The Jordan Harbinger Show - 682: Hustle Culture | Deep Dive
Episode Date: June 9, 2022Jordan (@JordanHarbinger) and Gabe (@GabeMizrahi) take a deep dive into the toxic cesspool of hustle culture and emerge with better alternatives you can use to break free from its seductiv...e but icky grip and write yourself a meaningful success story! What We Discuss: Hustle culture makes you miserable because it sells you the destination without the journey. Hustle culture is a toxic sham because it operates like an emotion-manipulating pyramid scheme that pits you against your peers instead of encouraging you to work together. How you can spot the sure signs of hustle culture and avoid its sticky, wicked clutches. What you can do to break free of hustle culture if it’s already got its hooks in you. Better alternatives that will enrich your journey toward success instead of guilting you, shaming you, pressuring you, and making you co-dependent on hustle culture’s empty promises. And much more… Full show notes and resources can be found here: jordanharbinger.com/682 See Jordan (with Ryan Holiday) Live in L.A. June 13th!: Go to jordanharbinger.com/tickets for more info 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 including 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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Welcome to the show. I'm Jordan Harbinger. On the Jordan Harbinger show, we decode the stories,
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That's going to be in Los Angeles at the Venice West on June 13th. So tickets are available.
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Again, Jordan Harbinger.com slash tickets. June 13th at the Venice West in Los Angeles,
I'll be interviewing Ryan Holiday, and I hope to see you there.
Today on the show, a deep dive and a debunk of hustle culture. If you,
use the internet at all, which you do, you've probably been bombarded with wannabe gurus,
influencers, and the idea that you have to be working, networking, building, nonstop, you've got
to be grinding or you're falling behind. Riches and success only come if you just grind it out.
You've got your head down 24-7, 365 days a year. But the truth is, not only is this a bunch
of nonsense. It's actually bad for you, surprise, surprise. It's counterproductive. And what's
worse, most of the people professing this message are actually just shilling their own brand of
negative self-help designed to entrap you on their pay-to-play hamster wheel.
Today on this deep dive, we'll expose what hustle culture really is, why it's bad for you,
and what to do about it.
Ignoring it is not always as simple as you might think.
This is something I wish I'd learned a couple of decades ago.
I know it'll be useful to you whether you're 15 or 55.
Producer Gabriel Mizrahi is here with me today.
All right, let's do it.
As you know, I've always had a problem with the whole hustle culture phenomenon.
it's probably always been a part of our society in some form,
but it's really amped up in the last five to ten years.
It's really at 11 right now,
and I think it's created a lot of damage and dysfunction,
and I wanted to talk about this in a deep dive,
building on the article that we just wrote about this same topic.
So hustle culture, aka rise and grind mindset,
aka motivation porn, aka toil glamour.
This is the philosophy slash mindset or lifestyle
of just constantly working your ass off
in the pursuit of some big, crazy goal,
no matter what the cost.
And we see this absolutely everywhere.
It's an identity that glorifies
nonstop labor, brute force drive, blind resilience.
Like any movement, hustle culture creates products,
markets itself, which is why you see so many
of those inspiring or motivational videos
popping up on YouTube or Instagram every day.
You know, I joke about this all the time.
The dude on the beach with his arms in the air
and there's a quote that's like, if you can do it, if you can dream it, you can do it. And it's just nonsense.
It's just meaningless. Right. Like videos of people working out or climbing a mountain or walking in and out of boardrooms of companies they frankly don't even belong to.
Like wearing nice suits or boarding private jets. Totally. It's very stock footagey. It is.
There's always like a voiceover from a famous athlete or an entrepreneur or like an actor. It's like Will Smith or someone is talking about what it takes to succeed.
With inspirational music in the background. Yeah. Exactly. Yeah. That's like classic hustle porn. And it is.
everywhere. Even, I mean, if you log on to YouTube, it'll serve you up one of those videos
within like 10 minutes if you watch a TED Talk. It's ridiculous. But it's also not just
YouTube videos. It's also books and courses and, to your point, memes. And also even conversations
you hear in real life when you're out, you overhear somebody talking at a table at a restaurant
or at a party you go to get a three or four high performance together. And before you know,
it someone's talking about how they like start their day by dipping in some subzero temperature
water or something and going for a run before they sit. If you don't have a cold plunge tub on your
porch, what are you even doing? Right? With your life. Exactly. It's just ridiculousness. Do you even cold
plunge, bro? Do you even cold blunch? I don't even know what that is, yeah. It is that whole ethos of
you know, get that bread or die trying, which is kind of comical, but it's a real thing. And it's sort of
taken over social media. It has. And in my view, it's toxic. It's terrible for your mental health.
It's a never-ending black hole. It has seriously diminishing return on investment. It's 99.9.9% fake. And it's
almost like a pyramid scheme of these hustle influencers cloning themselves for cash. I want to just
shred this. And we're going to do that today on this deep dive. What hustle culture promises is that
it's possible to rise up, breakthrough, improve your situation, and finally excel in all the
ways you want to excel, right? Because according to the gospel of hustle, only those disciples who are
willing to outwork everyone around them, usually because they're dissatisfied, right? They're
basically they're angry at life. They're terrified of not being special. Only
those people are going to find true success. And of course, I'm being sarcastic when I say this,
this is the hustle culture message. More than that, these are the only people who deserve success,
right? If you're not working 17 hours a day, you're nothing. You don't deserve to be successful.
It's if you're playing the lottery. And that's a toxic belief and that's at the heart of this movement.
This idea that work equals good and that work equals success and that work is the only way to live
a fulfilling and successful life, it's patently bullshit. We all know that means that means. We all know that
meaning comes from tons of things, work just being one of those things, and that what people find
fulfilling is highly personal, right? So why does hustle porn work? What is, what's the allure here?
