The Jordan Harbinger Show - 424: Bypassing Putrid Pop's Repulsive Proclivities | Feedback Friday
Episode Date: October 30, 2020Your dad has poor hygiene -- so poor, in fact, his #1 gross habit is that he'll go #2 and not wash his hands afterward. What can you do to discourage your foul father's frightening fecal fora...ys? We'll tackle this (from a distance) and more here on Feedback Friday! And in case you didn't already know it, Jordan Harbinger (@JordanHarbinger) and Gabriel Mizrahi (@GabeMizrahi) banter and take your comments and questions for Feedback Friday right here every week! If you want us to answer your question, register your feedback, or tell your story on one of our upcoming weekly Feedback Friday episodes, drop us a line at friday@jordanharbinger.com. Now let's dive in! Full show notes and resources can be found here: jordanharbinger.com/424 On This Week's Feedback Friday, We Discuss: Tune in on Friday, November 6th at 2 p.m. Pacific through the Stereo app (available on iOS and Android) to hear Jordan and Gabe gab! Ever experience something you can't explain and wonder if you're losing control of your mental faculties? Jordan's got a story about that... Your visiting dad has poor hygiene -- so poor, in fact, his #1 gross habit is that he'll go #2 and not wash his hands afterward, and then touch everything in your house. What can you do to discourage your foul father's frightening fecal forays? You've always been interested in becoming a mental health therapist, but life coach might be as fulfilling a career without the time/money investment. But how can you ensure you're the real deal and legitimately helping people? A friend in your group is difficult, loud, and rude, with zero social skills. The solution might seem to just cut her out of your life, but you've known each other since kindergarten and you know doing so would devastate her. So what should you do? Have any questions, comments, or stories you'd like to share with us? Drop us a line at friday@jordanharbinger.com! Connect with Jordan on Twitter at @JordanHarbinger and Instagram at @jordanharbinger. Connect with Gabriel on Twitter at @GabeMizrahi. Sign up for Six-Minute Networking -- our free networking and relationship development mini course -- at jordanharbinger.com/course! Like this show? Please leave us a review here -- even one sentence helps! Consider leaving your Twitter handle so we can thank you personally!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hey, before I forget, I wanted to mention that Gabe and I are going to be doing a live episode of this show,
not live in person because, you know, COVID, but live in this app called Stereo.
You can find that in the iOS App Store.
And Gabriel and I will be broadcasting live this Friday, November 6th at 2 p.m. Pacific Time.
Friday, November 6, 2 p.m. Pacific Time.
We're going to do a bunch of these, actually, a handful, any case.
and the first one is Friday, November 6, 2 p.m. Gabriel Mizrahi and I, topic is going to be
TBD, but we're going to do something like a deep dive. You'll be able to chat to us inside the app as well.
You'll be able to send us questions. We might be able to get to those. We're sort of feeling out this
process here, but go grab the stereo app in the app store and tune in to us. And I'm Jordan Harbinger
inside the stereo app. You can find me. I've got an eye patch. That's how you can find me.
This Friday, November 6, 2 p.m. Pacific time. Me and Gabe. Catch us live.
Welcome to Feedback Friday. I'm your host, Jordan Harbinger. Today I'm here with Feedback Friday
producer, my comrade in consultation, Gabriel Mizrahi. On the Jordan Harbinger show, we decode the
stories, secrets, and skills of the world's most brilliant people and turn their wisdom into
practical advice that you can use to impact your own life and those around you. I think we should change
brilliant to fascinating. Gabe, some of the people that we talk to, they're fascinating. I don't know if they're
brilliant. I'm not naming any names, but I'm just saying maybe in the next copy we can... Are you perhaps
referring to somebody whose episode is dropping this week?
No, no, no, no, no.
This is completely unrelated, I promise.
It's just that when I read that, I went,
are they all brilliant?
I don't know.
I don't know.
Anyway, we turn their practical wisdom into advice
that you can use to impact your own life
and those around you.
We want to help you see the Matrix
when it comes to how these amazing people think and behave.
See, they're all amazing,
but they're not necessarily all brilliant.
That's my only qualm.
I hear you.
Our mission is to help you become a better informed
more critical thinkers
so that you can get a deeper understanding
of how the world,
works and make sense of what's really happening, even inside of your own mind. If you're new to this show
on Fridays, that's today, whatever day it is for you, it's still Friday for us. We give advice to you,
we answer listener questions. The rest of the week, we have long-form interviews and conversations
with a variety of, I won't say brilliant, but fascinating folks, from spies to CEOs,
athletes to authors, thinkers, performers, for a selection of featured episodes to get you started
with some of our favorite guests, popular topics. Go on over to Jordan Harbinger.com. We'll hook you right
up this week we had billy mcfarland if you haven't heard that name i don't blame you but he started
fire fest which was a total catastrophe he did an interview with us this was his first interview ever
with any media of any kind from prison it was from prison yeah so um i'm sorry how did that
line up i can't imagine that was as easy as calling as publicist that was not there is no publicist
to be had no it's a i got friends in low places i think is the moral of that story and i scooped the
New York Times, we scooped, to be fair, the whole team was involved. We scooped in New York Times,
Vanity Fair, and everyone else, we got him first, and it was fascinating. And he said some surprising
things. I will leave it to you to listen to that episode released earlier this week. That's
Billy McFarland. We also had Celeste Headley, who's a journalist over at NPR. She's an expert
on conversation. I think she's great. She's absolutely brilliant. Now, that is a qualified
brilliant right there. She's brilliant when it comes to having better and more productive
conversations. You'll dig that one as well. I also write every so often on the blog. My latest piece,
our latest piece. If you are too busy to respond, you are doing something wrong. It's all about
the silly excuses people make for not being on top of their inboxes, their texts, their communications,
and how not being responsive, not making everyday relationships a priority, how that can be,
and most likely is, holding you back in some pretty major ways. Gabriel, I don't know about you.
when I see somebody who has like 72 unread texts, I get, is there a word for like anxiety that I catch
contagiously by osmosis by being near that person? I just can't deal with that. That's my own stuff. I get it.
But who has unread texts in that amount? Here's the thing. On the iPhone, you can't mark texts as unread.
That just means they have never seen those texts. Good point. What? How are you surviving day to day? That's what I'm
wondering. You have digital anxiety by proxy, I believe, is probably.
probably the technical term for the horror that you're describing.
Oh, it's so awful.
And seeing somebody's sunscreen.
Yeah, it is weird.
I don't know.
If I saw that, I would probably freak out a little bit.
Yeah.
Anyway, make sure you've had a look and listen to all that.
