The One You Feed - Robbie Vorhaus

Episode Date: May 17, 2016

This week we talk to Robbie Vorhaus about following your heart Robbie Vorhaus is widely recognized as one of the top three reputation and crisis experts and advisors in the world. Robbie’s path is... fascinating: On the outside, renowned crisis expert and communications strategist, Robbie Vorhaus’ life appeared ideal: a New York City Park Avenue apartment, a home in the Hamptons, two adoring children in world-class private schools, and a thriving PR agency representing world leaders, celebrities, sports stars, entrepreneurs and Fortune 500 companies. Privately, though, his life was falling apart. A marriage in trouble, jeopardized health, and financial pressures culminated on vacation when his family asked: “Dad, are you really happy?” Realizing he was in peril of losing everything he held dear, Robbie courageously followed the advice he had given clients for decades: Follow your heart. Choose to be happy. And consciously make everything better than you found it. The result: Vorhaus closed his agency, moved his family to their small Sag Harbor home, started a leadership and crisis consultancy, and began anew. Now transformed, healthy, happy, and celebrating a marriage of more than 25 years, Robbie drew on his life’s work and experience to write a column for his local newspaper, The Sag Harbor Express, outlining a step-by-step plan for following your heart and being happy, which, after going viral, became the basis for his next seven years writing. His book is called One Less. One More. – Follow Your Heart. Be Happy. Change Slowly. In This Interview, Robbie Vorhaus and I Discuss: The One You Feed parable The choice we face in every moment How if we feed our ego we are always alone, if we feed our heart we are always connected How you have to start now The math of One Less, One More Add one more good thing to your life each day and do one less thing negative thing Why we fail at major life transformation when we try to do too much at once The uniqueness of every human Doing less of what is no longer working for you Facing the fork in the road How there will always be resistance to our dreams. Committing to being our own person Following our heart The process of becoming How much choice do we have in our mood? The power of curiosity The power of small changes The crying Zen Monk If you think you are enlightened spend a weekend with your family Dealing with the perception of others How we tend to judge people by their worst moments Not allowing others to define us Do we want to be dust or ash? How wealth and fame do not necessarily bring happiness Committing to being our own person and being authentic For more notes visit our show page Learn more about the new coaching program. The window is open until 11:59 May 25th to sign upSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 If you really, really think you're enlightened, spend a weekend with your family. Welcome to The One You Feed. Throughout time, great thinkers have recognized the importance of the thoughts we have. Quotes like, garbage in, garbage out, or you are what you think, ring true. And yet, for many of us, our thoughts don't strengthen or empower us. We tend toward negativity, self-pity, jealousy, or fear. We see what we don't have instead of what we do. We think things that hold us back and dampen our spirit. But it's not just about thinking. Our actions matter. It takes conscious, consistent, and creative effort to make a life worth living. This podcast is about how other people keep themselves moving in the right
Starting point is 00:00:51 direction, how they feed their good wolf. Hey, y'all. I'm Dr. Joy Harden-Bradford, host of Therapy for Black Girls. This January, join me for our third annual January Jumpstart series. Starting January 1st, we'll have inspiring conversations to give you a hand in kickstarting your personal growth. If you've been holding back or playing small, this is your all-access pass to step fully into the possibilities of the new year. Listen to Therapy for Black Girls starting on January 1st on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Thanks for joining us.