Why is it effective in some level? Because obviously something is going right if all these people are
doing this stuff nonstop and feeding it, feeding the monster. Hustle culture works, and I put works
in air quotes here, because it preys on a few major needs or vulnerabilities in the human brain.
The hunger to succeed, the fear of failing, the desire to conform, the wish to be admired,
and the need to have purpose or feel fulfilled.
And I understand all of these.
We all have this going on in our lizard brain, so to speak.
All reasonable needs, yeah.
All reasonable.
This hustle porn, it all promises to meet all of these needs with one simple strategy,
which is working your friggin' ass off.
And over the years, I've talked to hundreds of people who have been swept up,
usually via email or in Feedback Friday inbox, people who have been swept up in various hustle
communities, if you can call it that, all of them ended up experiencing similar feelings here.
So burnout, resentment, alienation, self-loathing, disillusionment, depression, general malaise
the feeling of being lost and confused.
And saddest of all, they actually talk about feeling further away from their goals, less
connected to their purpose, more resistant to the growth that they're looking for.
So exactly the opposite of what hustle culture is promising is what it basically delivers,
right? And why is that? What is it about hustle culture that corrupts the one freaking thing?
Like you had one job and it's going to do the exact opposite thing. What is it about hustle culture
that corrupts the one thing it's supposed to give us? And is there a way to work hard toward our
goals that doesn't involve a toxic relationship with our career, everyone else, with ourselves
for that matter? The answer is of course yes. But first we have to talk about why hustle culture
makes you and me and everyone else so miserable when we get suckered into it.
And the 30,000 foot overview here is it sells the destination and not the journey.
So if you've ever watched these hustle porn motivational nonsense videos,
you know they all kind of look the same.
You can see it in the first five seconds or so Gabriel, or not even, you know what it is, right?
It's like slow motion opener, sunrise or something.
And then it's like show somebody doing yoga or working out on the beach.
Like it's universal music slow-mo intro, right?
Not very original.
Not original.
Or it's somebody getting out of a luxury car, boarding a private jet, wearing some fancy clothes.
That's always their favorite shot of like the door of the Bentley slowly opening and the person with a suit stepping out and taking off their sunglasses or rearranging their little cuff.
Right.
Yeah.
Or like looking off into the distance.
When I get out of a car, I'm not like looking up under the horizon.
But alas, you know, people wearing fancy clothes.
They're hanging out in exotic places.
They're looking cool and attractive and they're surrounded by cool and attractive friends.
They're of course the center of attention.
And that's because these hustle bros are selling you the dream, right?
Trademark.
The dream of becoming fabulously wealthy, powerful, important, popular, independent, everything
you weren't in high school.
And the best way to sell the dream is to sell you the destination.
Not the process, not the journey, not the mission, but the glorified end result, which is
usually some version of, eh, get cash money rich, bra, right?
Lambo money.
It's a fantasy.
And ironically, they're telling you about all this work, but really they're kind of not.
They're just showing you the destination.
Why aren't you grinding?
By the way, here's a jet that you're never going to be able to afford even if you grind
because that's like a $100 million sort of purchase.
The hustle scammers use that fantasy to tap into the low effort, high reward mechanism
of our lizard brains, right?
They focus on the rewards and completely gloss over the sacrifice required to actually succeed
at a high level.
So these folks, they know they have nothing to offer in that department.
In fact, they know that acknowledging how hard the journey is going to be, other than the
lip service of like, what are you doing from 12 midnight to 4 o'clock in the morning?
Are you sleeping?
You're a punk, right?
Other than casual lip service, they know that acknowledging how hard it's going to be would
actually work against them.
So instead, they dangle the fancy car of the jet, the huge house.
The idea is to shift your focus to the end result.
So in the process, they're reinforcing a toxic mindset that values the spoils over.
the journey. Despite the fact that tons of science, and by the way, every single successful
person's experience that I've ever talked to in my entire life in the history of the show,
confirms that most of the joy in life comes from the process of actually doing something.
When those material assets become the point of the entire journey, then we have missed something
that is crucial. We've really missed the forest of the trees here. High performers don't do what they
do so that they can fly to Aspen on a friggin' gulf stream. Most of them, the best ones anyway,
the ones that aren't sort of sociopathic internet marketer types.
They do what they do because they're lit up by a mission that they care about deeply.
Not that all internet marketers are sociopaths.
I mean, the ones that are showing you the jets and the Bentley's, right?
So it makes sense that most people who get caught up in hustle culture eventually abandon
their dreams.
As soon as the destination feels impossible to reach, because they're not in a strong
relationship to the process itself, they eventually grow disillusioned and give up, right?
If you're going after something like, I need to earn enough money to get a jet, you're never
going to stick with one thing. You're not going to be attached to the process of getting it. You're
just going to switch and flip-flop around until you find something that's earning you money that
week, which is a very losing strategy for actual long-term success. Yeah. And growing disillusion,
growing disaffected, getting upset, getting angry, that is not entirely an accident because
the other weird thing about hustle culture, if you pay enough attention to it, just watch a few
videos and a couple blog posts, you'll realize that it generally tends to traffic in negative emotions.
Even though it's selling you this sort of vaguely hopeful dream, it's actually predicated on a lot of toxic and negative energy.
Every marketer knows that the best way to sell a product is to make people feel like they're incomplete without it, right?
It's how you sell toothpaste, how you sell trips to exotic destinations.
Hustle culture of scammers, they understand this principle better than anybody because they are marketers, first and foremost, right?
They don't inspire people to change by building up their skills or developing their confidence.
They don't push people to perform better by, you know, appealing to their passion or trying to tap into their potential.
No, they do the opposite.
They tap into their fear, their resentment, their anxiety, their envy, especially.