The articles are at Jordan Harbinger.com slash articles.
Podcasts are where you listening right now.
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Hit us up Friday at Jordan Harbinger.com.
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Go figure.
Some of these people's names that we say on the show,
we just make them up.
You could never tell.
By the way, the weirdest thing happened to me this week.
Gabriel, I know I called you about this,
but I wanted to share it here on the show.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. I want to understand this because it's still friggin bizarre. I don't quite understand it.
It was so weird. So I walk and read. So I read audiobooks, listen to audiobooks. And I was walking...
Nerd. Yeah, nerd alerts, yes. So I was walking around my neighborhood wearing like one of those Korean grandma hats that keep the sun off of you, which is what I do.
I'm sorry, a what? You don't know about Korean grandma hats? They have like a face shield and a giant neck thing so that you don't get any sun on you. You haven't seen these?
Oh, kind of like, is it like a visor?
Huge brim.
but it's not a visor.
It's like an old lady gardener brim.
Okay, okay, okay.
I've never heard of them.
It's a great image.
So I wear that in a landscaper shirt,
which is like a really thick longsleeve shirt
that's about bright yellow
or as bright orange as you can get.
So a lot of people think I'm like a landscaper,
but I'm just a weirdo walking around the neighborhood
reading books about it.
Easy mistake to make with you.
Yeah, it really is, honestly.
And so I dictate notes sometimes
because it's easier to speak
if I have like a longer sentence
than just whipping out my phone and typing.
Definitely sound like a crazy,
person.
I was walking around talking to myself while wearing a gardening outfit in the hot sun for
miles at a time.
You were like a 50-150, just walking down the street.
It is definitely awkward.
So I'm dictating and normally it works fine.
And a couple days ago, whatever it was, I'm dictating and I'm going like, okay, so in
his office, I can't remember.
What was I saying?
Like, in the office, they make sure that everyone has a chance to learn during the meetings
or whatever thing I was trying to dictate into my notes for the show.
and all this gibberish sentences kept going into the Google Docs app.
I restart the Google Docs app.
I turn off dictation, turn it back on, doesn't help.
Put my AirPods back on.
Doesn't help.
All this gibberish.
And then I finally started reading,
instead of just deleting the gibberish out of my notes,
I started reading it.
And I would say something like,
this company's existed for 150 years.
And what would get dictated into the Google Doc
would be something like,
I can hear you from inside the machine.
And I was freaking out.
Freaking out.
Does that mean?
Yeah, first of all, what does that mean?
Second of all, it happened over and over.
I would delete that and then I'd go, no, this company is 150 years old.
And it would say, I can barely hear you.
Can you speak loudly?
And then there'd be more gibberish.
Like, it wasn't exactly that sentence.
And I would just say it again and again.
And it would say something like, am I crazy or are you crazy?
And I was just thinking, like, I don't know the answer to that question.
What's wrong with me?
What's happening right now?
I'm sorry.
This is the creepiest.
I didn't quite understand what you were trying to tell me on the phone because I think
you were so freaked out. I couldn't quite understand what was happening. But like, what is this?
Is this like an AI prank? Or is this like Google programmed to some joke into like Easter egg into their
AI? That had occurred to me. So I tried a different app. Same thing was happening. Then I was like,
okay, the phone is messed up. Reboot the phone. No change. Oh, well. I was like, okay, this is bizarre.
So I think the 2020 hindsight, what I think happened, because I don't believe in supernatural stuff or
anything like that. I think I was using Bluetooth AirPods. It may be connected to multiple devices at once,
and somebody inside their house was either messing with me or had a movie playing or was talking and
also heard me talking to their computer or something like that, and they heard my voice coming.
Like somewhere in my neighborhood, there's somebody going, no, I swear that the Bluetooth speaker
was talking. I swear this happened. Somebody else has a creepy story. Yeah, they were talking about meetings,
and I was just like, who are you? What are you doing?
And, you know, because it was that kind of thing.
Like 150 years?
What does that mean?
Yeah.
What is he trying to tell?
What is my Bluetooth pill speaker trying to tell me?
That's creepy.
It was something like that.
Yeah.
So I, but it gave me kind of a perspective on mental illness because I really thought for a second,
I go, okay, this is not a prank.
This is definitely really happening.
But is it, though, or am I crazy?
Like, am I having a weird hallucination in my neighborhood?
So I stopped.
I, like, took my sunglasses off.
I'm rubbing my eyes.
I'm looking around.
I'm taking a deep.
breath, I called you because I was like, okay, am I being weird right now? Like, am I talking funny?
What's happening? Because if I called you and you were like, hey, are you okay? You sound weird.
You're slurring. And I'm like, I'm fine. You know, then I would realize it was me.
Yeah. But I just couldn't find the explanation for it. So it gave me a kind of a bit of compassion
for mental illness. And then also, if you look for an explanation and you convince yourself that
something is true, you can find patterns and things that aren't really there. And this is called
patternicity. Michael Shermer talked about it on the show a long time ago. We're going to
to bring that episode out of the vault, but it's called Patternacity. And it has to do with the fact
that humans look for patterns in anything. And I went back to the Google Doc, and I looked at some of the
things that I dictated because I stopped deleting them after a while. And it didn't exactly say,
with no extraneous words, I can hear you from inside the machine. It said things like,
hello, who, what? Okay, I can hear you inside the machine. And then something else, right,
with maybe another word thrown in there. But all I read was, I can hear you from inside the machine,
which obviously scared the living daylights out of me.
So that was the kind of thing that I went,
wait a minute, okay, I'm actually convincing myself more
that this is happening.
It also reminded me, the third bullet here,
it reminded me of the Mark Edwards episode
from a couple weeks ago where he's doing fake psychic readings
and he's saying, oh, you know, everyone thinks you're really caring.
Also, you're an adventure in your future
and everyone's like adventure.
Well, that's in the future, I can't just prove that.
Ooh, you have a lot of animals in your house.
And they're like, I don't really have any animals.
But my friends do think I'm a caring person.
and you forget about the stuff that's wrong,
and you look at the stuff that actually matches
what you want to believe about yourself.
Since I didn't think I was crazy,
and since I was looking for a pattern,
I saw that something was happening,
but then I eventually figured out,
okay, this has to be the technology issue.
And I ended up resetting the AirPods
and walking away from that area,
and it went away, and they're fine,
and it's never happened again.
But it got me thinking, like,
our brains are so good at tricking us.
Even when there isn't anything there,
your brain is going to go, wait,
I got to make sense of all this data.
Right.
And it will make sense of the data, even if there's no sense to be had.
Even if there's not data points supporting that.
