it
yeah
and I just want to say
well he's actually being
a scientific experiment for the rest of us.
So I respect him for that.
I respect him for that as well.
That's courageous.
It's like,
it's like someone going to Mars for the first time.
Can you do it?
Exactly.
And what are the,
you know,
the collateral damage associated with it?
Well,
yeah.
How is he happy?
Is he not happy?
I actually met him.
I talked to him.
He's,
he seemed very happy.
Okay.
I mean,
it's hard to judge from the outside but you know i think the the the thing for me that has to
do with the physical health part is that you know my definition of of health and how i want to age
is being able to do whatever i want yeah and for as long as you can and this year i learned
something new helicopter skiing yeah i'd never done it before.
And you did.
Did you do that in Iceland?
I did it in Iceland.
And I just came back from Iceland.
My God.
Yeah, what a beautiful place.
It's amazing.
But, you know, it's something I'd always wanted to do.
Yeah.
I never could afford to do it.
Now I can afford to do it.
Yay.
And it was one of the most exhilarating experiences I've ever had.
And it was something that I want to continue to be able to do, not at just 64, but at 84.
Yeah.
Or 94. I mean, and I think that, not at just 64, but at 84 or 94.
And I think that, for me, is why the biological part is important.
Because it allows us to do the other things, which is to learn and to be engaged in relationships, to have purpose, to do stuff.
Because if you feel like shit, you just want to sit around and watch TV. Yeah. So the average American watches 40, I'm sorry, average American retiree watches 47 hours
of TV a week. So it's almost like they retire from a job that they were doing 47 hours a week.
And they just decided to go be a couch potato watching TV for 47 hours a week. So yeah, that sedentary life is not good for us.
And it's really bad for our brains too.
I mean, the thing that a lot of people think is like,
oh, especially recently with Biden having some challenges
with his mental capacities in his debate,
the reality is that our short-term memory
definitely gets worse with age.
But this idea of crystallized intelligence, the ability to be not so fast and focused with your brain, but as Dr. Gene Cohen
showed, to be able to have four-wheel drive of your brain, to think systemically, holistically,
and to connect the dots. We get better at that into our early 70s. And so it's a little bit of
wisdom. It's a little bit of intuition. It's a little bit of peripheral vision.
And why would we want to actually deprive ourselves and others from that? Which is part of the reason why this movement part of MEA is like, hey, why is it that Ernst & Young, and I like Ernst & Young, and we've had Ernst & Young partners come to MEA, but why are they requiring their partners to leave the firm at age 60?
Really?
Yeah.
And there's a lot of companies that do that.
Because they have to pay them too much.
Well, that's a little bit of it.
A little bit.
Like, hey, let's get you off the payroll.
But the truth is, in some ways, in some parts of your life, that's when your brain is at its best.
Yeah.
And so that's why part of what we help do is say, okay, you're going into your next chapter.
And your next chapter, I like to call it same seed, different soil.
Take that seed of all your wisdom,
but plant it in different soil.
Like I did at Airbnb when I was 52.
I joined a company.
I was twice the age of the average person there.
I had no background in tech.
And so I had to learn a lot from everybody else
because I thought I was supposed to be the mentor,
but I was also the intern.
I was what I call a mentor,
a mentor and an intern at the same
time. And the bottom line is, you know, I was better off for it by learning from the young ones
and they were better off for having me there. Yeah. Yeah. And I think, I think, you know,
what you're talking about is, is developing different aspects of your physical health,
emotional health, mental health, spiritual health spiritual health social health all of which kind
of form this soup of happiness that's right it's not one any one thing because you know for for all
we know you might be a paraplegic tomorrow because we get hit in a crosswalk so if you only have one
if your physical is the only thing that you actually value in life. I mean, Christopher Reeve, you know, God rest his soul, was a really interesting character, very Superman. And then he has a,
you know, horseback riding accident, and he's a paraplegic and, and he had to learn a new identity.
And if we're not willing to learn new identities, we get stuck in the old identity. And that's what feels really depressing.
And especially if that old identity is starting to shrivel up.
And part of what's happening in our society just feels like we're ossifying our ideas
and ideology and identifying with tribalism and divisiveness and separation and discord
and disconnection.
And it's heartbreaking because we're all human beings.