And they do that because negative emotions are actually highly manipulable, right?
If a self-help teacher can create a sense of lack in you, if they can, you know, make you look at the person next to you and wonder why they have more than you do or look at the other person and wonder, like, what are they doing that I don't have?
Or just make you feel sort of anxious and insecure.
then they can offer you the solution to that quote unquote lack, right? Then they can turn around
and say, well, here's your answer. All you need to do is want it badly enough and work your ass off
and, you know, buy my book and sign up for my course and join my mastermind so I can coach you
because that's what you really need right now. Hustle culture appeals to negative emotions because they
make you more susceptible. They make you more susceptible to their values and they also make you more
susceptible to their products. Just to bottom line it, it's way easier to sell somebody a $5,000 self-help
package by showing them a guy boarding a G6, you know, with a bunch of supermodels around him,
then by explaining that working for years and years on a meaningful mission will make you more
fulfilled and eventually the money will come, right? It's just like basic human psychology,
ad agency, 101 stuff. So here's a helpful thing to keep an eye on. If you ever consume some
self-help and you feel worse after you look at it or read it or watch it, that's a pretty good
sign that it's probably toxic, especially if it makes you feel angry or envious or ashamed. Those
emotions in particular tend to be very common with this hustle stuff, or if it encourages you to compare
yourself to other people, which I'd say in almost every case, that's usually pretty toxic.
Yeah, I would say I don't need, most of us, myself included, I don't need any encouragement to
compare myself to other people and feel crappy because of it. Right. Like, that's a habit
almost everyone I know is trying to get out of because it's very human and it's very destructive.
Exactly. So the other thing, Gabriel, is this hustle culture stuff, it teaches shortcuts and not
skills almost exclusively.
Yes.
Right?
So hustle gurus, they also tend to focus on hacks and techniques rather than knowledge and
skills per se.
They do this because shortcuts are attractive to the primitive part of your brain, to
everyone.
Even those of us that know better are like, oh yeah, how to get another half an hour a day
by making my calendar more simple, I'll spend time setting that up, right?
That part of you, that reptile, I won't say reptile brain, I know that our neuroscience
guests hate it.
Let's say the part of my brain that is attracted to shortcuts that may be
primitive or maybe not. That part of me, it's not interested in becoming an expert,
growing as a person, right? I just want a clever, easy solution. And hustle bros know they can sell
that with much greater ease. It's software that does the trading for you, not I'm going to
teach you over the next 50 hours how to trade, you know, crypto, like, no, give me the software
that does it for me. The other reason scammers sell this garbage is that it's the only thing that
they can sell. And this is extremely important, right? These are not researchers who study the
neuroscience of productivity. Some of them try to pretend like they are. They're like, I hired scientists.
It's nonsense. They're not leaders who understand the value of a mission. They're not entrepreneurs who can
speak to building lasting companies. These are serial kind of one year it's this book and this method
in the next month. It's a different thing entirely. All these guys can do is traffic in the lowest
common denominator of advice. The effect of this teaching is that it trains you to think that success is a
matter of handy shortcuts and mindless exertion. You then start to believe that you can get ahead
by being clever or efficient or outsourcing, pay someone else do the job for you, when most of business,
and this is firsthand experience here and a lot of people that I've talked to on the show, when
most of business is actually just putting in a ton of high quality time to build skill sets
and become amazing at least one thing, ideally more than one thing, and then stacking them
together. Productivity hackers like to think, and this isn't like everybody who's written a book on time
management. I mean, a lot of these hustle guru productivity combo hackers, right? They like to think
that doing something smarter or faster will make you successful. They often don't acknowledge that
you also have to be great at the thing you're doing. Cal Newport's a good example of doing this
the right way, right? His one book is Be So Good They Can't Ignore You. That's great at the skills. And the
rest is like, and also don't get distracted by all this BS. So he's a productivity hacker, quote,
who understands how to do this right.
The other guys were like,
hey, just don't even do any real work.
Sit on a beach and hire other people.
That is a bunch of nonsense.
The really sad thing is that all of these mistaken approaches,
they're kind of like detours.
You're hiking in the woods and you get lost.
These are all paths that end up taking you in circles, right?
They delay your success.
And having you waste, frankly, the crucial time you need to spend leveling up,
developing your skills, deepening your craft.
It's just, it ends up harming you.
It's not net zero.
Yeah, that's such a good point, Jordan.
And it actually connects to another weird thing about hustle culture, which is that it really
conflates this so-called grinding, you know, like working your ass off 20 hours a day,
don't get sleep, just keep on going.
It conflates that with actual success because baked into hustle culture is this idea that
if you want to be successful, it's just a matter of working hard, right?
Like if you just put in the hours, it will happen.
And even worse than that, a lot of these hustle bros, they say stuff like, you know, working hard
is success. The point of life is to grind so that you can just keep on grinding more. Like there's no
like greater higher end game. It's not like you've got to work hard to bring about some great mission or
some great product and then, you know, just decide what kind of life you want to have. It's just like,
no, grind to make more money so that you can just keep grinding. It actually doesn't make any
sense once you think about it. Now, some successful people, they might buy into that idea. They might
center their entire lives around work. And that is a totally fair choice. It's not entirely a healthy or
interesting one, in my opinion, but it's a fair one. But that definition of success,
it's incredibly narrow. I mean, it basically amounts to how many hours do you spend in the
pursuit of money, power status? It's really about being like the richest, most popular,
most influential person possible, right? All those high school values you talked about in the
opening. It completely overlooks all these other versions of success in life, being healthy,
being stable, having strong relationships, right? Like getting along with your parents, with your
siblings with your children having a meaningful role or purpose in life outside of work, it just
completely glosses over the possibility that people could be happy doing a number of other things
besides sitting chained to their desks. Hustle culture at the end of the day does not care about what
makes you happy or what makes you excited or what makes you fulfilled. It doesn't consider the people
you work with or the place you work or the projects you choose to take on or the impact that you
have on the world around you. To the extent that these people, these productivity gurus,
to the extent that they even think about meaning, they usually think it just resides in assets, right?