Yeah, you'll just ignore the ones and take the ones you do want or that your brain wants.
That's interesting.
Yeah.
Yeah, I get it.
So that was an interesting sort of segue.
If that happened to me, I would have freaked out, man.
I mean, I was a little nervous.
First, I was just pissed because I was like, oh, it's so frustrating that my dictation's not working.
And then I started reading it and I was like, okay, what the, what is happening?
Like, I can deal with somebody being like, what?
Sorry, didn't catch that, but somebody being like, I'm speaking to you from inside the machine.
The call is coming from inside the house, right?
Yeah, that's what it was.
It was like, what the hell?
Yeah, at first it was an inconvenience.
But then as soon as my brain saw the pattern to kind of arise out of it, that's when I was looking around.
Like, good thing it's not dark outside.
Right.
You're like, I'm not in an anime after all.
Exactly.
Yeah, Scream 7.
Oh, also, in a brief announcement, I have a course on how to do a podcast interview.
A lot of people ask me for this.
It's out right now.
Some of you probably found it already because I mentioned it casually in a couple earlier episodes
and on social media. It's available at Jordan Harbinger.com slash how to interview, no spaces.
Stay tuned after the episode, this episode, at the very end, after the show close and everything.
For a snippet from the course, you can also go to Jordan Harbinger.com slash how to interview
to buy. I did it in concert with Himalaya. And it's affordable. I think it's like 40 bucks.
I haven't checked the price recently. I know it's going to go up and down with sales.
but it's very affordable.
It's literally like under 50 bucks.
It might even be under 40 bucks.
That's Jordan Harbinger.com slash how to interview.
And it's all my super cool secrets of experience over time.
It's not what microphone to buy.
It's literally like how to research and conduct an interview for podcasting.
You don't need it if you're trying to get a job interview or do anything like that.
It is for content creators and it's something I did with Himalay.
Gabe, what's the first thing out of the mailback?
Hey, gang.
I have a five-year-old and my brother has a,
a four-year-old and a six-month-old. We want my dad, who's a great-grandpa, to spend as much time
with them as possible. The problem is, my father has terrible hygiene. My dad will go number two
and not wash his hands. Gross. Gross. We don't hear water, and the sink is dry. We live far away
as well, so he has to stay for days when he comes to visit. He showers on average once every three
days. Well, wait, hold on. Plot twist. Maybe he doesn't even wipe. Clean hands. I don't know.
Never mind. The odds of
that slim. I don't know, man. After this, I don't know what. How can you not wipe? You have to. There's
no bidet. They would have mentioned a bidet. I want to live in a world where this guy's dad wipes. That's
what I want to live in. But just doesn't wash his hands afterwards. That's just me. I'm just
you know, I'm an optimist, whatever. We've mentioned it before. We've gotten angry. We've
joked about it. We place hand sanitizer around the house for hints. We remind him that fresh towels are
in the bathroom. We've even embarrassed him. But nothing changes. He reaches his hands in the chip bag.
No. Obviously, those are his now.
Totally. Good way of keeping the chips to yourself.
Our kids ask for food and he tries to feed them. We sprint across the room to stop him.
Oh, gross. I cringe when he holds the new baby. We don't want to offend him, but we need better hygiene.
It makes all visits a complete stress fest. Our kids are now becoming scared to touch grandpa.
Are we overreacting here? I think you already know the answer to that.
Yeah.
If not, how do we address this?
and what if nothing changes, signed Dealing with Dad's Dastardly Dishevelment.
Wow, nice one.
Man, this first question stinks, huh, Gabriel?
Oh, man, that was low-hanging fruit, but it was the correct food.
Look, this email, that joke was cringe, but this email makes me really cringe, especially
as a dad of a toddler, as you could tell by that dad joke a minute ago, look, right now,
especially not washing your hands, bad in general, but not washing your hands on the Rona
could be crawling all over them.
Literal nightmare.
Yeah, this is a problem.
And the sad part is your dad is great at being a grandfather.
He's not some carmudgeonly wanker you have to deal with who all, you know, happens to
smell like a UFC fighter's jockstrap.
That would be so much easier.
That would be easier.
That would be easier.
If this guy's sweet, you want him around, he's making it very difficult.
Look, on the bright side, your kids' immune systems are going to be super strong.
But really, really nasty.
That is so gross.
And it's dangerous.
Look, this is tough because my advice would have been to bring it up.
with him directly, crack a few jokes so he doesn't feel embarrassed, hope that he gets it,
ratchet it up a little bit, maybe put some social pressure on and embarrass him. You've already
tried that and he still won't change. You put towels by the fridge as a reminder. There's
Purell in his underwear drawer. I mean, he's just not taking the hint. So, look, you could keep
a bunch of chlorox wipes around the house. If you can find some, I haven't been able to find any since
we thought Kim Jong-un was temporarily dead back in like April. That is the last time we heard about
Chlorox wipes.
Yeah, they're just gone.
You can't get them.
Nope, entire aisle full of Rite Aid is just empty.
I feel like you got to physically wipe down your dad's hands before he reaches into the bag of sun chips,
but you can't be everywhere at once.
And I'm not sure that's even practical.
I can imagine Gabe this person just getting PTSD when they hear the chip bag crinkle because
they're like, there's dad ruining the snack item.
What is it?
What bag can I not touch now?
35 years later, they can't open up a bag of Pringles.
Yeah, somebody opens up some Fritos and they're like, ooh, I got to take a shower.
It's a thing. Sorry, it's a thing. I got to do it. So to answer your question, are we overreacting here?
Definitely not. I don't think it's crazy to expect Grandpa to wash his gross, gross hands before he holds
the little Cody and digs into your bag of skinny pop. There's a freaking pandemic going on.
This would be important in normal times during COVID, non-negotiable. We know this virus is transmitted
through the mouth and nose and eyes often via people's hands. So no, you're not, you're not being
Howard Hughes over here. You're being totally
responsible, reasonable.
The one upside, though, is, like I said, your kids
are going to have super strong immune systems.
They are going to be immune to
a lot of stuff that comes their
way, but maybe don't get them
super sick with E. coli and other gross things.
I'm surprised your dad doesn't get sick all the time.
I guess he's probably gone through it already.
Bro, this guy went through the pandemic of
1918, and he made it. He made it.
He's probably just made of stronger stuff than we are.
I was in the Korean War. We didn't have Purell.
Exactly. So how do you address this?
I would have one more conversation where you really lay it out there.
Tell him your concerns bluntly.
Explain why this is so important.
Blame it on COVID if it helps.
Maybe taking the attention off of him and onto the virus will help.
