The One You Feed - The Hidden Cause of Procrastination and How to Finally Move Forward with Taylor Jacobson
Episode Date: June 27, 2025In this episode, Taylor Jacobson discusses the hidden cause of procrastination and how to finally move forward in your life. He explores how transformation rarely feels graceful, how represse...d emotions shape our behavior, and what it takes to live a life true to your inner compass. It’s a vulnerable, grounded conversation about fear, reinvention, and creating space for what you actually want to give to the world.For the first time in over three years, I’ve got a couple open spots in my coaching practice. If you’re a thoughtful business owner, creator, or leader feeling stuck in scattered progress or simmering self-doubt, this might be the right moment. Through my Aligned Progress Method, I help people move toward real momentum with clarity, focus, and trust in themselves. If that speaks to where you are, you can learn more at oneyoufeed.net/align.Key Takeaways:Importance of experiencing and releasing emotions for personal growthThe concept of safety in productivity and its impact on focusOverview of Focusmate as a solution for procrastination and accountabilityThe role of community support in overcoming distractions and enhancing productivityThe significance of vulnerability in seeking help and building connectionsThe principles of behavior change, including commitment and accountabilityThe relationship between emotional well-being and productivityThe challenges of transformation and the necessity of aligning with one’s true selfThe exploration of intuition and discernment in navigating emotions and decision-makingIf you enjoyed this conversation with Taylor Jacobson, check out these other episodes:How to Overcome Procrastination with Tim PychylDavid Kadavy on Getting StartedFor full show notes, click here!Connect with the show:Follow us on YouTube: @TheOneYouFeedPodSubscribe on Apple Podcasts or SpotifyFollow us on InstagramSee 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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We don't want to be walking around, you know, getting pissed at every driver on the road.
That's a really unpleasant way to live.
So the antidote to that is like learning how to really fully feel and release the depth
of those emotions.
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
direction, how they feed their good wolf.
direction, how they feed their good wolf. What happens when the thing you built no longer feels like it's yours?
For Taylor Jacobson, founder of Focusmate, the answer wasn't to push harder.
It was to pause, reflect, and begin again.
In this conversation, we talk about why transformation rarely feels graceful, how repressed emotions
shape our behavior, and what it takes to live a life true to your inner compass.
It's a vulnerable, grounded conversation about fear, reinvention, and creating space
for what you actually want to give to the world.
I'm Eric Zimmer, and this is the one you feed.
Hi, Taylor. Welcome to the show. Hey, Eric. Great to be world. I'm Eric Zimmer and this is the one you feed. Hi Taylor, welcome to the show.
Hey Eric, great to be here. It's a pleasure to have you on. We're going to be talking about a
variety of things today. We'll be talking about your company that you've built called Focusmate.
We're going to be talking about spirituality. We're going to be talking about focusing, routines,
all kinds of different stuff. But before we get into all that, let's start like we always do with the parable.
There's a grandparent who's talking with their grandchild and they say,
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 grandchild stops and thinks about it for a second and looks up at its grandparents
and says, well, which one wins?
And the grandparent says, the one you feed.
So I'd like to start off by asking you what that parable means to you in your life and in the work that you do.
Well, I just got chills in my body listening to you tell that even though I know it, obviously
thought about it.
What it means to me, you know, is like good and evil are not these abstractions.
They are our experience of ourselves in every moment.
And I think evil is just the expression of fear.
And we all have fear, you know, it's human nature. And then on
the other side of fear, you know, what is there? There's different words for it, but you could say
that's love or kindness or truth. I'm a fan of that. It's kind of the opposite of fear or the opposite of ego. So I think it's just, it is a moment-to-moment
discernment and effort for each of us to feel the kind of reflexive or autonomous nature of our
fears and the patterns that those have cultivated in us and to just resist them one tiny little choice
at a time and to find that what's on the other side of that is this intrinsic
goodness that wants to be expressed. I love that and I'm gonna put a pin in
coming back to truth because I think it's a big word for you and I want to
make sure we get to it but let's start by talking about Focusmate, the company
that you've built. And I don't want to spend a ton of time here, but I'd like to know a
little bit. First, maybe you could describe for people what you do. And then secondly,
why you built it.