The plane, the car, the trip, whatever. Assets that will ultimately just enable you to keep hustling even more.
Now, to be clear, we all know that great success obviously depends to some degree on hard work, right? We're not denying that.
It's not like, no, you just like hack it and work 20 hours a week and if you do it really smartly, you'll be Bill Gates.
No, that's not what we're saying. But success depends on so many other factors besides how many hours you put in.
It depends on passion and talent and relationships, resilience. I mean, there's so much.
much that goes into why somebody becomes successful. And there are also other metrics of success
that frankly have nothing to do with money, right? Like fulfillment, happiness, impact. I mean,
these all can't, you can't put a dollar value on all of these things. But in the minds of these
hustle bros, you don't just work hard to be successful. You become successful so you can keep
working hard because that to them is the only source of value worth pursuing in life. And that's
just not true. And it's up to us to decide that anyway. You're listening to the Jordan
Harbinger Show. This is our deep dive on hustle culture.
We'll be right back.
If you're wondering how I managed to book all the amazing people I've got on the show,
it is, of course, about my network, and I'm teaching you how to build your network as well for
free over at Jordan Harbinger.com slash course.
The course is naturally about improving your networking and connection skills, but also
inspiring other people to develop personal and professional relationships with you.
It'll make you a better networker, a better connector, and most importantly, a better thinker.
That's all at Jordan Harbinger.com slash course, and most of the guests that you hear on this show,
They subscribe and contribute to that same course.
Come join us.
You'll be in smart company.
Now, back to our deep dive on hustle culture.
The whole hustle culture itself, the motivation stuff,
it's not interested in you, if I can phrase it that way, as an individual.
Hustle culture is a one-size-fits-all model.
It isn't designed to understand you as an individual.
It's just designed to speak to you as generically as possible.
Hence the reason that social media is so good for it, right?
It's not tailored in any way other than to a potential demographic.
A hustle bro is more likely to tell you to want success more than you want sleep than to ask you
what makes you feel like you had a good day.
What do you care about?
What does productive mean to you?
What uniquely brings you meaning?
And a lot of this stuff might sound fluffy and soft, but it's not because this is the
stuff that happiness is made out of according to science and according to people who died after
working way too hard and missed out on all the stuff that had meaning, right?
That's one more reason that hustle culture hinges on the gospel of hard work, because it's much
easier to tell millions of people to sit at their desks longer than it is to help all of those
people individually figure out what they truly care about, why they do what they do, what
makes them different.
It's not practical for them to do that.
They don't care anyway.
Hustle culture flattens you into a one-dimensional person so that it can sell you a one-dimensional
product or solution.
Then, when you stop and wonder why this stuff isn't making you more successful,
hustle bros turn around and they blame you for not taking them seriously enough or you're
not applying yourself enough, which if you think about it, that is shady.
It's gaslighting, first of all, if you think about it.
It's one of the most common techniques employed by cults and other coercive organizations
and crappy spouses and partners everywhere, right, in your family, mothers and relatives,
right?
Like, this gaslighting is known as a technique to make people feel like they are the ones at fault when really it's not the case at all.
And of course, hustle scammers resort to these methods because they can't acknowledge the limitations of their own system.
Yeah, they can't acknowledge the limitations and they also do it because, sadly enough, it's pretty good business.
On some level, like you said, it works.
And it sort of works by turning many people into lifelong customers.
Again, at the end of the day, hustle gurus, these are business people.
They aren't preaching the gospel of hustle out of the goodness of their hearts.
Look, they're out to make money.
And if they're not getting money from you directly by making you pay for a course,
they're getting eyeballs attention, add revenue on YouTube, whatever form that comes in.
And they'll go to pretty great lengths to keep that money coming in,
even if it means undermining their followers in the process.
I mean, this is another reason that motivational content is so bad,
because honestly, Jordan, if it were higher quality,
if it actually weren't as silly and cheesy and surface level as we're talking about,
it might actually have something to say
and it might actually work.
But then the people who are consuming it,
they would find success in what they're trying to do
and they would just move on with their lives
because they already figured it out, right?
Yeah.
One of the reasons actually that I switched from dating
to what we discussed now on the show is,
one, I got sick of it and outgrew it.
But two, what I was teaching worked so well,
people outgrew what I was talking about.
And then I talked to them like three years later
and I'd be like, you're still listening to the show?
And they'd be like, nah, I found a girl married her and moved on.
And I was like, uh-oh,
everyone who's successful with this is outgrowing me. So I had to evolve into something else. And that's
exactly what hustle culture does not want you to do. Such a good point. I mean, it's almost a barometer
of how good a piece of self-help is. It's like if you read it a few times and you get it and then you
apply it and then you just live your life, like that's probably a pretty helpful piece of self-help.