Starting point is 00:01:39 Our guest on this episode is Robbie Vorhaus, widely recognized as one of the top three reputation and crisis experts in the world. Robbie's path is fascinating. On the outside, his life appeared to be ideal. A Park Avenue apartment, a home in the Hamptons, two adoring children in world-class private schools, and a thriving PR agency representing world leaders, celebrities, and sports stars. Privately, though, his life was falling apart. A marriage in trouble, jeopardized health, and financial pressures culminated on vacation when his family asked, Dad, are you really happy? Realizing he was in peril of losing everything he held dear, Robbie followed the advice he had given clients for decades. Follow your heart,
Starting point is 00:02:22 choose to be happy. The result? Four House closed his agency, moved his family to their small Sag Harbor home, and began anew. Now transformed, healthy, happy, and celebrating a marriage of more than 25 years, Robbie drew on his life's work and experience to write a column for his local newspaper, the Sag Harbor Express, outlining a step-by-step plan for following your heart and being happy, which led to his book, One Less, One More, Follow Your Heart, Be Happy, Change Slowly. And here's a quick message from Eric, followed by the interview. Hey, everybody. You might have heard last week that I announced that we have opened the second round of the One You Feed coaching program. We had a great first round
Starting point is 00:03:05 and a lot of success, and I got to work with a lot of people that I'm now happy to call friends. We've incorporated their feedback into the program, and now it's evolved into an even stronger offering. It is available now, but only until May 25th. We've limited the enrollment window to allow me to be more focused on who we work with and to make sure we deliver an optimum experience. You can go to oneufeed.net slash coaching program, or you can text wolf to 66866 to sign up for more information. And when you do that, you'll get a free download of the top five mistakes people make when they're trying to change their behavior. If you're interested, don't put off looking into it. You can make the changes to your life that you've been considering.
Starting point is 00:03:54 I'd love for you to be one of the success stories here. So go to one you feed.net slash coaching program or text wolf to 6686. That'll get you signed up on the emails, you'll get the download guide, and you'll get more information about the coaching. So I'd love to talk with you. And now, here's the interview. Hi, Robbie. Welcome to the show. Hey, Eric. How are you? I am doing very good. I'm happy to have you on. Your book is called One Less, One More. Follow your heart, be happy, change slowly. And if there's anything that I strongly believe in
Starting point is 00:04:32 with change, it's that doing it in smaller, slower doses. So I think we're going to have a lot to cover there that we definitely agree on. But before we jump into that, let's start like we always do with a parable. There's a grandfather who's talking with his grandson. He says, in life, there are two wolves inside of us that are always at battle. One is a good wolf, which represents things like kindness and bravery and love. And the other is a bad wolf, which represents things like greed and hatred and fear. And the grandson stops and he thinks about it for a second. And he looks up at his grandfather and he says, well, grandfather, which one wins? And the grandfather says, the one you feed. So I'd like to start off by asking you
Starting point is 00:05:11 what that parable means to you in your life and in the work that you do. I love that parable. And that's what actually brought me to you is because it's something that I followed my whole life. And what I discovered is, is that if we follow our ego, which the purpose of the ego is to separate us, to give us identity, but what it does is that it sets up us being alone in the universe
Starting point is 00:05:36 because with the ego there's always more. And I'm rich, I'm poor, I'm white, I'm black, I'm Jewish, I'm Catholic, I'm male, I'm female. There's something that always separates us. So there has to be varying degrees of which is better and not. And if you keep feeding the ego, if you keep giving into that separateness, you will always feel alone. On the other hand, as I've discovered, is that we all are born with a purpose. We all are born with a song in our heart. I believe, and over the course of my life in advising a lot of famous people
Starting point is 00:06:19 and sports people and people who run governments, it's the ones who feed their heart. It's the one who give credence to that song, that unique song, that their place in the universe, universe, one tune. And that when we feed our heart, we make everything better around us. We connect to the universe, and we find ourselves drawing to us that which we were born to experience. So that parable means to me that when you feed your ego, you will always be alone. When you feed your heart, you will always be fulfilled. Excellent. Well, let's talk first about the title of the book, One Less, One More. What does that mean?
Starting point is 00:07:12 What it essentially means is that in every moment, we have a choice. And especially as we become more conscious. And people who want to discover what their purpose in life is, how they can be happy, how to get through a crisis, what they were born to do, if in fact we were really born with a purpose. I've advised people who are in crisis. I advise leaders, people who want to get themselves out of a tough situation or people who want to avoid getting into a tough situation or people who want to articulate what they really stand for. And there was always the question of, I can tell you what I do, but I don't know what I stand for. And I've heard this again and again and again. And one of the things that I discovered was in my practice, in helping people to discover how to be happy, how to feel relaxed, how to experience joy, how to be a better lover, how to experience joy, how to be a better lover, how to be a better friend, how to truly follow their heart. And what it was, was a very simple path. And that was, one, you have to start now. You can't start tomorrow. You can't start later. You have to make the decision to start now.