Yeah, thanks for asking. So yeah, just really tangibly, what is Focusmate? Let's start with
what problem we solve. You know, a lot of us are say distracted or have a hard time taking action on the
things that we most want to be in action on very universal experience.
So I started Focusmate to help really myself first, but to help other people to
be in action, um, on the things that matter to them.
And I can talk about how that's evolved, but yeah, simply put, we create, um, the
opportunity for you to meet up with one person, one partner, or a group of people.
To keep each other company and hold each other accountable while you take action
on whatever it is that you want to be in action on.
And so after this, I could set up a focus mate session because I want to write a
blog post and I could get matched up with you and you want to edit a podcast episode. So we share our commitments to what we want to
work on. We might write those down actually and post them in the chat interface.
Then we hang out there on video while we work quietly together. It's really an experience of
not just accountability, but also camaraderie, and
I'll say structure too.
It really helps us to have some kind of definitive start point and also end point for things.
And so it's kind of this very light touch in all those ways.
And I think people are surprised by how much those things can impact you, but it's enough
to have a very transformational and often life-changing impact on just your
ability to do the things you want to do.
Yeah, I first heard of your organization through a coaching client of mine and had used it
as a way of kind of like you said, procrastinating on things.
He could show up, book a focus mate session and log in and have somebody there.
Now, the first thing that a lot of people when they hear that think is like, I'm just
going to meet a complete stranger that I don't know and feel anxious about that.
Talk about why and how people get past that.
Yeah.
So that's totally the right question.
In fact, because so much of the power of Focusmate is actually in the experience of feeling
safe and being
with other people.
It's a facet of how our nervous system works actually that we can't really reach optimal
sense of embodied safety alone or if we're too isolated too often.
And so one of the reflexive responses that our nervous system has to being around
somebody that is not presenting a danger that feels safe to us is it actually helps to calm
us down, help us feel grounded and help us focus. And it has an impact on even blood
flow to the brain and so a direct impact on our ability to focus. So all of that is to
say feeling safe is really critical. And so having those thoughts go through your mind, you know, and to be evaluating, am I going to feel safe
with this other person? And even the word stranger, I think connotes danger. I think
that's kind of what we mean when we say stranger is like, I don't know if this person's safe.
And so Focusmate, we just put a tremendous emphasis on our culture and on creating safety. So the culture of focused mate is really the opposite of kind of hustle culture
or grind culture, which might seem counterintuitive for a quote unquote
productivity company, but I believe in my experience is that when we're in that
head space, we don't think as clearly and the ways we work, even the things we work
on are not as true of expressions of ourselves and
our work isn't as creative, so on and so forth.
So there is a bit of a leap of faith when you try anything new.
And I would say almost universally, what people find is it's like this really magical soft
landing of safety and warmth and acceptance. And it's a declaration of vulnerability to
join Focusmate to say, you know what? I'd rather admit that I might be better off getting
somebody else's help than continue to struggle because it's more important to me to follow
through on this thing, to be who I really want to be than it is to try to muscle through
or tell myself the story that I can do it on my own.
And we really strongly reaffirm that in every touch point of your experience.
So that when you experience other members of the Focusmate community, it really is a
lot of encouragement, a lot of enthusiasm, a lot of like wherever you're at, wherever
your starting point is okay.
And we're also working on ways to give you preferences over who you get to work
with as well. So, you know, one of the examples is gender-based matching, you
know, some people just would feel safer working with somebody of their own
gender, for example, and if that's you, that's fine. And so when someone logs on,
it's not like you're spending this time chatting with another person, there's a
little brief introduction and then it's kind of to work, right?
Yes, we say about 60 seconds, you're saying hi, you're being friendly, but it's really,
you know, smile and then ask the other person, Hey, what are you up to? What are you working
on this hour? And then you get to work within 60 seconds. And then at the end, it's similar,
you know, a chime goes off and you're just checking in how to go Eric, you know, I okay,
I got distracted for a minute or so, but I got back to it.