In this conversation, I would lay out the consequences if he doesn't change.
Tell him, if you don't start washing your hands and taking showers, we can't have you
over and you can't play with the kids.
It's not a punishment.
It's a health thing.
Also, make him understand why you are so concerned.
Tell him how poor personal hygiene, especially in older people, can lead to all sorts of serious outcomes.
Skin infections, bacterial and fungal infestations, which is, ugh, gross, gastroenteritis could happen,
and how it can lead to other conditions like septicamia, which is blood poisoning, basically.
Tell him, you are asking to improve his hygiene for his own benefit as well as for his kids and grandkids.
You know, don't make it about you, make it about him and the grandkids.
And if he doesn't care about himself, make it about the grandkids.
Really give it one more shot so that you know you did everything you could to help your dad understand that this is a problem before you make a more drastic decision.
If nothing changes though, then you got to make a decision that works for you.
Maybe he can only come over for a day, not for days at a time, if that's even possible, if he lives close enough.
Maybe he has to stay at a motel nearby, one with lots of soap that he won't ever use.
Maybe he can't directly interact with your kids.
You just can't be around them without you guys there to wipe his hands down.
this will come down to your standards and values as a parent, and every parent is different.
I know this just from my own prefs here.
You'll have to weigh keeping your kids safe against giving them the joy of hanging out with grandpa.
But like I said, there are objective health concerns at play here.
The hardest part will probably be hurting his feelings and depriving him of time with his
grandchildren, but that is something you can tell him as well.
I really don't want to keep you away from them, but if you don't wash your hands,
this is going to become a problem.
Gabe, any other thoughts here?
Well, no, I think that's really fair advice.
I do wonder, though, if his age is playing a role here.
Did you think about this just as an older man?
Like, the letter didn't say whether this hygiene thing was, you know, a new problem or it'd always been a thing with him.
But if it is a new thing, and I kind of get the sense that it is, then there might be a little bit of cause for concern.
Older people, you know, they do tend to fall off sometimes in their hygiene for a few reasons.
One common one is dulling senses in general.
A lot of the time, like, they just can't see or smell if it's time to change clothes.
or take a shower. I think that's called nose blindness.
Interesting. I've never thought about that. That's so true, though.
But another one, and the one that I'm wondering about is depression.
You know, depression, by the way, that can be harder to spot in older people
because the signs of depression like fatigue or irritability or lack of interest.
Describes all old people pretty much, not all.
Yeah, yeah. I mean, it can look a lot like getting older in general.
And there are other reasons for poor hygiene as well.
There's a desire for control and people being afraid or uncomfortable all around
having to have someone make them bathe. I mean, it's awkward, right? And there's always
like cognitive impairment like dementia, but I don't know if that's going on. I think we would
have heard about it. But depression and cognitive impairment, those are the two things that I would
look out for with your dad. What seems to you, like a lack of interest in just staying clean, it could
just be that, but it also could be a sign of something else worth finding out. The conditions
that cause cognitive impairment, they do come with other behavioral changes, you know, sensitivity
to stimuli or a struggle to keep track of time. And if you put all those things together, you can
start to understand why somebody of his age wouldn't, you know, cozy up with some old spice.
So I'm thinking, has he seen a doctor recently? Maybe you should take him to his primary care
physician and tell him what you're noticing. A PCP could give him a basic cognitive assessment,
order some labs and maybe get a picture of how your dad is doing in general. And if he needs more
attention, then you can take him to a neurologist or possibly a psychiatrist if you notice any mood
related changes. That'll tell you more about what's going on with him and hopefully get your
dad the help he needs if he needs it. Aging parents, man, you don't.
don't think it'll happen to you until it does. It makes me think about how I tell my dad that he
needs to sing the happy birthday song twice through while he washes his hands before holding Jaden.
Awkward. But also a good reminder that it's something we just got to do for our parents at some point.
My dad, though, he's a bathroom door handle toucher. Like he'll wash his hands, flick the water off
in a public restroom, and then just go and touch the gross handle. And then he's like,
all right, let's go eat some pizza. And I'm like, you, sir, are not touching anything that's
going anywhere near me.
See, that's what I'm talking about.
Their generation, they're made of different stuff.
He's made it this long.
He's probably fine.
But you and I, after COVID, there's no way.
No way.
But I was also never, even, I remember being like four and my dad was touched the handle.
And I go, dad, the handle's yucky.
And he'd be like, whatever.
And I'm like, nope, I was right.
I was like a four-year-old.
I was like, you are gross.
Yeah.
You were also a non-door handle toucher for famously for years.
I remember when we both walked out of the one at Podcast 1 and we both took our paper
tiles with us from the dispenser.
to the door and there was not a trash can by the door and we were like, what kind of people
are they catering to here?
I'm throwing it on the floor.
I'm throwing this on the floor.
Then you become that guy.
Which is not fair to anybody, but that's what has to be done.
What am I going to do?
Put it in my pocket?
No, absolutely not.
You walk into the office like, hey, is there a garbage can for this paper towel that I definitely
took from the men's room because I'm the non-door handle.
Now though I have no shame.
I'm like, look, what?
Somebody throw this away.
Give me a garbage can.
I'm not touching the handle.
Disgusting.
Such rock star behavior.
You're a fucking diva now. Absolutely. I'd open my own door. Okay. This place has gone downhill.
Just throw it in the director's face of the podcast. Yeah. The producer here. Eat this.
Oh my God. You're listening to Feedback Friday here on the Jordan Harbinger show. We'll be right back.
And now back to Feedback Friday on the Jordan Harbinger show. All right, what's next?
Oh, man. Okay. Hi, Jordan. I've been a stay-at-home mom for the last 10 years.
right out of college and would like to find a career to ease into over the next decade.
My husband and I will be empty nesters in our early 40s and plan to be financially free before then.
My husband is starting to show some signs of a neurodegenerative disease.
And depending on how quickly things progress, there may come a time soon when he won't be able to be
the breadwinner.
So it's my turn to start bringing in an income, preferably part time.
That terrifies me, actually.
As a 40-year-old now, I'm like, oh, my God, we're not invincible.
The feeling of invincibility you have in your 20s and early 30s,
goes away and then it is quickly replaced by not only am I not invincible, but life is really
fragile, especially now some of that's COVID, but the fact that like people my age are getting
neurodegenerative diseases is absolutely terrifying. Unbelievable. Sorry to hear this. Anyway, continue.
I've always been interested in becoming a mental health therapist, but that would require quite a
big investment of time and money. My therapist suggested I look into becoming a life coach because
of the flexibility with where and when to work, and I'd be able to help people with a
wellness instead of things like trauma. I'm hesitant to pursue this path because it feels like it might be
too much of a hustle, but the other issue is that I want to be legitimate and well qualified for whatever I do.