Starting point is 00:08:43 The second thing is, is that what you have to do is you have to eliminate something. You have to make the decision to start now. The second thing is that what you have to do is you have to eliminate something. You have to stop doing something that's no longer working for you. That could be an addiction. It could be gossiping. It could be a negative thought. It doesn't have to be grand, Eric. It can just be very simple. but you stop doing it one time today. So if you catch yourself worrying, you can catch yourself and say, excuse me, I'm not going to worry at this moment. On the other hand, you have to, in doing the math of one less, one more, is you have to be conscious about your experience in wanting to be happy, in wanting to be joyful, in wanting to be sensual, in wanting to be enthusiastic, in wanting to be passionate, in wanting to be courageous.
Starting point is 00:09:39 And you have to make a step, a choice of doing something more that takes you out of your circle, takes you out of your habit, takes you out of your everyday life so that you can experience something new. And when you do the math of one less and one more and then stop and become aware of what your experience is now. And recognize that, and again going back to changing slowly, that if you just do that every day, one less thing that no longer feels good or works for you, and that you choose to do one more thing in the direction of your heart's dream or desire, your life will change immeasurably, and you will begin to experience the life that you were born to live.
Starting point is 00:10:36 Yeah, I talk on the show about the idea that it's amazing what a series of small steps adds up to if you do them consistently over a period of time. Right. of small steps adds up to if you do them consistently over a period of time. Right. You know, Eric, my uncle, who has now departed, was Martin David Krestel. He was Einstein's protege and then went on to run his department at Princeton, applied mathematics. His son is a physics professor at the University of Maryland. And I called my cousin Clyde, and I asked him, I said, Clyde, is it possible to write a mathematical formula for one less and one more? And he said, well, what's the intention? I said, well, my belief is, is that based on my experience that one less, one more changes when a person
Starting point is 00:11:16 practices that they change the future and that intentionally their life becomes better. So he called me back and he said, look, I really, you know, we try to do this, and there's nothing here. There's no math to it. I said, well, thank you very much. About two weeks later, I get an email and then a call saying, can I talk to you? I have to talk to you. I said, okay.
Starting point is 00:11:41 He calls me and says, you know, my colleagues and I started getting into this and realizing that when you do math, if you're taking things away, you eliminate things. When you add things in, then you become their greater mass. But when there's a formula, But when there's a formula, that in that one formula, that the intention is to discover or to do something, and that as part of that formula is elimination and addition, you absolutely change the future. And he was very excited. And I said, well, is there a formula to that? He said, no, because what you're doing is in ways that can't be distinguished at this point. And that's when I knew, in my heart of hearts, hearing his excitement, that this was in fact ancient math.
Starting point is 00:12:58 Because if you look, Eric, at almost any philosopher, any religion, they all say the same thing. That you have to believe that we're here for a purpose, we're here for a reason, that our reason is unique, and that happiness is a choice, and that's ultimately the purpose of our life. Let's talk a little bit about the idea that we fail at major life transformation usually because we try and do too much too quickly. Why is that a recipe for failure? Well, because what grows quickly in nature?
Starting point is 00:13:30 Fire, cancer, weeds. We don't give ourselves the opportunity to transform because every system is built to follow a specific path. It's very hard. It's like riding a bicycle. I grew up in an area where there were gutters in the road where the water went down. If you got your bike in that gutter to try to get out, it required more force and you had to be more focused. Otherwise, something would happen. It's the same thing as when you're skiing or you're doing anything. When you get into a rut,
Starting point is 00:14:12 when you get into a specific field, to try to get out of that, if you do it too quickly, it's disruptive. So it's like no acorn would try to become an oak overnight. Nobody would try to meet somebody and marry them and have a child within a couple of days. It's not natural. You set yourself up to fail if you want to become the boss on your first day on the job, unless you're a leader and that's your job, supposedly. But the point is, is that if you want to change your marriage, or if you want to change your status from single to married, or even married to single, you need to give yourself time. to single, you need to give yourself time because we see what happens to anyone in any situation when something catastrophic or something that just happens.