And I'm really psyched about my progress, how to go for you.
And so it's, it's very, um, focused.
What led you to create this product?
It really came out of my own huge struggles.
You know, I'm going to say with being who I knew I could be or being who I wanted
to be and my whole life, I've always been interested in, let's say, personal development, but
about 10 years ago, I almost got fired from a job and I chose to leave that job instead
of getting fired basically.
It was just very demoralizing and it was really a result of me not...
I was working from home and I just couldn't hack it with that kind of isolation, lack
of accountability.
I just couldn't do it.
And leaving a job like that was very demoralizing and also humiliating for me.
And so it just kind of cast me into this dark place and I got a lot more serious about how
do I get unstuck?
What do I need in order to bootstrap myself to a better place
of being somebody I want to be? And so I just by and by got more and more passionate about
all the things I was learning and sort of realizing I could use all this struggle to
help other people. And it was years later that I really stumbled on this technique, but when
I did, it was just so life-changing for me
that it clicked really quickly that there is an opportunity to help other people as
well.
Yeah.
I mean, right off the top of my head, I see several core behavior change principles embedded
right in Focusmate, right?
Know when you're going to do something.
Okay.
You commit to a session that tells me I'm doing it at this time. Know what I'm going to do something. Okay, you commit to a session that tells me I'm doing it at this time.
Know what I'm going to work on.
Knowing what I'm going to do.
I talk about it with coaching clients
as just basically like we wanna be specific.
Like what, when, how, where.
Any bit of ambiguity in those things
is terrible for procrastinators, right?
They can become roadblocks.
And so with FocusMate,
immediately I know when, I know where, I'm gonna be in front of my computer, I know I've
decided what I'm going to do in that period, because I'm going to articulate it to someone
else. The other big principle there is that we just tend to, it's just a facet of human
nature, we're often more accountable to others, You know, knowing that somebody is going to be sitting there without a partner if I don't show up,
you know, enables me to try and make it to the session.
Although maybe they wouldn't be without a partner because you'd rematch them.
But the point being, I've got an accountability there.
And I think you guys keep track of accountability also, right?
And if you make sessions and you don't show up, there is some penalty for that over time, right? Maybe penalty is not the word you would use.
Yeah. I mean, we're really like a carrot, not a stick kind of culture. That's one way to put it.
We'll basically just say, Hey, looks like something came up. That's okay. We're not
judging it. But we just, if you have another session after that, we'll kind of freeze your
account so that the next person has a partner and sort of say, Hey, will kind of freeze your account so that the next person has a partner
and sort of say, hey, just kind of wave your hand
and say, hey, I'm back, I'm okay.
Yeah, yeah.
Thus reactivate your account and we trust you.
And that seems to work better than the stick approach.
Got it, that makes sense.
So let's move on from the product
and let's talk about focus.
So, you know, the goal of focus mate and the problem you were solving was an
inability to, I would say it would be maybe an inability to get started and
then actually focus, you know, you're sort of solving two things there, but
get started focus mates, a clunky name.
Talk a little bit to me about how you think about a getting started on a task, two things there, but get started, Focusmate's a clunky name.
Talk a little bit to me about how you think about, A, getting started on a task, you know,
for people who procrastinate.
Let's start there and then we'll move to Focus after that.
How I think about getting started on a task.
Yeah, like if somebody's a procrastinator, obviously Focusmate is sort of your best answer
for, you know, how to work through that.
But do you have any other suggestions or ideas?
Yeah.
Well, just taking a step back, like I think that procrastination is an
expression of feeling unsafe.
And I'll explain that a little bit more, but like, we are so perpetually
stressed out and, and then from a nervous system standpoint in fight or flight.
When we're distracting ourselves, it's kind of this expression of that constant low level
agitation or anxiety or whatever you want to call it, but stress.
We might think of fight flight as like, oh, I stepped into traffic and I got a huge rush
of adrenaline, but actually a more common experience of fight flight is like, oh, I stepped into traffic and I got a huge rush of adrenaline.