I do not want to feel like an imposter. I don't want to tell people I can help them and then not really
be able to help them. If I do go the life coach route, are there any well-respected programs or
schools you would recommend? Do you have any advice for someone thinking about becoming a life coach?
Or do you think I should run the other direction and do something like HR, which is another
career option that sounds interesting to me, but wouldn't require that huge initial investment to get
started. Signed, taking the lie out of Life Coach. Hmm, okay, so look, I know I make fun of Life Coaches a lot
here on the show, but to be fair, they're kind of an easy target. There are just too many of them these
days, especially the ones you see promoting themselves on Instagram, social media, people who woke up
one day on their mom's couch half the time, not knowing what they wanted to do. And they thought,
Hey, why don't I tell other people what to do, which I find a little suspicious at best.
A good rule of thumb for finding a coach is, have they succeeded at something other than coaching
before they became a coach?
It doesn't have to be the thing that you want to do.
There are plenty of coaches that are great tennis coaches that never won the French Open,
but have they succeeded at anything other than coaching?
Sports coaching may be the difference here, Gabriel, I think,
because there are world-class coaches that just have a pre-year.
proven track record that you can measure.
Like, he's got three Super Bowls.
He's a good coach, right?
That's fair.
But life coaches or financial coaches, it's like, I'm not so sure about this.
Is being a coach their only real qualification?
I'm not saying 100% of coaches need to live up to that standard.
I'm sure that there are some incredible coaches who have found their calling early on
and are fantastic at what they do.
But that does weed out a lot of the people who just did an online certification course
from their childhood bedroom and started telling people they met at the gym how to curate their
life because they couldn't cut it in retail or whatever. Unfortunately, life coaching is an industry
with little slash really no oversight, loose standards, if any standards at all, which invites
a lot of questionable folks peddling questionable ideas that are rooted in pseudoscience.
They've no performance background whatsoever. Like you said, most of the time, it's just too much
of a hustle. But all right, let's talk about you. I got to say, I love the way that you are approaching
this question. You're not one of the people I was just talking about. You actually want to be of value.
You actually want to be qualified. You don't just think you are already because of your life experience
or something. You actually want to make a difference. You don't want to be a bullshit artist
walking your clients through some manifestation exercise you learned 20 minutes ago on Tumblr.
I admire that. I really do. And I'm very sorry to hear about your husband, by the way,
like I said, that's horrible. I'm sure it puts a lot of pressure on you to make the right choice here.
For what it's worth, you sound like a responsible and thoughtful person.
These are two qualities that will serve you very well in whatever you choose to do.
So here's my advice on becoming a life coach, so to speak.
If you feel called to that kind of work, I think you should explore it.
But do a lot of homework before you dive in.
First, do some research on how the best life coaches out there have trained.
I'm talking like the top five, 10% of coaches.
Do they have a degree in psychology?
social work. Did they get certified at the same one or two institutes? Did they go to some kind of self-directed
research? Do they have additional training and organizational leadership, performance science,
conflict resolution, mediation, meditation, anything like that? I don't know. Do they have their own
coach? Try to piece together a common curriculum from the people who are doing the best version of what you want to do.
And don't believe the hype on social media, right? There's a lot of people that have like 200,000 followers,
and they're like, I'm a life coach.
Really?
Do they just buy followers?
Do they write for a blog like Forbes or entrepreneur
where you get the little blue check mark
and now you're thinking, oh, they're doing so many great things?
How do you know?
How do you know that they are?
How do you know they're even successful?
Or are they just selling coaching courses?
Don't work with those people.
See if you can replicate the successful people
in your own way, what they are doing in your own way.
I actually don't even know which life coaching programs
are supposed to be good.
I'm sure you could Google your way to that answer pretty easily.
My only advice there is this, just as I said earlier, do not follow the marketing.
Don't follow Google ads.
Don't follow sponsored posts.
Look for the programs that get mentioned organically or that show up in people's bios a lot.
Even many of those are going to end up being scams, frankly.
Do your homework on those programs.
Read up on their alumni.
Testimonials, which are often fake, by the way.
Their ratings, their press, reviews can be faked.
Anything can be a scam, but life coaching is much more rife with scams than most other places.
any kind of coaching these days is very trendy.
Don't take anyone's word for it.
Really do your due diligence before handing over your money to any of these places.
The next thing I would do is find out what being a life coach really actually means.
Reach out to a handful of working life coaches.
I say working because way too many of these types of people,
they spend their days bullet journaling and drinking $8 matcha lattes at a vegan cafe,
probably near Gabe's house somewhere.
get to know them, ask if you can book 15 minutes with them by phone and find out what the day
to day of this job is really like. Don't fall for, they're like, oh, I need to get an assessment going
and find, no, just find out what the day to day of the job is really like. And if you can
shadow somebody for a day or two, then great. Tell them you're not in the market to become
one of their clients. You are trying to become a coach yourself. Many of them will turn you down
and that's fine. How long does it take to build up a successful practice? If things went well,
Would you enjoy seeing four, six clients a day?
Are you willing to spend the rest of your time attracting new clients and selling?
Can you realistically become financially free by being a part-time life coach?
We'll get into what these people get paid later.
What hourly rate will you have to hit in order to make enough money?
And what exactly do you want to specialize in?
Is it work, dating, spirituality, aging, wellness?
Do you want to focus on individuals, executives, companies?
Do you want to do the marketing work to build your practice around that special?
because you're definitely going to have to do that.
That's going to be the majority of what you do, probably.
Will you need an LLC or a business type of insurance?
You're going to have to do a lot of work around the actual coaching.
So it's important to know what that really entails, and if you're up to the task.
And this is not unique to life coaching, by the way.
This is true of every single job that seems interesting.
There is always a huge part of it that just sucks or is not even sort of inside the core.
It's important to know what that is before you're in too deep.
This show has tons of marketing and finance and negotiation, and I've got to do this and that and manage
this and then, and these people and these teams. It's not just read books, talk to smart people.
I've designed it so that's the majority of my time, but it certainly isn't all of it.
I spent years coaching and consulting, and I spent so much more time on admin, lead generation,
sales than I ever did on actual coaching. I had to hire coaches to coach because I was the only one
who could do lead gen sales admin. By the time I had enough research,
resources to scale. I was so sick of coaching. I'm telling you. True story. Also, you're going to spend a ton of time
finding clients, closing clients, a ton of time trying to convince those leads. You're not like the other
10,000 life coaches that came up on Google when they were searching. Then you got to collect their money.