Right. So in a really messed up way, hustle scammers, they actually need their consumers to fail
in order to keep them on the hook, so to speak. As long as their followers are struggling to see results,
And also, if their followers believe that if they just stick with it long enough, then they'll finally
break through, right? If they can just keep that psychology alive, then they can keep these people as
perpetual customers. It is so shady, but it's very true. The less these gurus teach, the more their
disciples tend to stick around. Higher quality self-help, on the other hand, that's interested in doing
exactly what Jordan just described, empowering people to make changes for themselves. It doesn't encourage
you to have this unnecessary dependence or devotion. You know, it doesn't require you to keep coming back.
every six months or buy the next tier of the course or, you know, pay me an annual fee to join the
community if you want to stay on track here. Like, it's none of that stuff. Legitimate teachers,
they want you to run with what you learn, apply it on in the world, right? Of course, they're happy
to foster a long-term relationship with you if it continues to deliver benefits, but they
won't design the system in such a way that it keeps you on the hook just so they can make more
money. In the world of hustle culture, though, if anybody in that world adopted that philosophy,
it would just, it would break the whole business model. And by the way, even if you're not
handing over money directly or indirectly to these people, sometimes it's just about giving them
the attention they crave. I mean, a lot of these people on YouTube, I'm just venturing to guess.
Even if they're not raking in like millions of dollars from some of their videos, they probably
love looking at the view count and just watching those numbers go up. Sadly, that's often the
greatest reward for the people who tend to be attracted to this world as teachers. They tend to be
highly narcissistic. Something to keep in mind. But these systems, they don't just turn you into
a lifelong customer. They also often turn you into a tool.
in the whole scheme to keep it going. That's right. That's right. These systems, these folks, they encourage you,
the whole system encourages you to perpetuate the con, right? So hustle culture is parasitic. It doesn't
just try to convert you to the tribe. It also encourages you to convert other people overtly or covertly.
In some cases, that means bringing new people into the fold. It's like multi-level marketing in many ways.
A hustle scammer might push you to bring your friends to a workshop or encourage you to share links to their videos or
recruit your colleagues into some sort of mastermind, in more extreme cases, that actually means
becoming an affiliate of their organization. So it straight up goes MLM, right? You got to represent the
brand or you get certified in some program and then you're teaching it to other people yourself.
But even if you're not actually teaching a hustle curriculum, you're still probably getting sucked
into what I like to call, and I'm pretty sure I stole this from somewhere, but I can't remember
aware, the bullshit industrial complex. So you're consuming the ideas, you're trying to apply them
to your life, and you're judging the results through the prism of that program. In all likelihood,
you're then talking about hustle culture with your friends, foisting it on your colleagues,
and using it to guide your strategy. Eventually, you start to slowly or quickly sacrifice your values,
your identity, and your instincts in the pursuit of success as defined by these hucksters,
and then you pass that nonsense version of success onto other people.
people who then slip down the exact same slope. This is how a hustle system becomes hustle culture.
And in that way, it often makes you more than just a customer. It makes you a tool and just another
node in the system so that it can perpetuate itself. At that point, becoming a better person
isn't even really part of the equation anymore. That was just the bait. Now it's about clicks,
views, likes, downloads, shares, and sales, the flywheel of toxic self-help. The hustle mission
isn't to help people succeed. It's to package that success as a product that convinces more and more
people to hand over their money. It's just pure commerce or their attention, right? And then they get their
ad clicks. It's pure commerce. It preys on other people's real desire to get better. In fact, in many
ways, it's more like a virus than any sort of beneficial plan for growth. And to me, that's incredibly
sad. It's also super freaking boring. But you can't deny that in some very limited way, it, and again,
and in air quotes, works.
The problem is, it only works for the people that are selling it, and it works at your expense.
So, Gabe, how do we break out of hustle culture?
Because a lot of people are like, cool, I get it, but I'm stuck in it.
I watch this crap all the time.
I feel like it's doing something.
How do I get out of the orbit?
The gravitational pull.
Well, as with most things, it really does start by just becoming aware of the problem in
the first place.
You have to notice when you're in the grip of this type of content and when you're starting
to subscribe to this whole culture.
And that really begins just by tracking your thoughts.
You know, like when you consume the gospel according to grind culture, what ideas do you notice popping up, right?
Are your thoughts focused on new opportunities, new insights?
Do you feel like you're having interesting ideas that you're excited to pursue?
Or are your thoughts more focused on what you haven't done or what you could be doing more or what you should be doing less?
Because that's a huge part of hustle culture too.
It's like, do more of this stuff that you're not doing.
But also stop doing the stuff that actually makes you happy.
You've got to notice how those thoughts start to creep in.
Again, beliefs, same thing.
Are they optimistic? Are they generative?
Are they forward-looking?
Or are you sort of noticing that you're getting fixated on what you lack or what other people are doing or what you fail to accomplish in the past?
And another thing I've noticed, Jordan, I think there's really subtle.
It's not something that they would ever acknowledge openly.
But the ideas that hustle bros pedal, they tend to be very vague and aspirational and abstract.
Have you ever noticed that?
It's never like carve out three hours to debug the software that you figure, you know, like talk to your customers because that's,
going to make your product better. It just tends to be sort of like while away your hours because
one day in the future you will have everything you can dream of having and usually that's material
success. But really, the ideas that actually are helpful are concrete, they're realistic, they're
practical, they're about how I'm going to spend my day or my week or my month or where I want
to end up in a year from now. It's not like, let me just sit here until one day I'm this big,
awesome boss guy that they sort of sell you in the videos. It's funny. This example just popped
into my head when I was interviewing Brian Chesky from Airbnb. One of the things he said he did,
look, $100 billion company or whatever it is, right? One of the things he said he did was they
contacted a lot of their customers in New York. They flew there from Silicon Valley and they started
knocking on doors and meeting with the individual hosts and being like, we're here to take photographs
of your apartment, right? They set these appointments up and they'd be like, wow, this is really cool
that Airbnb is going to take photos of my apartment and they were the photographers. So these guys are
talking to their customers, flying across the country to go meet with them, spending weeks,
you know, in New York City knocking on doors and taking photographs with a digital camera that
they probably scraped together the funds to buy. That's what they were doing. That's not sexy.
They weren't talking about jets and islands and getaways and luxury properties at this point.