But actually a more common experience of fight flight is much more subtle.
It's just stress basically, or it's rumination or waking up early with thoughts about work
or something, whatever it is.
And when our body is in that state, we can't focus because our body is basically preparing
to either fight or run. It's optimizing for one of those functions. So there's a lot of agitation. There's a
lot of energy to act, but it's not focused. It's not calm. So we're really bad at slowing
down and being like, okay, what do I really want to do with my time? And then doing that
thing because the blood
flow is not even in your brain. It's just moving you and it's grabbing for things that can help to
really numb that unwanted feeling. But what we really need is to slow down and feel grounded.
And from that embodied safe place, what naturally is going to arise is a more authentic desire than Netflix
or snacking or whatever myriad things we do from a procrastinating place.
So that sort of indirectly speaks to what I'm talking about.
But with getting started, I do think that addressing that experience in our bodies can
be really important.
So why is a morning routine such a popular thing?
It's because when we say morning routine, we're not doing things that stress us out.
Basically morning routine is doing things that ground us.
And even things like just brushing our teeth or drinking a glass of water, it's having
a slowed down experience of ourselves that actually signals to our body, I'm safe.
So from that place, we're able more easily to get started.
Something like Focusmate, you might still feel a little bit of that agitated energy
when you show up, but the commitment, as you said, like the accountability to show up,
you've got a scheduled time, that might be enough to get you over the hump as well.
Then once your butt's in the chair, you're already slowing down.
Now there's a person there, they're helping you feel grounded to reflecting on what you
want to do.
So it's sort of easing you into a safer space, but it doesn't have to be focus-made.
It's really how do we ground ourselves?
How do we slow down?
How do we set the intention?
And so it's starting to feel slower and safer in our bodies. And then how do we just get ourselves
over the starting line to start that thing as well. And so you've got a line that I heard recently,
it was design a life that demands what you want to give. Say a little bit more about that.
Yeah, you know, that's something we say internally on our team at Focusmate. And
Yeah, you know, that's something we say internally on our team at Focusmate.
And the way that we think about ourselves as a company and our mission is, it's actually not really about focus.
It's about being who you really want to be or being who you truly are.
And that starts with our team.
You know, we think about serving ourselves on our team before we think about serving
our customers and like how we interact with each other on our team is kind of the energy that we're
putting out to our community.
And so we have this mantra internally of that's what we're helping each other do is to
design a life that demands what you want to give.
That's kind of one way of thinking about this.
And so we don't have a lot of hard and fast rules about how we work at FocusMate.
The starting point, you know, even in interviewing somebody is really, let's,
let's really learn about you and what works for you.
And we'll share about us as well and see if there's some real alignment there and
see if this is a good environment to support you in designing the life that you want to live.
And are the things that we need, the roles, the skills that we need in our team, are those things
that you really want to give? And it could be tactical stuff too, you know, the times of day
that you want to be working. Do you want to be on a lot of calls or is that really not good for your
energy? And you'd like to, you know, just kind just be asynchronous and whatever. So that's where it comes from. And actually, I'll just share briefly, I'm in a very active
reinvention of my own role at the company and it's really been enabled by the strength of that
conviction and commitment by the entire team, where I was very scared, honestly, to relinquish some
of the responsibilities that I had, but I could also feel that I just no longer had
the energy to keep like muscling through some of the things that I had been doing since
we started the company.
And the team and especially our head of operations, who has really taken a lot of this stuff off
my plate was just really adamant.
Like we got you, we got this, let's reinvent this, let's design a life that demands what you want to give.
And we all have faith that when we do that, and when I do that, it will serve the company as well.
Yeah, I think what's interesting about that line is two things. One is my experience is no matter
what you design to get a life you demand, there are still things that you don't really want to do.
There's just some measure of that, at least the stage that our organization is, right? There's
just things I do that need to be done and I don't love doing them. I outsource as much of that as
possible. But as you know, early on in a company's state, you don't have money to do all that.