You got to chase them. That's the problem in an industry with no certification, no barrier to entry.
And that is filled to the brim with con men and 20-somethings, which the life coaching industry really is.
Con men and 20-somethings that just don't want to get jobs. They're hustling on the internet. You might not
want to play that game. I know I sure don't. I would also get clear on what qualities a good life coach
needs to have. Gabe, I don't know. Do you want to take it from here? I feel like you're pretty good at this
kind of stuff. Well, I just want to say that I agree with everything you've just shared Jordan, but this woman
does seem particularly thoughtful, as you pointed out. And if she did decide to go down this path,
I'm pretty confident she would not be like any of these other people. No, no, she won't. Yeah, no, I don't
think you think so either, but I just want to be super clear because the upside to having an industry that's
filled with a bunch of, as you put it, con men and questionable folks, is that the ones who are
actually good really do rise to the top. It might take a shit ton of marketing to get noticed and to get
to that point, but people are so desperate for good life coaching that the really, really good ones
do stand out. So that's something to keep in mind alongside this. But as for the qualities that
make a good life coach good, I don't know. I mean, in my view, a great coach has to genuinely
love watching other people succeed. They have to be empathic toward other people. They have to be
super invested in their struggles, their successes. They have to be patient. They have to be willing to
to help somebody work through a difficult challenge and not just want to solve that problem for them or,
you know, rush them through the solution. In many ways, the relationship is similar to that of a therapist
and a patient, but the rules are much fuzzier. That goes to the lack of regulations that you were
talking about, which is fair. I mean, it's a different industry. But there's more emphasis on work
and end results. And are those the qualities that you already have or are the qualities that you'd like
to develop? I think that's a good question. Is that a relationship you wouldn't
enjoy having with people most of the time. That's another good question. You know, if you do decide to
pursue this kind of work, then I would recommend trying it out for a few months. Here's an idea.
You could approach two or three people you know and tell them, you know, I'm thinking about
becoming a life coach. I want to learn more about the role. Would you be interested in having
me coach you for free for three months, let's say? And they would basically get free coaching,
which is great. And you would get a sort of low pressure internship. It's a win-win. And then coach
them for a few months and see what happens. And that'll teach you the most you can learn
about the coaching dynamic, what people will actually need from their coach, what you need to develop,
where you need to develop as a coach. Or it'll teach you that you really don't like this kind of work
at all and that it's not for you, in which case you can pursue another path like HR and you can
know that you made the right choice. But basically, I think what Jordan and I are trying to tell you
is that you want to make sure that you will enjoy this work and that you can actually help people
in a meaningful way. And I know that that's what you want to do too. You said you want to be
legit. You said you want to be well qualified. You don't want to feel like an imposter. I really
admire that. But to do that, you have to be willing to put in a ton of work. And that basically means
doing, you know, the basic training that every life coach goes through, for sure. But it also means
deepening your knowledge around psychology and health and wellness and becoming more curious and
more empathetic and more informed and basically just developing your capacity for close relationships
with your clients and putting in hours and hours to get good as a coach. So you have to constantly
be a student, I think, to want to thrive at that kind of work and to always be learning about what
makes people tick and how to make them better. So if you really love it and if you could see yourself
being super committed to it and you do think that you can be truly useful, then I think you could be a
great life coach, but those are the questions that you have to answer. And honestly, I wish all life
coaches approach the decision the way you are. If they did, the profession wouldn't be so wishy-washy
and we would not be able to make fun of them nearly as much as we do on the show. By the way, before we
wrap this one, I do want to go over the average annual earnings according to pay scale. This should
dissuade you and everyone else from becoming a life coach. Okay. California, $35,650, New York, $37,000, roughly.
Colorado, $50,000. We guess life coaches are more in demand in Colorado. There's probably less of
them, so they have more clients. Alaska, $60,000. Tennessee, $23,000, $24,000, basically. The moral,
move to Alaska if you want to become a life coach, unless you, you know, want to drive for Lyft to
bolster your salary and pay for that audible subscription. So it's not super lucrative. This is not something
you'll be better off going to school and becoming an actual therapist, in my opinion. Again, I don't
want to slam life coaches too much, but it's not a great gig, generally speaking, for most people.
This is the Jordan Harbinger show, and this is Feedback Friday. We'll be right back.
Thanks for listening and supporting the show. Your support of our advertisers keeps us going. Who doesn't
love some good products and or services? You can always visit Jordan.
harbinger.com slash deals for all the details on everybody that helps support the show. And now for the
conclusion of Feedback Friday. All right, Gabe, what's next? Hey, J-Team. One of my friends in my friend
group is an extremely difficult and sometimes rude person. She lacks basic social skills and will
often ramble about her interests in a condescending manner as though her opinions are the only ones
that matter. She also frequently talks much too loudly, even when my friends and I repeatedly ask her to
quiet down and generally doesn't seem to have much of a regard for our comfort levels or what's
appropriate. It's gotten to the point where other friends in the group have expressed that they don't
want to hang out with her anymore and have even started excluding her from group invites, unbeknownst to her.
I feel like it's only a matter of time before she realizes that she's being excluded and that
most people in the group feel negatively about her. Although the easy answer would be to cut her out
of the friend group, it isn't that simple. Most of us have known her since kindergarten, that's almost
20 years and don't intend on losing her as a friend. We're also the only friends that she has,
so cutting her off would likely devastate her. I want to talk to her about being more conscientious,
but I don't know how to go about it. I worry that if I say something, I'll only hurt her and make her
feel unwanted. Even worse, she suffers from anxiety and depression, so I also worry that it would
only trigger a breakdown. How do I tell someone, hey, all of your friends find you insufferable and
want you to completely change without completely ruining her? Signed, tethered,
tired, and terrified.
Oh, yikes.
This is pretty bad.
Wait a minute.
Gabe, is this one about me?
Be honest.
Yeah, I wrote into the feedback Friday inbox, hoping that you would see this letter.
Huh.
That's what I did.
Yikes.
Look, I can totally relate.
Sorry, Jordan.
Can you just keep it down just a little bit?
Yeah, sorry.
I know.
Yeah, thanks.
I'm pretty loud.
That actually is true.
Not self-aware at all.
I used to get in trouble in kindergarten because I talked a lot, but all the kids would talk
It's just that my voice would carry the whole classroom all the way down the hall and be like,
you know, Jordan's so loud.
Or it was more like, Jordan's the only one talking.
I was like, no, I'm just louder than everyone else combined.
You pick the right professional.
Yeah, I guess so.
I guess so.
Could have been an auctioneer.