So Huzzle culture doesn't show six dudes and six women in sweatpants with messed up hair with a bunch
of takeout containers all over the place and energy drinks talking about the product and
going on customer service chats because the engineers are also customer support.
and are also accounting and are also the C-suite, right?
They just show somebody walking in with like a newly custom suit,
a folder after getting off a jet.
It's skip forward to absolutely the end of the movie, always.
That is such a great example.
It could not have said it better myself.
And the fact that that actually comes from a real example
just tells you everything you need to know
about what it actually looks like
to put in the work and become great at building a product
people actually want,
as opposed to just watching a YouTube video
and thinking that somehow it's going to seep in
and make your thoughts in your...
feelings better or whatever. So yes, take stock of your ideas, but also take stock of your feelings
because the feelings that you have while you consume this productivity porn nonsense, that's also a
very rich source of information. I'm going to speak from personal experience here. I have never
watched one of those videos and felt better about my life. I've never felt for like 30 seconds,
you sort of have this weird thing where you're like, oh, maybe I can do it if I run up a hill. I'll
feel a little more energized or something. But that never lasts. It does sprints. Yeah, like
climbing. It's never going downhill. I don't know what that's about. Just the metaphor doesn't quite work. So
is your overall mood positive? Is it clear? Is it productive? Or are you sort of feeling pessimistic,
anxious, doubtful, right? These are really helpful things to notice. Do you feel hopeful? Do you feel
curious when you watch the stuff? Do you find yourself feeling frustrated and angry or shut down?
The list goes on and on, right? If you watch one of these videos and you feel excited and motivated and you feel
more in touch with your purpose, great. But if you watch a video and you end up feeling more apathetic
or more unmotivated or just kind of like lost because you're like,
I'm no closer to where I wanted to be after I've watched this.
And also now I'm confused about how I should actually spend my day.
That's something worth paying attention to.
If your feelings fall into that latter category,
that's a sign that hustle culture is taking a toll on you.
By the way, if you find that motivational video
that makes you feel good about your life,
send it to me because I've never seen one.
I want to know if they exist in the wild.
I don't think they do.
I think it's full of a lot of emotional toxicity
that becomes a breeding ground for increasingly bad thoughts,
increasingly bad feelings and usually increasingly bad decisions, including, by the way,
the choice to just keep watching the videos and keep hustling in the hopes that one day it'll
magically fix all of the unpleasant emotions that these people just stirred up.
And also, Gabriel, I think people should study their patterns as well.
Zoom out.
Look at the larger patterns in their lives, right?
These trends will tell you whether the content you consume is actually making you a better
person or just keeping you stuck in place.
you know, are you becoming more skilled, more knowledgeable, more effective in your life, or are you
plateauing in terms of your expertise, your curiosity, your impact? Are you making objective
progress in your life and your career? By whichever metrics you choose to measure them, right? So is that
impact, responsibility, salary, fulfillment, et cetera, or do you feel stuck in place, lost? Maybe you
even feel like you're going backwards. Yes. And also I would throw in here, Jordan, another really
interesting pattern to look at is how your relationships are doing, right? Are your relationships with
other people getting stronger? Are they getting closer? Are they getting more productive? Or are your
relationships with people also maybe getting a little transactional or superficial or competitive or maybe just
fading away entirely because the hustle culture thing is forcing you to compare yourself to them or measure
yourself against them and you're not actually like relating to people in a meaningful way anymore?
Yeah. And also what role is self-help playing in your life in general? Do you find it additive, insightful,
supportive, or does it feel burdensome, confusing, difficult to implement? If it feels like another
chore and it's not moving you forward, then chances are it's not going to be something that you can
sustain, right? So to put it simply, has hustling and grinding actually gotten you anywhere?
If your thoughts, feelings, patterns are all trending toward the negative after you interact
with this hustle content, then you're almost certainly consuming toxic content. There's no better
barometer for the quality of this stuff than your own personal experience with it. So when you zoom
way out on the balance, self-help should be making you more empowered and effective, not less. And if
not, that it's time to make a change. And that begins by getting clear on the ideas that you want to
prioritize. Yeah, and that really begins by creating your own set of values, right? Saying these are not
the values that I believe in anymore. I better check back in and figure out what I actually care about.
because again, not to repeat here, but baked into hustle culture are these principles that are just
at best, they're very simplistic and at worst, they're super toxic and flawed. And some of those
principles are, for example, that the answer to life's biggest problems is just more work, right?
That's probably like the foundational one. Another principle that's baked into hustle culture
is the idea that working yourself to the bone is inherently good, right? That's something worth
discussing. Then not everybody agrees with that. Another one is that toiling for material wealth is a
worthwhile endeavor that competing with other people is healthy. I mean, the list goes on and on. The idea
that your labor is more important than your physical health than your mental well-being. It's more
important than your relationships. So when you consume hustle content, you're not just consuming the
video of the guy stepping off the plane and looking awesome. You're also consuming these more fundamentally
questionable ideas. So if you're going to break your dependence on this stuff, you have to come back
to your own values, your own expectations, your own standards. I mean, what do you believe is the
most important thing in life. How do you want to spend your precious time on earth? What do you want to
spend the fruits of your labor on? What problems, what missions do you find inherently rewarding to work on?
That's one that hustle bros never talk about, right? It's never about what you would do if you never
got paid to do it, which as we all know is the best place to figure out what kind of company you want to
build or what kind of creative work you want to work on. I mean, that's just not part of the equation
at all. Where in your life and in your career do you make the most impact? How do you judge the value of that
impact. You know, what would make you proud? What would make you fulfilled? If you can answer some of
these questions for yourself, and again, this is not something that you can solve in an afternoon.