But I think the other thing that's really interesting about that is that it
changes. You know, we design a life that demands what we want to give. And then what we want to
give, at least my experience is it can morph over time. And that maybe was your experience with
Focusmate was early on, you were giving what you wanted to give, and then it transformed. And you
had to, as you say, kind of be willing to try and reinvent.
And that word reinvent always sounds lovely, but it's rarely a lovely process.
Yeah, that's such an important observation, like, or transformation, like, God, I would never wish
transformation on my worst enemy. It's like pain, you know? But yeah, I mean, often the way we come to it is like burnout or something like this,
where you get in a groove and hopefully it starts out being, you know, you're doing something
that's authentic.
And then you just keep going and you may start feeling some dissonance and you know, the
like the thing starts to rattle a little bit and maybe you start to get migraines or like
chronic pain or like other signals that your body is like, no, this isn't working for me anymore, for us anymore.
Yeah.
Unfortunately, because of categorically, I guess we'll say fear, like, oh my God, if
I stopped doing this thing, it's not going to get done.
The company is going to fall apart.
For me, it was real.
If I tell my colleagues what's going on for me and that I need rest, everyone's going
to stop working if I need rest.
Our culture is suddenly going to become lazy.
And I'll come back to that in a sec. We have all these stories that keep us from just noticing like the moment
that thing changes, it's like, Whoa, I feel some strong resistance to doing this.
And like, can I make a shift?
But instead we just kind of plow through and then we have burnout or other, you
know, or injuries or other things that really force us to a halt and
kind of force the reinvention on us.
But the stories are rarely true.
So like in this case, the whole team was like really rallied around.
They were like, oh my goodness, like you've worked so hard and let us take these things
off your plate and find out what's on the other side of this reinvention for you. Hey everyone, I haven't had an open spot in my coaching practice in over three years,
but right now I've got a couple.
But I work best with a certain kind of person.
So if you're a thoughtful business owner, creator or leader, and you're ready to move
from scattered progress and simmering self-doubt to aligned action, strategic clarity and real
momentum, this might be the right time.
Through something I call the Aligned Progress Method, we'll turn inner alignment into real
world results.
So you can grow your revenue, reclaim your time, and finally trust yourself as much as
others already do.
If that speaks to where you are, you can learn more at when you feed.net slash align.
You're in the startup world, which means you are trying to please a variety of people,
right?
I guess that's not just a startup world, right?
Companies in general are trying to please their investors slash shareholders are trying
to please their customer.
They're trying to please their internal team.
You know, it sounds like your internal team was 100% behind you sort of saying, all right,
I'm going to slow down and get some rest.
Did you find any pushback from any of your other constituents or stakeholders around
that?
Because startup culture is very much grind, hustle, macho, like, I can work more hours
than you can work.
Did you find any or have any issues there?
You're welcome to say if your investor situations are ones you don't want to talk
about, I get it.
So you're welcome to say pass.
No, you know, for me, being able and willing to have one truth for all audiences is that's
really like, I think the ultimate aspiration in some ways, I think for like a human being
is to feel that peace that comes with being true in all ways, with all people.
There's nothing to hide.
So that's an aspiration, but I haven't experienced any of that pushback or tension.
And I think it's because it's always been a core aspect of our ethos.
And even our mission is really about paradigm shift, like creating
a company in a different way and doing it at scale to really model that it's possible
that you, that hustle and grind isn't necessary and to show, to find out, experiment with
what happens when you do things this other way.
I imagine that scares our investors sometimes, just like it scares me sometimes, but it's
just like, what are we here for?
What is my life for?
It's not to make a lot of money.
And so yeah, the pursuit-
It's not?
I really hope not.
For me, the point is to find out as much as you can, experience as much as
you can of your soul, your true nature, to really experience that deeply.
And so, yeah, how can our work and how can this company specifically for me be kind of
the vessel to further that experiment?
And so it's very authentic for me to say to an investor, yeah, we want to make this as me be the vessel to further that experiment.
It's very authentic for me to say to an investor, yeah, we want to make this as big as possible
and we really believe we can reach tens, hundred million people or more.