I can relate to this.
Look, I've had a couple friends like this over the years, no names mentioned, and it's always
incredibly awkward.
Do I say something?
Do I not say something?
If I do say something, will I be helping them or am I humiliating them?
Is that even my job?
It can be pretty confusing.
I'm really sorry that you've been put in this spot.
And based on your description,
your friend has a lot of stuff she needs to work on,
not just with her social skills,
but with her mood, personality.
I wouldn't be surprised in the least
if these two things were actually related.
But that's between her and her therapist,
maybe her life coach,
if she hires the woman from the previous letter.
If you'll love your friend as much as I think you do,
you said you've been friends for 20 years
and that you guys are pretty tight.
If you really are that close,
I think you actually owe this conversation to her.
Sometimes we're afraid to hurt people we love by telling them the truth.
But then when we withhold the truth from them, we're not really loving them, right?
We're sort of doing what's easiest for us.
It's not our job to make our friends feel amazing and validated all of the time.
It is our job to make them feel understood and supported, which sometimes means helping them
acknowledge something they might not want to acknowledge, even if it's super uncomfortable,
even if it's pretty scary for both of you.
But like you said, you don't want to hurt her unnecessarily.
So here is how I would approach this conversation.
I'd invite her over to your house or invite yourself over to her house, carve out a couple
hours to talk.
I recommend having this conversation at home because it might get a little intense.
You don't want to make her cry into her pokey bowl or whatever in public.
Is it pokey bowl or pokey bowl?
There's a little thing over the E, right?
There's a little accent over the E.
I've been saying pokey for like 10 years, but I recently found out that it's
pokey bowl.
Like, as in like okay.
Like Pokemon, right?
Yeah, yeah.
But I don't know.
I don't know if I'm going to say it.
Whatever.
I'm not going to go.
I'm just going to go straight pokey forever.
Pokey for life.
There it is.
You can become, Poke's growing on me already.
You can begin by telling her how much you love her, how happy you are that you're still
friends after all these years, how you hope you can still be friends for a long time.
Tell her that you asked to hang out because you wanted to share a few things that you'd
noticed stuff you think would be helpful for you both to talk out.
You can even say, you know, this is really hard for me to talk.
about because a big part of me feels like I might hurt your feelings here, and I don't want to make
you feel anxious or depressed or anything like that. But then I think, you know, if the positions were
reversed, I would want to hear it. So that's why I wanted to make some time for us. I would
just take a minute to set the stage like that so she doesn't feel ambushed or misunderstood in some
way. Then, once you've laid the groundwork, you're going to get into specific behaviors that you
mentioned. This is definitely going to be the hardest part for you, by the way. I would
I would rehearse this in your head a couple times in advance.
I would start by saying something like,
I've noticed a few things that keep coming up when we're all together,
and I just wanted to share them with you
because I think they might be coming across very differently
from how you intend them.
That is really important, by the way.
Don't ascribe intention or motivation to these behaviors.
You want to decouple what she's doing from whom she is fundamentally as a person.
Does that make sense, Gabe?
You don't want the behavior to be,
you are this way. It's like this thing you do sometimes that you should change. That's the difference.
That'll make it a lot easier for you to say, and it'll also make it a lot easier for her to hear.
Then you go through the behaviors. Tell her that you notice she rambles about her interests,
that she sometimes comes across as being more knowledgeable or more important than the people she's
talking to. That does sound irritating. And then when she shares her opinions, sometimes it
sounds like she thinks her position is the only one that really matters. Tell her that you notice
that she talks very loudly when you get together. Guilty is charged. I can relate to that.
That even when you guys ask her to be more conscientious, she just won't listen. Keep it all brief.
Definitely make it specific. So you're going to, you want to say stuff like, hey, remember when
we went to the griddle and Jess was talking about starting that marketing agency with her friend
from college? And you said marketing was a bullshit job and working with people you know is a
terrible idea, and then Shea said, lower your voice, and then the family next to us stared at us
while they ate their waffles, that kind of thing. You want to get down to it. You want her to be
able to recognize the behavior in specific moments, because if you just say, ugh, you've been
like so annoying lately, that doesn't mean anything. She can't change anything. She's just going to
think you're crying at her, and it's not going to be fun for either of you, and it's not going to
change anything. Like I said, this is going to be very challenging. You can write this all down.
It's not weird if you do that. You're probably going to feel like you're hurting her when you
bring this up, by the way, just by pointing out the obvious. And in a way, you are. She might even have
an emotional reaction while you're talking, but you have to be willing to tolerate those feelings
back from her in order to have this conversation. Try and say all this in a kind voice,
in a gentle voice, resist the temptation to get angry or judgey or unnecessarily harsh. Make an effort
to tell her all of this from a place of love and concern for her rather than judgment or
condemnation. Then talk to her about how this behavior is affecting all you guys. Help her understand
how all of this is starting to push you away. And look, when she goes on and on about her opinions
and you guys feel like there isn't much room for your own thoughts, let her know that. Tell her when
she talks really loudly, it makes all of you uncomfortable. And that when she refuses to lower her
voice, it makes you feel like she just doesn't care about your comfort level. And it's starting to make
you guys want to spend less time together because she doesn't seem to want to want a respectful to
relationship with you. And this is really key, not just calling out what she's doing, but helping her see
the impact and what it is on you. Because she can deny that she's being annoying or doing any of that
stuff or talking too loud. She can do that all she wants. But what she can't do is deny your
experience of that behavior. And that's a good technique in general, by the way. If you think someone
is going to get defensive during a conflict, you can share your experience of them instead
of attacking their behavior directly. Finally, once you've laid all that out, invite her to talk.
Ask her what her experience has been like. Ask her how she feels about the group these days.
If she's picked up on any of this. Let her explain her behavior. Process what you're saying.
Have whatever reaction she has. Let her get mad. Let her get sad. Let her get embarrassed. Let her
get scared. That's all part of this as well. Support her through these feelings. Don't reject her
for having them. Try to make this a conversation as much as possible rather than
lecture just from you. Now, if she gets super defensive about all this, if she's like, screw you,
Emily, you have no right to call me self-absorbed, I'm just doing me, and if you don't like it,
you can screw the hell off. Look, if she does that, calmly help her see that that is part of what
you were talking about. You know, you can say, listen, I can see this is really hard to hear.
I totally understand that. It would be hard for me too, but as your friend, I have to point out
that the way you are reacting right now is exactly what I am talking about. Keep supporting her.
keep helping her get out of her own way.
If you do that enough times,
she'll run out of defenses
and be forced to confront what you're saying.
Or, you know, she won't.
That's also possible.