This is a lifetime of revisiting these questions. Obviously, it's a process. But if you can answer
some of these questions for yourself, you'll start to create a system that is much more meaningful
than whatever some, you know, roided out fitness bro on YouTube putting interviews with Arnold
Schwarzenegger laid over NBA footage, whatever someone like that is going to tell you. Because
developing your own philosophy, that will make you more equipped to judge the credibility of the
self-help that you consume in the future and when you're in touch with what really matters to you,
it's a lot easier to watch just a dumb motivational video on YouTube that's telling you to outwork
everybody in the building and say, you know, that doesn't quite fit with what I'm trying to do
with my life. I know that that doesn't chime with what I hold to be true. That's not who I am.
And it's way easier to let that stuff roll off your back and just ignore it completely.
And if you go through this exercise and you realize that what you truly value is more work,
like you actually do want to spend more time at your desk, we're not arguing with.
view, more power to you, but at least in that case, you'll have arrived at that view on your own
rather than just inheriting it from a teacher who's pushing you to buy into that particular
definition of success so that they can just collect more money from you. Although I would venture
to guess that if you really did this exercise, you'd probably find additional sources of meaning
beyond just, you know, rising and grinding. And that's really the whole point. This is the Jordan
Harbinger show. We're doing a deep dive on hustle culture. We'll be right back. Thank you so much
for listening to the show. I love doing these deep dives. I know that you guys get a lot out of them,
because I always hear from you. If you want to support the show, and I of course appreciate it when you do,
all the sponsors and discount codes are all in one page. We recently redid the page. It should be more
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and you can also search for any sponsor using the search box on our website as well.
So please consider supporting those who support this show. Now for the rest of my conversation on
Hustle Culture with Gabriel Mizrahi.
A lot of this, and I know we touched on this earlier, though, I want to highlight this.
You have to cut out the toxic content.
Once you've developed a set of values that are truly your own, it's time to make a conscious
decision to just stop consuming all of this hustle BS.
This is no different from cutting out on healthy food, dangerous substances, bad TV, toxic
friendships.
You just have to choose to do it.
And from there, it's up to you to create a new information diet.
My recommendation is to go cold turkey on all motivational content, all productivity porn, all other rise and grind type nonsense.
Unsubscribe from those podcasts and YouTube channels.
Donate or better yet toss out.
Recycle those books and magazines.
Clear those websites, the bookmarks from your browser.
And if you find it hard to avoid this content because the algorithms and filter bubbles can often keep serving it up to you, you got to get even more proactive.
Block the freaking website if you need to.
create new accounts with a fresh history, mute the channels on YouTube or social who post
this kind of garbage. Cutting this stuff out, it's liberating. It feels great, and it'll make
room for more substantive influences. And then I recommend taking a break from self-help in general
for a little while and just getting back in touch with your own thoughts and rhythms. You know,
this is a mental detox, and part of the reward is coming back to yourself, free from all
influences, good or bad. And then when you're ready, you can start consuming better content.
I've heard from a lot of you here on the show,
listening to the show,
you'll say something like,
oh, I love when there's a guest that's a scientist,
or I love when there's a guest that's a coach that does this,
but I also love when there's just no homework.
And that's a key phrase, right?
We do balance the great stories with the coaches
and the scientists and the whatever,
because you can't be constantly bombarded with this.
I want you to listen to all the episodes,
and I realize it's not good for you
if I have like 10 science of happiness authors in a row
because people just go,
good Lord, I have to meditate for 15 hours a day and journal everything. Otherwise, I'm not doing it.
And then people start to feel bad. And I don't want the show to make you feel bad. I want it to make
you feel good like you're moving forward, okay? If you can do that, if you can cut all this crap out,
all this stuff that's making you roll backwards, hustle content might still find you from time to
time. But it won't be able to sink its teeth into you the way that it once did. Because you're
just not under its spell anymore.
And once you do all that, once you do get to enjoy that mental detox, then it's really just about seeking out higher quality resources, right? You clear the decks, you open up your mind, you open up your time to consume better ideas, authors, thinkers, people who actually know what they're talking about. And obviously, those influences, they'll look very different from person to person. So we're not here to tell you, this is what you should consume. This is what you shouldn't consume. But here are a few principles to keep in mind this might help. So first of all, we recommend looking for resources that actually meaningfully contribute.
to your skills and to your knowledge. So that means avoiding those, you know, you go girl manifesto
type stuff, those motivational masterminds, those rah-rah summits that are kind of just designed to, like,
tap into that tribal mentality where everybody just gets high on being in contact with other people
who are really excited to be there. Ultimately, those feel good for a few hours, but they don't
really do much. I would look for books, courses, conversations that teach you concrete skills
deepen your expertise in specific areas that are relevant to you. The more you can immediately
apply what you learn and generate results, the higher the quality of what you're consuming is bound
to be. And very closely related to that is gravitating to people who are truly committed to your growth.
We talked about how hustle culture people can kind of undermine their customers because it
keeps them on the top. This applies both to experts you follow, but also to their followers,
your peers, who are also consuming the same stuff. So don't settle for teachers who traffic in,
you know, kind of vague language or cliches or teachers who tell you to double down on your
existing strategy or your existing patterns, you know, like, you're doing fine. Don't worry if
everyone's mad at you. There's nothing wrong. Just keep going. Very common in the hustle community.