This can be a great place to put some money to work, but we're going to do it our way.
I also think we're at a moment in time where that's, the kind of gestalt is shifting
the collective consciousness.
We're all like the great resignation happening now.
We're all feeling that inner pull for something different.
And so I think that's also attractive to our customers and to our community.
And when we have an outage or something like this, we had a seven-hour outage a few months back,
and we were very vulnerable about it and very apologetic about it.
We did everything we could to provide
alternate resources to people who needed them.
But people were also very understanding and were just like,
you got this, it's okay,
because we're so actively creating
that narrative,
you know, in all facets of what we do.
Let's go back to focus for a second and let's go back to, you said somewhere, our
ability to focus is a function of our nervous system state period.
And you, you hit that a little bit.
I'd like to dive in a little bit deeper there.
And I'm going to start by saying, I sometimes feel like we have hit a point
where we need a different way of describing nervous system function than fight, flight, freeze.
I heard recently flop, which crack cracks me up.
I sometimes feel like those terms point towards, and you said it, it doesn't
have to be extreme, but they point towards an extreme. You know, they point towards a
very heightened type of reaction. Whereas I think what's happening with a lot of us
is what's happening nervous system wise is mild but chronic. I guess first your thoughts
on that. Oh, yeah. It's pretty interesting to unpack a little bit actually. I guess first, your thoughts on that. Oh, yeah.
It's pretty interesting to unpack a little bit actually.
I'm thinking about it as you say it.
I do think there's absolutely a need for a lexicon that resonates with people that feels
relevant to my life, right?
Because what I would love to see happen is for what we're talking about here and what
we'll talk about more in a sec to become common knowledge, you know, for parents and teachers
and just everyone, workers, like to understand how your body works and how your nervous system
works and what's really happening.
And this extends far beyond focus.
I mean, the implications for relationships are profound.
So yeah, fight, flight.
It's like, yeah, no, I'm not about to have a fist fight with my colleague.
And so you might just reject this as somehow irrelevant.
On the other hand, I believe that part of why we are so stressed is that we repress the extent of the experience
that we're having as one of fight or flee. And so we're trying to, here's a fun example.
If you're experiencing fight flight, meditation might help you because you're slowing down your breath. You're sending signals to your body basically that I'm safe, right?
But you might actually have enough pent up fight flight energy that you really need to
get it out in a more aggressive way.
And I'm a little bit reticent to even use this language, but it's the
truth is that when we're angry, it's a kind of murderous experience. The fight impulse is
violence. And it's so taboo in our culture to name that, let alone to allow ourselves to fully
experience it. And I don't mean act it out, of course, at all, but to just experience the level of agitation,
like the directionality of that fight-flight energy in us is immense.
And I think why, societally, we have so much angst is that we're collectively so repressed.
And we don't have the tools and also don't have the kind of shared understanding
of what it actually means to release that fight flight energy in a healthy way.
Like something that I will often do is I'll do like primal screaming, you know, and sometimes
I'll do it in a pillow if I'm in a place where that's necessary. But there's also a few things
that are more liberating for me than like going up on a hilltop and just like, you know, screaming. And in a very literal way, that's
vibrating your body and it's unblocking this stuck energy that's in your body. You know,
if you're not releasing that, you're literally just holding tension in your body, you know,
and that's what we're walking around with when we feel stress, when we feel anxiety,
when we are procrastinating, whatever it might be.
So I'm with you in terms of how do we make this common knowledge through more accessible
lexicon.
And on the other hand, part of that is we can't nice it up and say we're just going
to do all these sweet, gentle practices.
There's actually a need to fully embrace and feel our anger so that we're not projecting it
in all these sideways ways.
You can imagine the term snide remark is coming up or sarcasm or some of these really low
key things that most of us are doing constantly.
It's just like these little pressure valve releases of anger, but it's not actually
a release.
It's a manifestation of this pent up unex unexpressed, unfelt fight flight energy. And we don't want to be walking around, you
know, getting pissed at every driver on the road and all these, that's a really unpleasant
way to live. So, you know, the antidote to that is like learning how to really fully
feel and release the depth of those emotions.