Starting point is 00:15:15 It's so hard to deal with it because it's not natural. Thank you. Hey, y'all. I'm Dr. Joy Harden Bradford, host of Therapy for Black Girls. And I'm thrilled to invite you to our January Jumpstart series for the third year running. All January, I'll be joined by inspiring guests who will help you kickstart your personal growth with actionable ideas and real conversations. We're talking about topics like building community and creating an inner and outer glow.
Starting point is 00:16:19 I always tell people that when you buy a handbag, it doesn't cover a childhood scar. You know, when you buy a jacket, it doesn't reaffirm what you love about the hair you were told not to love. So when I think about beauty, it's so emotional because it starts to go back into the archives of who we were, how we want to see ourselves and who we know ourselves to be and who we can be. It's a little bit of past, present and future all in one idea, soothing something from the past. And it doesn't have to be always an insecurity. It can be something that you love. All to help you start 2025 feeling empowered and ready. Listen to Therapy for Black Girls starting on January 1st on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Starting point is 00:17:02 I'm Jason Alexander. And I'm Peter Tilden and together on the really no really podcast our mission is to get the true answers to life's baffling questions like why they refuse to make the bathroom door go all the way to the floor we got the answer will space junk block your cell signal the astronaut who almost drowned during a spacewalk gives us the answer we talk with the scientist who figured out if your dog truly loves you, and the one bringing back the woolly mammoth. Plus, does Tom Cruise really do his own stunts? His stuntman reveals
Starting point is 00:17:32 the answer. And you never know who's going to drop by. Mr. Brian Cranston is with us today. How are you, too? Hello, my friend. Wayne Knight about Jurassic Park. Wayne Knight, welcome to Really, No Really, sir. Bless you all. Hello, Newman. And you never know when Howie Mandel might just stop by to talk about judging. Really?
Starting point is 00:17:48 That's the opening? Really No Really. Yeah, really. No really. Go to reallynoreally.com. And register to win $500, a guest spot on our podcast, or a limited edition signed Jason bobblehead. It's called Really No Really, and you can find it on the iHeartRadio app, on Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. and you can find it on the iHeartRadio app, on Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Starting point is 00:18:15 I love one of the ideas in the book, which is about not making big disruptive change. You know, I work with some clients on some things, and a lot of the internet culture today, particularly in the entrepreneurial, personal development, call it what you want space is all about like, you know, go for it, live your dream, quit your job tomorrow, and, you know, abandon everything and follow your passion. And I think for a lot of people, that is just not the right approach. It's not practical, there's a lot of different things. So I love how you talk about, you know, you can start to do this, whatever your dream is without big disruptive change. So let's just pretend somebody wants to get from where they are, which is stuck in a job they don't like to owning a business where they get to focus more
Starting point is 00:18:55 on things they care about. How does one less one more work in that scenario? Let's first go back just a little bit further and recognize that scientists tell us that since the beginning of time, there have been, if you include the seven plus billion people on the planet today, there have been approximately a hundred billion souls, a hundred billion human beings that have been on the planet or that inhabit the planet and have also been on the planet. And that if you ask a scientist or a doctor or a religious person or whoever it is on any level, will there ever be or has there ever been a human being that's remotely like me? a human being that's remotely like me? The answer is no. We have over trillions living cells in our body, all having the ability to communicate. A hundred billion people and no one ever like us.
Starting point is 00:19:57 So the first thing that we have to do is we have to believe that we were born unique and with a purpose. Once you accept that or at least consider it, then you can start listening to certain signals within our body, within our experience. It could be curiosity, it could be what makes us enthusiastic, what did we dream about when we were children? What direction do we find ourselves moving in? What would we do if we knew we couldn't fail? Where is our heart? Where are our passions? What do we love to do? So now we're up to the point of your question. We're in a dead-end job, or we're in a job that we took because maybe our parents told us that this is the job that we needed to do, or maybe we're involved in a relationship that we knew we shouldn't be involved in.