I mean, I had people criticizing me for treating different patients.
Like, you treat a prisoner.
You treat a Republican.
You treat a Christian.
You treat a Muslim.
You treat a Democrat.
I mean, like, what?
You're a doctor.
You treat everyone.
Like, come on.
And I'm like, you know know these are all human beings first
and whatever they are second and we've kind of lost that and i wonder part it seems like part
of what's happening to us is this sort of this ossification is happening earlier and earlier
yeah in life and and and i wonder through the wisdom you've gained through the work at mea
and your just your own personal life how we kind of break through? Because what you're talking about
is building deep, meaningful,
social relationships and connections
as a key part of living a healthier
and happier, longer life.
And that's what Dan Buettner showed,
the blue zones, it's certainly true.
So, but we're going,
it's not like we're going the opposite direction.
Yeah, how do we get,
the key is how do we learn to get to know each other from the inside out?
We tend to get to know each other from the outside in.
That's how we've always been.
And that's led to certain isms, racism, sexism, homophobia, ableism, et cetera.
Well, the reality is that that's what I've learned at MEA. One of the beauties at MEA and Dacher Keltner's work on awe
has shown that the number one pathway
to feeling awe in life is not in nature.
It's number three.
Number two is collective effervescence,
your sense of being with people
and feeling a sense of connection.
But number one in life is moral beauty.
Moral beauty.
Who knew?
Moral beauty is when you witness kindness, courage, compassion, equanimity, resilience in another person. And it
gives you a sense that humanity is good. So part of what we do at MEA is when you come and you're
in a cohort of say two dozen people, no one knows each other's last names. We've not sent out
LinkedIn profiles.
People can, if someone says, what do you do for a living? You can answer it, but you don't have to.
Because actually what we really want people to get to know is like this person for who they are.
And we talk about speaking from the third vault. The first vault is the facts of our lives.
The second vault is the stories of our lives. The third vault is the essence of who we
are. And so having people spend a week together, speaking from that third vault, by the end of the
week, they realize, oh my God, the person I've connected with the most is somebody who is a big
Trumpster. And I'm a Democrat. But I love them. And now I understand them better. So I think the world,
I think America needs to be all coming to MEA for the political division. Because if you get to know
people from the inside out, you understand their motivations, and you assume best intentions.
That's right. And we live in a society right now, partly through social media,
where we assume worst intentions. Yeah, it's such a beautiful movement.
I think what I wonder is people are drawn to you and to MEA because they're already sort of
free kind of set up to think that this is something they want or that they're missing.
How do we reach those people who are just sitting on the couch watching TV for 47 hours? Well, we get their spouse to go first and then their spouse comes home and they're missing. How do we reach those people who are just sitting on the couch watching TV for 47
hours? Well, we get their spouse to go first and then their spouse comes home. So like,
in fact, we have someone in this week's workshop and he's there because his wife went and she came
back radiant and, and, and he said like, okay, I'm going to try it. Um, so we had a union plumber,
uh, who was going to be retiring and he his whole life was
knowing how to fix things and you know there's only so much plumbing you can do at home with
his wife and she's she said like you've got to go to this program so sometimes it's encouragement
from family members uh and from friends who've done it uh But you can't, you know, you can take a horse to water, but you can't make it drink.
If someone doesn't really want to look at themselves or build a deeper connection with
other people, it ain't going to happen.
But what I've found, you know, 5,500 people into this for week-long workshops, is it's
a real rarity that someone actually doesn't want to go there?
Yeah.
Maybe two or three people in six and a half years have left early.
Right.
Maybe.
And that's partly because we actually are in very isolated locations.
Santa Fe is not like a commuter school.
Baja is in another country for most people who are coming.
So, you know, we could have done this in Sonoma for San Francisco
or Hudson Valley for New York,
but we chose places that require a little bit of a pilgrimage,
partly because that first 24 hours,
sometimes people are looking around like,
what the hell am I doing here?
I have never done anything like this.
But by a couple days into it, they're like, wow,
this is how I want to live.
And this is why we actually have created residential communities as well where you know we in baja uh we have something called baja sage which is a
regenerative community it's based on regenerative living principles with a regenerative farm
we're gonna be doing the same here in santa fe a regenerative ranch and so how do you help people
not go to a retirement community but go to a regenerative community. It's a beautiful sort of stake in the ground that you've put in to sort of change the perspective
of how we think about what happens to us as we go through life and get older and things
change.