Yeah. As you're talking about that, it brings brings me right to I feel like one of the fundamental questions we wrestle
with here at The One You Feed because it's a fundamental question I wrestle
with which is what do we do with negative emotion? What do we do with it?
Do we experience it? Do we feel it? Do we just really go into it and
let it be? Do we work to try and soothe it? Do we try and put it in perspective?
I'll give you an example. The other day, I had a busy day, lots of calls, calls,
calls, calls, and I've been having trouble with the prescription for like
four days. The poor pharmacy is overworked. They don't have enough people.
It's just been very difficult. So I had like 15 to 20 minutes and I was like, all right, it's a three minute drive.
I'm going to go to the pharmacy. I'm going to get there. I'm going to get it. I'm going to leave.
Right. And so I'm sitting there and I'm waiting in line and it was supposed to be ready like
four hours earlier. I finally wait in this whole line out the whole time, you know, talk about the
sort of fight or flight. I'm like, Oh God, I've got a coaching call. I got a client in seven minutes, you know, and I'm not freaking out.
But, you know, I'm feeling that energy build.
I get up there and the guy's like, yeah, we'll get that ready for you right now.
They had not gotten it ready, even though I talked to somebody a few hours earlier.
Then I just had to go, well, I can't stay.
I got to go.
And I wasn't going to be able to get back there for another day because of my schedule.
Anyway, long story short, I was leaving and I was feeling very angry, you know, anger
out of proportion to the situation, right?
So there's a couple ways to go there, right?
One way to go is to go and get in my car and bang on the steering wheel and scream for
a while and let out a bunch of curse words and just vomit that energy out.
That's one approach.
Another approach, and it's the one that I chose to go with this time, but I don't always,
was I really went, hang on a second, like get this in perspective.
Like you are an incredibly like privileged, lucky person
and if this is the worst thing that's happening in your life, you need to take it down a notch
and recognize like, hey, there's nothing to be that upset about here.
But that points to two directions and sometimes they're compatible. Sometimes there's a way
to do both those things actually. But I think it does point to particularly as we look at spiritual literature, right? And we look at spiritual traditions,
both those ways and psychological traditions, both of those ways are stressed at different times by
different people. And I'm just kind of curious how you think about that. And that was a long
setup for that question, but hopefully it's helpful.
Such an awesome illustration.
Yeah.
And I love the contrast between those two approaches.
So yeah, really glad you shared that.
Yeah.
So, you know, it's an ongoing experiment for me and I've, I've learned a lot as
you've alluded to from like different viewpoints and different traditions.
So like I read a book by David Hawkins called Letting Go that is profound and
you know, his view is basically all emotion is projection.
And so the experience that you had in the pharmacy was sort of the world helping to
needle some anger that is repressed within you.
And you talked about the disproportionate magnitude of your anger.
So perhaps David Hawkins would say that once you've released all the
old repressed anger, you might not even feel any anger in that situation. It would just
be kind of a ho hum, this is what is. At other times, there might be like a very small feeling
in your body that you could label as like the parts of your body that might heat up
or feel tense or something that's anger, but it's just so momentary that it kind of just guides
you back to, here's my boundary, like something that didn't work for me.
And then like Peter Levine, whose body of work is somatic experiencing, he talks about
how you see dogs that, like a dog will just come in from taking a walk, it'll come indoors
and it'll just shake.
Right?
It's like, we just went on this excursion, there was different stimuli happening, now
I'm back in my nest, I feel safe.
Whatever stress, whatever tension or emotion that dog is holding in its body, it just immediately
releases.
And that's the thing that all animals do except humans is they immediately release that fight flight energy
or that stress, that tension, it's all emotion. I think all of these things are synonymous in some
ways. So the tricky thing for humans is that we have all this stored up tension. And so the technique
that you chose in that moment, I would call that kind of a conscious dispersion of the anger,
kind of a conscious dispersion of the anger, right? Like, well, I just don't need to be angry right now. But you also experienced the disproportionate experience of anger, which points to, okay,
I have repressed anger. And I'd say this is universal, right? So I think the answer is really
both. It's, we don't have to, we can choose to do the work to unearth these stuck,
repressed, suppressed things in our body. And if we do that, then that situation will
make you gradually less angry in the future. Oftentimes, I say to people, if you've got to choose between taking a perspective and
feeling an emotion, Feel the emotion first.