Starting point is 00:20:57 And that's where one less, one more comes into play, is one is come present. Stop regretting, is one is come present. Stop regretting. Stop blaming. Become accountable. And come present and say, okay, where I am today, this present moment,
Starting point is 00:21:15 this moment right here is the fork in the road. It's the place where I leave my past behind, where the future can be anything that I want it to be. And what makes me passionate? What direction do I want? Let's say I want to open a bookstore or I want to open a fly fishing touring company, but I'm a teacher. So as part of One Less, One More, changing slowly, what we can do is, one, start to believe that you can have that fly fishing company. Start to believe that there really is a soulmate for you. Start to believe that you really can heal.
Starting point is 00:21:58 And once you believe, then you have to start preparing. And part of that slow process is then you have to start preparing. And part of that slow process is that instead of thinking I'm going to go from a teacher to becoming a fly fishing tour guy, is if you just leave your job and try to do it, you've never done it before. So something's going to break. But if you start doing research and saying, okay, how much money do I need? Where do I need to go? Where do I need to live?
Starting point is 00:22:30 Who else has done this? Who else can I talk to? And you start doing that every single day. And you start doubting less. You stop beating yourself up. You start doing less of what's no longer working for you and more in the areas of preparation.
Starting point is 00:22:52 At some point, as I write about in One Less, One More, you're going to have to come to a point where you're going to have to commit. And once you commit, that's scary. That's going to take courage. And by the way, courage, going back to what we were saying at the beginning, comes from the word core, which is Latin for heart and age, the age of the heart. And at some point, you have to consciously
Starting point is 00:23:18 make that decision to switch, going back to the parable, you now have to start feeding your heart and saying, I've got to make this shift. I've got to move to Nashville like Taylor Swift said, which she went to be a singer. I've got to quit this job. I've saved up enough money. But at some point, you have to make that decision and then to continue to pursue it. But in each moment, if you do it one day at a time, less of what's no longer working and more of what does, you will allow yourself to grow into that job. So it's just natural. Does that answer the question?
Starting point is 00:24:03 Yeah, yeah, it does. What I like about it is, you know, start now. I was one of my favorite, you know, I'm often asked for, for advice. If you give one piece of advice, I'm often like, just start, whatever it is, start because you, you will learn more in starting and moving forward than you ever will just thinking about it. And as you go down the path, you know, if you can, if it. And as you go down the path, you know, if you can, if you can only see five feet down the path, if you take two steps, now you can see a little bit further and a little bit further. And so to your point, if you just believe you can get there and start taking the steps, then, like you said, you arrive at a place
Starting point is 00:24:39 where it's not this huge, crazy thing. It's the next step. It's the next logical step. You know, there's a wonderful parable that we all know. As Confucius said, that the beginning of the longest journey starts with one step. My daughter, who we live out by the ocean in the eastern end of Long Island, and my daughter is a sailor. And there was a lot of wind and a lot of waves, and it was cold. And I said to her one day, and I said, Molly, wouldn't it be more comfortable if you just went out to where this,
Starting point is 00:25:14 you're not going to take your sailboat out in this weather, are you? And she looked at me, and she said, Dad, sailboats are meant to sail. And it's not a sailboat if you're just sitting there looking at it. We've got to go out there, and if I'm going to sail around the world, if I'm going to be a better sailor in inclement conditions, I need to get an understanding of how to sail in high seas, how to sail in high winds. And it was so interesting to me because it's true. high winds. And it was so interesting to me because it's true. Unless you start, unless you start moving down your path, unless you start preparing, you'll never have any idea.
Starting point is 00:25:57 I mean, my wife's a yoga teacher. And one of the things that she was talking to another yoga teacher who has a yoga studio. And this woman was saying that she never realized how much went into being a yoga teacher and a businesswoman and owning a yoga studio until she started doing it. Because now she learned that there's marketing involved, accounting involved. It's not just helping people with yoga. It's being a businesswoman. But she never learned it. She never realized it. And had she known it even ahead of time, she may not have even done it. So part of starting is the realization that you have to follow your dreams,
Starting point is 00:26:43 but you're always going to come up against some kind of resistance. There's always going to be some learning, which will send you off in another direction, and then another direction, and another direction. That's what life is. It's a constant exploration. It's a constant choice of who we are and what's going to allow us to become who we are. It's that process of becoming happy, fulfilled, joyful, enthusiastic. I mean, the word enthusiasm comes from in theos, in God. Look, Eric, we all want to be happy. We all want to feel peaceful. We don't want to feel afraid. But then we're not alive. That's not life. So as with your parable,
Starting point is 00:27:45 So, as with your parable, what do we feed? When we feed our heart, at least then we can claim authenticity. At least then we can claim that what we're doing is worth it. And anyone who is following their heart, anyone who's choosing to be happy, joyful, anyone who's choosing to heal, choosing to be happy, joyful, anyone who's choosing to heal, anyone who's choosing to be authentic, will tell you that despite all of the storms, all of the resistance, all of the pressures, all of the problems, and however many times you feel like giving up, you don't. And even if you do, you still come back to it because it's worth it. Because now you're singing your song. Now you're dancing your dance.