She might be so defended that nothing gets through.
You just got to decide at that point
whether to keep her as a friend or move on.
You don't have to cut her out of your life forever,
maybe take a bit of a break or something like that.
Do you think she should involve the other girls?
Is there an intervention?
Is it one-on-one?
Does she say, hey, other people agree with me,
or is it just, this is my experience?
I think that could actually work really nicely as long as they don't create the feeling that they're ganging up on her.
That's what I was worried about. Yeah, like everyone hates you now. You know, okay.
That could cut both ways. She might feel ganged up on, but if it goes well, she could also feel like, oh, I really have to pay attention if all of them are saying this at the same time, right?
So I think it kind of comes down to the group dynamic and how they can make that work.
I got the sense from this letter that she had a little bit of a special relationship with this person.
So like they two were closer maybe than the rest of them were with her.
So that made me think that maybe it should be a one-on-one conversation.
But if the group is super tight and you guys are all part of this, then yeah, maybe consider
doing it as a group.
That's a really good idea.
And if you do decide to part ways with her, I think that's completely fair.
You've done your part to help her.
If she absolutely refuses to engage, she just refuses to consider her behavior in a new way,
she's made her decision.
It's extremely hard to be close with somebody like that, even if you do have a deep history.
Maybe she'll come around later.
Maybe she never will.
Maybe it's Maybe it's Maybe.
I don't know. Who knows?
That is a good point. It could be Mabelin.
It could be, you know, in fact, it usually is.
It usually is. From my experience, yes.
Honestly, this situation is kind of sad.
Here's a woman who's dealing with anxiety and depression,
who's clinging to her friend group since kindergarten,
because I can't believe that just came out of the 90s into my brain.
Is that a TV ad, Gabe?
Yeah, I think that was it. Yeah, yeah.
Isn't it makeup?
Yeah, or hair stuff, maybe.
I'm not sure now.
Is maybe she's born with it.
Maybe it's maybe.
That was something that was on like during TGIF.
I was probably watching Steve Urkel in full house and then those would pop on.
Although why they would be advertising that against Steve Urkel is a bit of a mystery.
Yeah.
It's makeup.
It's makeup.
Okay, good.
I can go on with my life now.
So look, this is a little bit sad, right?
Here's a woman who's dealing with anxiety, depression.
She's clinging to her friend group since kindergarten because she probably struggles to
build relationships with new people, candidly.
And she seems like she's on the verge of a little bit of a mini breakdown at any given
moment by your letter here. That's a lot to deal with. She definitely needs some help and from you as
her friend for sure, but also from a professional. Maybe that's something you could recommend to her too.
And that's a great reason to go into therapy, right? My friends can't deal with me and now they're
leaving me behind. Why? What am I doing? Nip this in the bud. She can be salvaged, right, if she wants
to be. If she admits that this is a problem, she doesn't know what to do, she's going to see a professional,
then yeah, don't cut her out. She's trying. That would be the beginning of a really important
conversation for her if you have this. And she is lucky to have you as a friend. I wish you the best.
I hope you help her get better so that she can keep you in her life. Hope you all enjoyed that.
I want to thank everyone that wrote in this week. Stay tuned after the show if you want to hear
a bit more about the course I just released on how to conduct interviews for podcasts. Go back and
check out the guests from this week, Billy McFarland of Firefest, the infamous Firefest, and Celeste
Headley of NPR if you haven't yet. If you want to know how I managed to book all these great people
and manage my relationships. It's about systems, consistency, tiny habits. Check out our six-minute networking
course, which is free over on the thinkific platform at Jordan Harbinger.com slash course. Don't kick the can down the
road. Don't try and do it later. Dig the well before you get thirsty. I see a lot of people making
this mistake and I see a lot in the inbox. Oh, I didn't dig the well. Now what? Start over. Start fresh.
No shortcuts. The drills take a few minutes a day. Ignore it at your own peril, frankly. It's free. It's
over at Jordan Harbinger.com slash course.
A link to the show notes for the episode
can be found at Jordan Harbinger.com.
Transcripts are in the show notes.
There's a video of this feedback Friday episode
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You can find Gabe on Twitter at Gabe Mizrahi
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And don't forget, you can catch me and Gabriel Mizrahi
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but catch the first one, Friday, November 6 at 2 p.m. Pacific. Oh, and most importantly, we're bribing you.
We're giving away $500 on this live broadcast. So come join us inside the stereo app for a chance to win
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Our advice and opinions and those of our guests are their own, and like I said, I'm a lawyer,
I am not your lawyer, so do your own research before implementing anything you hear on this show.
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I wanted to give you a quick bite of the episode I did
with Mark Cuban of Shark Tank and Dallas Mavericks fame.
Mark gives advice to entrepreneurs and founders in these uncertain times,
tells us how he stays on top of trends in technology,
and how the U.S. can compete with China.
When everybody's afraid, the best way to deal with it is by coming together.
It certainly seems a lot bigger than anything we've seen, you know, in my lifetime.
And the combination of the protests and looting and the pandemic, all these things combined together to make it for really uncertain times.
And when people are uncertain about their future, that's why people rebel.
Martin Luther King said, rioting is the voice of the unheard.
The only surprise is that it's taken this long.
Capardick did even bring the focus to himself.
You know, he just happened to be taking a knee and somebody caught him with a phone camera.
What would you have done in that moment, if that time, if he were your player, would you, how would you have handled that?
I'd hug him.
Yeah?
Yeah, absolutely.
If you were president, how would you improve race relations?
I mean, I'd hug a few people.
Yeah.
You know, I'd walk out there and listen.
You know, I'd take advice.
I wouldn't think I had all the answers.
This piece you wrote, dear white people, we're the ones that need to change.
This is probably controversial.
I would imagine you get some blowback from something like that.
A lot of people felt I was calling them out as racist, which I wasn't doing.
In order for things to change, then people need to take measures and understand,
be very self-aware about what's going on with them and how people are living their lives.
A lot of people don't seem to have much to look forward to right now.
What do you think we should be looking forward to as a nation?
I mean, look, there's no better time ever to start a business than right now
because all businesses are effectively going through a reset.
And so there's a lot of advantages.
And with the protests and the riots,
that gives us just one inkling of hope
that maybe we'll make progress.
Maybe this time we'll listen.
For more with Mark Cuban,
including the future of the technology economy,
check out episode 362 of the Jordan Harbinger show.
Have you ever been in an amazing conversation
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We remember these exchanges years later
and find ourselves going back to some because they offered us insights,
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My name is Jordan Harbinger.
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This episode is sponsored in part by Something You Should Know podcast.
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