And one of the things that a lot of us deal with is health issues.
I've had my own five, six years ago.
I almost died from mold
poisoning and i got autoimmune disease colitis i lost 30 pounds you see i'm already pretty skinny
but i was 30 pounds lighter than this and i was like this close to death and i had to pull myself
out i've had to pull myself out of a lot of these things i had chronic fatigue syndrome i had mercury
poisoning i've had lyme disease i've had back issues and you know um i
always found this resource in myself to come back yeah and i wonder kind of you know you're dealing
with something now yeah which is prostate cancer yeah and as long as i've known you you've been
dealing with it yeah um and uh you walked in today and i was like you look great like yeah
a little overweight but you
know because of the some of the treatments yeah yeah yeah yeah so i six years ago how does the
question really is how has that affected your thinking about yeah kind of midlife because it's
like you're thinking midlife i could have another 30 40 years yeah but then i'm facing this yeah
immediate yeah cancer what happens what happens if it's only three years yeah so six years 40 years, but then I'm facing this sort of immediate cancer.
What happens if it's only three years?
Yeah.
So six years ago, I found out I had stage one prostate cancer just through PSA.
PSA, you know, then ultrasound and MRI and biopsy and PET scan and all that stuff.
So stage one is prostate cancer.
No big deal.
We'll be okay and my decipher score was
relatively good which is basically tells like my genome you know am i at high risk or not yeah
but about three years later i went to stage two i had what's called haifu surgery you know it was
supposed to be fine i lost half my prostate prostate, but there's a 1% chance of metastasizing within
five years. And within 15 months it metastasized and went to my pelvic lymphs. And so now it was
outside the prostate. And that's when I had to start a lot of things. So for a year and a half
now, I have been on androgen deprivation therapy. So in essence, a testosterone
blocker. Um, and so I have a, you know, a testosterone score of eight or 12. So it's
really low, like 2% of what it would normally be maybe, or, and so that's hard when you're
launching a book, launching a new campus, that That's what makes you motivated, feel energetic. Yeah, exactly. So, you know, no libido, clearly with that.
I had to have a radical prostatectomy.
So, you know, got the prostate taken out.
And then I had to have 36 sessions of radiation.
You know, and my last session of radiation was January 12th this year.
And on January 15th, I was on Good Morning America.
On January 16th, my book came out. And on January 17th, I was on Good Morning America. On January 16th, my book came
out. And on January 17th, I was on the Today Show. So I have done it, but I will also say
it's taken a bit of a toll. So I take retreats once a month now. And whether that's going to
Iceland for a week or more often going up to a place called Ojo Caliente north of here to go do the hot springs for two to three days.
Going and doing a silent retreat by myself for two or three days.
I do that monthly because I need that as the refreshment.
I'm going to take notes from that.
Yeah, we do need it.
We need it.
I love it. We need it. I mean, you know, like, it's, I love it, you know,
because I'm my joke was, I'm going to kind of go part time and stop working nights and weekends.
Yeah, yeah. Well, and we're very similar. The other thing I started to get to is realizing,
you know, a lot of people think of cancer as this thing you have to kill. And yeah, I mean,
I want to kill my cancer for sure.
But the mentality is very much the warrior mentality.
And I've done, I mean, I've changed diet.
I did a keto diet for six months.
I've done a lot of different things to actually improve it.
I've had functional medicine doctors helping me and supporting me.
And I came to realize that what if I, instead of thought of this as something to kill, what if
I thought of this as school? I am in cancer school. Cancer is my teacher. What's cancer? Why do I have
cancer? What is the purpose of me having cancer? And I've learned a few things. Number one is,
you know, when I have cancer, I can't always be the hero. I like the archetype for me as hero.
I'm going to strap on that cape and become the hero.
And so how do I let other people be the hero?
And how do I let people take care of me?
How do I be less focused on my work?
How do I ask that question?
You know, not 10 years from now, what would I regret?
Three years now, what would I regret?