Starting point is 00:28:32 Now you're living your life. And it feels on purpose. A question that gets asked an awful lot is, well, I don't know what my passion is. I don't know what my heart says. I don't know what my heart says. I don't know what I want to do. You know, I've got, I've got, I know teenagers who are saying that very thing right now. So where, where do you start with this process? You start today and you start by committing to the experience of the exploration of who you truly are. If you truly want to discover why you were born, why you were here, what's going to make you happy, fulfill you, what's going to expand you,
Starting point is 00:29:30 expand you. You have to make the commitment to come present and to listen to the voices of your heart. Not to listen to what people are saying on Facebook, not listen to what people are saying on the media, not listening to what even what teachers are saying, but you have to come present and say, what makes my heart race faster? What is it that I find myself drawn to? What am I curious about? Maybe it's magic. Maybe it's pecans. Maybe it's blankets. maybe it's blankets maybe it's traveling maybe it's exploring another form of
Starting point is 00:30:13 sexuality or another place on the planet but there's something that all of us are drawn to. I can tell you that there are so many people who say that when they were eight years old and they went to visit SeaWorld, they knew that's what they wanted to do. Or friends of mine who are pilots who said, I knew when I was 10 or 11 that even though my father was an engine mechanic, that I wanted to fly airplanes. And I was giving a speech up in Boston. I was speaking at a school, and I was talking to college students about following your heart, being happy and changing slowly, walking them through the book. And this kid came up to me and he said, Mr. Borhaus, my parents are going to hate you. And I said, well, I'm sorry, why?
Starting point is 00:31:14 He said, because they spent a lot of money to send me to this school. And you know my parents because my dad's a very successful hedge fund manager. He's always on the news. My mother's very successful also. And I was always told and I always thought that I was going to go into finance. But I'm listening to you and I'm realizing that that's not what makes my heart sore. That's not what I'm curious about. That's not what makes my heart sore. That's not what I'm curious about. That's not what I dream about. What I dream about is being in music. And my parents, as I said, are not going to like
Starting point is 00:31:53 you because I realized today that I don't want to be a finance major anymore. And he listened to his heart. He listened in that short period of when we talked. I have a friend who was an entrepreneur who said, you know, I always wanted to go to divinity school. And is. He's now a divinity candidate at Yale. So, Eric, again, you have to be willing to come present. To start today. To listen to your heart, to listen to the feedback that you have of saying, what am I curious about?
Starting point is 00:32:33 One of the exercises that I do with adults is I ask them, when you were young, what is it that you wanted to do that your parents told you you could never make a living doing? And I hear everything from I wanted to be an elevator operator to I wanted to ride horses to I wanted to do this. And I say to them, well, when did that dream die? And 100%, 100% say it never died. I just never pursued it. So in my belief, if, as with the parable, if you continue to feed your heart and recognize that you were born,
Starting point is 00:33:19 or at least consider that you were born with a unique purpose, that your song, that your dance, that your purpose is to be experienced and expressed. And you take the time to do less of what's no longer working and more of what is. And that if you do that once a day, you become conscious, you start moving in the direction of your dreams and desires, and you will, you will find that your life becomes more authentic. Hey y'all. I'm Dr. Joy Harden Bradford, host of Therapy for Black Girls. And I'm thrilled to invite you to our January Jumpstart series for the third year running. All January, I'll be joined by inspiring guests who will help you kickstart your personal growth with actionable ideas and real conversations.