Or people who encourage you to power through tough times or adversity with basically what amounts to
blind determination without actually looking at yourself and deciding, do I need to get a little
bit better here? Do I need to level up? Do I need to fill in some gaps in my skills? Do I need to
develop some more relationships, right? The actual work, in other words, look for experts who value
critical thinking. Look for experts who care about, you know, higher ideals, better principles
who focus on actual meaningful results. But most importantly, seek out influences that don't keep you
on the hook for more and more products. Because if you find an idea or a teacher or a school,
any kind of institution that encourages you to run with what you learn and never look back,
I'd say like nine times out of ten, that's usually a pretty great sign. And at the same time,
be wary of people who fetishize their success. Excellence without failure.
is a myth. Look for teachers and peers who openly struggle, grow, and put in the work to get better
or have in the past. True experts understand that real growth is hard. They don't gloss over
adversity. They acknowledge and they lean into it. So if you're consuming content that's largely
about crushing it, right, all the time, that's a sign that the content is purely motivational
in nature. It's lacking in nuance. Time to graduate to higher quality stuff. So that's our take
on hustle culture, why it sucks, why it's important to move away from it, how to find better self-help
materials, and I put self-help in quotes because I don't love the industry as a whole, but
good self-help equips you to navigate life's challenges. It doesn't just tell you, ah, power through,
or don't overthink it, just keep grinding. Good self-help helps you build concrete skills,
helps you understand yourself better as a person, helps you carve out a meaningful purpose that is
unique to you. Sure, good self-help might encourage you to put in the time to get good,
but not because it shames you into working harder. Instead, it should empower you to chase the goals
you find inherently meaningful. Most importantly, it doesn't preach a system that pits you against
other people in the pursuit of success. Instead, it puts you in touch with what you believe
is most important in life and helps you hold yourself to your own standards. I'm so glad you
touched on that. Jordan, this whole idea that the hustle culture kind of pits you against
other people because one of the most interesting things I've noticed over the years about this whole
community is that there's this very weird correlation between hustle culture and bad relationships.
Have you noticed this, right?
Yeah.
The most intense hustle followers I've met in my life, they've all been, and I say this because it's
really sad, it's like a tragic thing.
They've all really been very lonely, alienated, sort of lost people.
They don't have a strong support group.
They don't have a strong community.
They might be part of a community that really follows this stuff.
but that doesn't mean that they're building intimate relationships.
And my theory about why that is is that I'm guessing hustle curriculum taught them to view other people
as competition.
It's got to be that.
Absolutely.
But it's also because hustle culture, it implicitly teaches you to not deal with the problems
in your life.
It teaches you to not acknowledge difficult experiences that you might be going through
with other people.
So if your business is going badly, a hustle bro isn't going to say, you need to turn to
your business partner and ask, like, talk about this or you need to go to your therapist
and ask them like, why do I feel so anxious when I wake up in the morning?
Why don't I want to go to work?
Let me figure this out.
They're never going to tell you that.
They're going to tell you, ignore those feelings.
Those are just your brain trying to sabotage you when really the best thing you can do in a
moment of struggle or when you're in a period of adversity is to turn to the people around
you and ask for help or just talk about it or learn from them, all of which goes against
sort of the whole ethos of the hustle community.
Absolutely.
If there's one antidote to the whole toxic productivity culture, it's probably,
the people you surround yourself with and the quality of the relationships you form with them,
to your point. And it's only by sharing our experiences with our close friends, our partners, our
colleagues, our mentors, our team, whatever. Experiences both good and bad, by the way,
that's how we can find the lasting motivation to go after what we want. Not by chaining ourselves
to our desk or running to second, third, and fourth jobs out of desperation, but by finding
out what really matters in life with other people who care about those values too and drawing on
those relationships to realize our goals. Hustle culture is corrupt. High quality self-help can be great,
but strong, meaningful, intimate relationships. That's where the magic really happens.
And if you want to build on what you've heard in this deep dive, I know there's a lot here,
it's a little intense. We're going to link to a bunch of related articles and episodes in the show
notes, including stuff that we've created on building resilience, how to stop comparing yourself
to other people, how to conquer envy and other negative emotions, and how to design a morning
routine that actually works, and much, much more. We also have a full article on this, Gabriel,
do we not, on hustle culture, so that people can sort of share it. And it goes into even more
detail, if I'm not mistaken. Yeah, absolutely. We drill down a little more into each of these ideas,
and we also have some aspects of hustle culture that we didn't get to talk about today. So if you
like this topic, definitely check that out. You can go a little deeper.
You're about to hear a preview of the Jordan Harbinger show with a black man that befriends members of the Klu Klux Klan.
I don't support the KKK at all.
I don't support that ideology.
But I support people having the right to believe as they want to believe, as long as they don't cross the line and hurt people.
And to show, to prove that I will stick up for somebody else's rights has also led to people just like that sticking up for mine.
I didn't convert anybody.
I am the impetus for over 200 to make up their own minds to convert themselves
because I've given them reason to think about other things
that make more sense than what they're currently doing.
It bothers me a great deal that we call ourselves the greatest nation on the face of this earth.
We have to admit that there are some flaws here.
I don't adhere to that statement that we are the greatest.
Maybe I would bend and say that perhaps technologically we are the greatest.
So how is it that we as Americans can talk to people as far away as the moon or anywhere on the face of this earth?
But yet there's so many of us who have difficulty talking to the person who lives right next door.
This is the 21st century.
This racist nonsense does not belong in any century, let alone the 21st.
We are living in space age times, but there's something.
still too many of us thinking with Stone Age minds.
For more on how Daryl Davis convinced 200 KKK members to give up their robes,
check out episode 540 on the Jordan Harbinger Show.
Thanks to Gabe Mizrahi for joining me here today.
Don't forget, I'm going to be interviewing author Ryan Holiday live in person in Los Angeles
at the Venice West on June 13th.
I'd love to see you there in person.
Tickets are available at jordanharbinger.com slash tickets.
That's Jordan Harbinger.com slash tickets.
It's again, June 13th, Los Angeles at the Venice West.
That's me and Ryan Holiday live on stage.
Hope to see you there.
Links to all resources we mentioned will be in the show notes at Jordan Harbinger.com.
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