Because what if this does keep metastasizing elsewhere in my body right um so that became a question how do what is it that i really matter what matters in terms of my relationships i have
two sons i have actually i have a foster son who's 48 years old like that's a long story and then i
have um two biological sons, 12 and nine
with a lesbian couple. I'm gay. And they reached out to me years ago and said like,
we want you to be the dad. We want your sperm. Like, you know, I was like, okay,
I know how to make sperm today with no prostate. I don't know how to make sperm,
but thank God they asked a while ago. So I have two biological sons in Texas and I go hang out with them more. And so to actually look at cancer as a teacher and as the opportunity to change my life and
my lifestyle in certain ways to respect that is great.
I can't wait to be off the androgen deprivation therapy because it's put 15 to 20 pounds on
me because that's what it does.
You actually go through menopause too i mean like you know like i i know what hot sweats do hot sweats and night flashes or not
hot flashes night sweats and and yeah brain brain brain issues too with uh yeah but i will be off
it soon enough you know um someone said to me very wisely said you know we asked why is this
happening to me he said the real question is why is this happening for you, he said, you know, we asked, why is this happening to me? He said, the real question is, why is this happening for you?
And I, you know, I wish you weren't dealing with this.
I wish I didn't have back issues.
I wish I didn't have all the things I had to deal with.
But, you know, it's what we make from it.
You know, it's the meaning and stories we make.
And it's all the little bits that help us kind of get to where our soul is supposed to get to.
I don't know what that is for each of us.
But my deep belief is that we're here to get our souls free.
And I see your work at MEA as sort of central to kind of redefining the process of getting older and imagining how we can actually get freer as we get older not more stuck yeah and and the
midlife crisis is the stuckness it's the stuckness and it's the okay i want to take you know chutes
and ladders back to adolescence um because that i liked that period of my life and i didn't well
you get teenagers a nightmare for me For some people it wasn't.
Yeah.
I know.
I know.
20s was great.
I'll go to 20s.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I can imagine.
And sometimes you're having your adolescence now too.
Yeah.
And that's beautiful because to be age fluid means you're all the ages you've ever been
and will ever be.
Yeah.
And why wouldn't we want to be that? Well, you know, when COVID happened and I got divorced,
I basically, you know, had a motto,
which was no emails, no females, and a backpack.
And that was really powerful because I just got free.
I dropped everything, all my identity.
I really dove into this sort of work of
Ram Dass which I'd known for a long time but he had this sort of audiobook called Becoming Nobody
yeah I love it as opposed to this Becoming Somebody nonsense that we're all striving for
and it was it was it was a really important moment in my life where I did the editing yeah and I did
the really deep inquiry and I was looked at how i got to where i was and you saw
your patterns and i saw my patterns yeah and i'm like i ain't doing this anymore this is fucked up
yeah and i i want to be free and happy and the truth is i've i've never been happier and i can
see it in your eyes freer and it's uh and i've never been healthier because i've also learned
a lot of stuff about how the body works.
I mean, that's the thing about medicine.
It's constantly changing.
It's not like you learn how to put together a record player and it's the same record player.
It's like a Pandora's box of magic.
And I feel like I'm on that ride. And so I feel we, we, we really are in this, this critical moment in society where the things that you're teaching and
things that you're offering are needed more than ever. And I think, um,
you know, people are listening to this,
they're wondering more how to learn about the work and where to find out more.
There's of course your book, uh, which is, uh, lessons in midlife, but what,
tell us more about where they can find out about MEA,
where they can find out about the work that you're doing.
Sure.
The website is meawisdom.com.
And you can see all of our workshops.
As well as for those who don't want to come to our campuses, we have online courses.
Also, I have a daily blog.
A daily blog.
A daily blog.
That you write.
That I write.
And it's on the MEA website.
Wow.
And I love it.
And it's called Wisdom Well.
And so if you
want to sort of learn more about this for free, just subscribe there and you get a daily micro
dose of wisdom from me. Oh, I like the micro dose idea. I thought you would. So the book is
Learning to Love Midlife, 12 Reasons Why Life Gets Better with Age. And your website is?
MEAwisdom.com. And then there's also chipconley.com great well
chip thank you for the work thank you thank you for your courage yeah thank you for making us
take a hard look at ourselves when we'd rather go watch a lot of tv and uh and i look forward to
having the same conversation 10 years from now yes well we can look back and ask the same questions
yes thank you for being a role model. Thanks, Jeff.
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