Starting point is 00:34:49 We're talking about topics like building community and creating an inner and outer glow. I always tell people that when you buy a handbag, it doesn't cover a childhood scar. You know, when you buy a jacket, it doesn't reaffirm what you love about the hair you were told not to love. So when I think about beauty, it's so emotional because it starts to go back into the archives of who we were, how we want to see ourselves and who we know ourselves to be and who we can be. So a little bit of past, present and future all in one idea, soothing something from the past. And it doesn't have to be always an insecurity. It can be something that you love. All to help you start 2025 feeling empowered and ready.
Starting point is 00:35:22 Start 2025 feeling empowered and ready. Listen to Therapy for Black Girls starting on January 1st on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. You talk about the fact that pretty much every moment we choose whether we feel good or we feel bad. And that has not been my experience or the experience of a lot of people I know, particularly people who have dealt with depression or other things that were, that they're just able to change from, I don't feel good or I don't, I feel bad to feeling good by just making that decision. What do you mean when you say that? Well, in fairness, I have suffered from depression over the course of my life at different points in my life. I also know there are times when I'm in a bad mood, and my wife Candice will say to me, well, you're not acting very spiritual.
Starting point is 00:36:16 And I feel stuck, and I know that, as I say, happiness is a choice, and we have the ability to choose. happiness is a choice and we have the ability to choose. My point is, is that as we become conscious, as we become more aware, as we take responsibility for our own dance, for our own life, for our own future, that in each moment we become conscious of that. I mean, in any religion or spiritual practice, the purpose of meditation is to quiet thought and to allow ourselves to become. So what I mean by it is, is that if we choose to truly live the life that we were born to live, if we truly
Starting point is 00:37:09 choose to be happy, if we want to allow ourselves to be vulnerable, to allow ourselves to transform, to allow ourselves to experience the ecstasy of those moments of perfection when we feel and know that we're really here for a reason and that we're loved and that our lives matter. It means that we have to choose as often as we can, and it's not a perfect existence, but as often as we can, to choose to feel better, to choose a thought that if every time that we keep thinking about what it is that we don't have, we'll feel bad. If you start to think about what it is that we don't have, we'll feel bad. If you start to think about what it is that we do have, you'll feel better. So the process, Eric, is not that there is perfection,
Starting point is 00:38:15 not that in every moment we should be happy, but what One Less one more is about is the process of becoming and allowing ourselves to at least see, well, okay, I'm acting like a butthead here. Or I allowed my anger to get in the way. I mean, I have a short fuse. I'm not very patient, but I'm better at it. And again, I don't think that it's important that we're better than anyone else. It's just that what I try to do is be better than I was yesterday. Yeah. Yeah. I love that. I think what you're, you know, really what you're getting at there and what I believe is that our moods are moods and they, there's sometimes, and emotions are very difficult to sort of
Starting point is 00:39:01 directly move. They're, they're not a lever that you can grab very easily. But our thoughts and our actions, those are levers that we can move. And if we move those in the direction that you're talking about, then we give ourselves the best chance for our moods to follow suit. Yeah, I mean, one less, one more. My book is not meant, it's not a Bible, it's not a perfect formula. It's a primer for anyone, whether they want to, you know, if you want to change jobs, change marriage, just be better in your meditation. You know, just even to explore the possibility of being happy. And I'll tell you one of my favorite parables is there's a Zen monk who's on a hill,
Starting point is 00:39:48 and he's crying. And one of the students comes up to him and says, Master, you're crying. You preach detachment. You preach happiness. You preach joy. You preach us to be unaffected by life, and you're crying. Why is that? And he said, because my son died, and I'm sad. And it's like, that's always struck me, because as
Starting point is 00:40:17 much as we would like to be on that path, as much as we would like to consider ourselves to be elevated on any level, the reality is that we're still human beings, and we still have bad days, and we still get pissed off, and we still allow people to rattle us. And someone once said, if you really, if you really, really think you're enlightened, spend a weekend with your family. Right, exactly. One of the things in the book that you talk about that I think is interesting and worth exploring is you say that sometimes when we go to make these changes, you know, we've made all, you know, one less, one more, we do this for a while. We've really sort of changed a lot of things about ourselves, that a lot of times those changes are either not noticed
Starting point is 00:41:04 or often not even appreciated by those around us. And that that can be a trap we fall into. a lot of things about ourselves, that a lot of times those changes are either not noticed or often not even appreciated by those around us, and that that can be a trap we fall into, and that's what we're looking for. So why is that, and how do we work with that? Well, that's a fabulous question, because it's something that, in my practice in advising people every day, is people will say, well, I'm a better person, but people still call me an asshole. Or I was, you know, even though I was the class slut and I know that I screwed around and I did terrible things, I'm not that person today. And that's part of the problem is that in our society, we seem to judge people by their worst possible moment.
Starting point is 00:41:46 I mean, whatever is their worst moment, that's the label that we give them, which is why I say, and again, even in the Bible, it says that Jesus said that you can't be a prophet in your own town. You know, what do they say a consultant is? Someone who has to travel in over 100 miles before they can give any advice. I mean, the reality is, is that you can't allow anyone to define who you are. You can't allow anyone to say, I knew you when you were this, and you're still this. That's why you have to recognize that in following your heart, in pursuing your path, in singing your song, in dancing your own dance, you have to be committed
Starting point is 00:42:40 to that quiet voice inside that's moving you in that direction. And at some point, I mean, we all change, Eric. I mean, I started, I was a newspaper photographer and writer, and then I went into radio, and then I went into television. And every step along the way, people always remembered me by what I was prior to that. And, you know, someone, people would always say, you know, this is my first book. And they would say, oh, well, this is your first book. And there's always some label, but you can't allow it to define you. What you have to do is you have to believe in your heart of hearts. If you're an electrician and you want to act, then you need to start preparing to do that. But what's more important
Starting point is 00:43:34 is that you can't be looking to other people to validate you until you start to do it. And then you have to recognize that even those people who validate you only know you from the outside anyway. And that's one of the things I think that's really important. In our life, we have to decide, are we going to be dust? At the end of the day, are we going to be ash? Dust is an accumulation of waste. It's something that you sweep into a corner and throw away. And so many people at the end of their life, I can't tell you how many people who I've advised who are fabulously wealthy, many people who I've advised who are fabulously wealthy, fabulously famous, fabulously well-known. They go into any restaurant and people see them and say, come this way. And they say,
Starting point is 00:44:42 I am a shell. I don't know who I am. My kids don't know me. I have all the money in the world. I don't even know what to do with it. I am an accumulation of everyone else's crap. And what do I do now? Versus saying, I want to be Ash when I die. And Eric, I think that's probably you too, knowing how, you know, I'm a fan and I love your work and I hear what you have to say. I think you feel the same way. We want to be ash. We want to be all burned up. We don't want there to be anything left to us. We don't want to die with the music in us.
Starting point is 00:45:25 But in order to do that, you have to commit to being your own person, regardless of what anyone else says about you. You have to be authentic. But at the same time, and at the same time, you also have to, in following your heart, recognize that we are all part of this universe, this one tune, and that we're all connected. The same energy that beats your heart beats my heart, and that in order for us to make this planet better, to make the world better, to make our lives better, our families better, we have to give more than we take. We have to offer more.
Starting point is 00:45:58 We have to be authentic. We can't allow ourselves to be reactive. We have to be responsive. We have to be open, caring, loving, going right back to the parable again. What are you going to feed? Exactly. Well, I think that is a great place to wrap up. This has been a great conversation.
Starting point is 00:46:19 I think our listeners are going to get a lot out of it. We will definitely have links to your book in our show notes. And it was really a pleasure having you on. It was my pleasure and my honor. And again, follow your heart, be happy, and change slowly. Great advice. Thanks so much, Robbie. Thank you, Eric.
Starting point is 00:46:38 Okay, take care. All the best. Bye. Hey, everybody, it's Chris. As a quick reminder, go to www.oneufeed.net slash coaching program or text WOLF to 6686 to learn more about the coaching program. There's just over a week left until the window closes. Thanks. You can learn more about Robbie Vorhaus and this podcast at oneufeed.net slash Robbie. That's R-O-B-B-I-E. Thanks.

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