Let it happen.
Let it be.
Allow it to be there.
Then move into taking a perspective on it.
Then move into going, okay, you know what, maybe it really isn't that big of a deal.
Like if you're unsure, that order of operations is probably best because then you're not repressing
or bypassing to the same extent.
What I think is interesting with what David Hawkins is saying, and I've seen that theory a lot of different ways
in a lot of different places, what I sometimes wonder is a couple things, is it bottomless?
So I went through this at one point in my life when I was, I don't know, 30, 30 years old, 32
years old, my marriage split up and I was separated from my son. And I certainly had
a role in that happening. But my partner had left me for someone else. And I was really
angry. It's interesting because that was a time that I expressed anger a lot. I took
up boxing, I was so mad at her, I took up boxing. And it was great. And I wrote hateful
letters that I destroyed and I allowed the anger to flow through. So I've had some experience with like, and now, you know, a couple of years later, I
went from wanting her to, you know, burn in hell to being like, Oh, yeah, sure.
I'll come over for Thanksgiving.
That sounds nice.
You know, so I do, I do agree with that.
But at the same time, I started working with a therapist and we started doing inner child
work, right?
That phrase then and now still makes us a certain part of me inside cringe.
But the idea was, hey look, the things that happen to you as a child
impact who you are today, your emotional reactions today.
The way to work through that is to go back, if you can,
and express the emotions that come up from that.
And so I spent some time doing that.
And then I hit a point where I felt like maybe I had more or less
sort of gotten all there was to get out of that.
But there seemed to be from her perspective like you just kept going.
And in my perspective I was like, it feels like I've done enough of that.
That there's not enough benefit.
As I'm talking this through, I'm realizing that what was happening
was I started to realize
I didn't have the emotions anymore.
So I had, in essence, sort of worked through them.
All right, that was a long way of answering my own question.
Well, I do think you...
Thanks so much for sharing that.
And like, oh, like, my heart goes out to you.
But also just like pulling the thread through to where you are now and going over Thanksgiving dinner.
It's such an amazing illustration of this.
Oh yeah, it's just like, it kind of is bottomless.
Like clearly you might be happy now, but the pharmacy still pisses you off.
So it's like, there's no righteousness in like, am I going to keep working with my anger
or am I going to just say, you know what, I have a really healthy enough relationship
to my anger right now that I want to focus elsewhere. There's no right or wrong about
that. I think it's just understanding, like, cool, at that point in your life, it was getting
in the way of everything that you wanted to do and who you wanted to be. And so that was
an urgent priority. And sometimes that's what life serves us up is these unavoidable things
to heal. Right? Yep. And then back to our point about
transformation and invention, like, yeah, I transformed a lot during that period. There's
no doubt about that. I don't want to do it again. Exactly. And yeah, and then it's just like,
I think for me, it's have I reached a safe landing pad where I want to exert my effort elsewhere or
even things like doing yoga.
If you're continuing to do, I don't know if you do yoga, I do some yoga. I'm very aware that the
yoga I do is tapping into stuck energy, stuck emotion in my body. So I might be feeling really
good, but at the same time, I'm like, I really want to keep feeling better and keep healing more
and keep getting my deep-seated,
we could say inner child fears, whatever, healed and out of the way so I can experience more of my
soul or true self or inner freedom or inner peace or whatever these things are.
Speaking of yoga, right, you are living on an ashram right now. I'm assuming part of
you're getting rest from Focusmate. Anything you want to share about what that is, what you're doing there,
what that's like for you?
You know, I guess the first thing I'll say is that it wasn't just getting rest.
It was really going through, in my case, also a breakup last year that just
brought up a lot for me, you know, and really I'll say the trauma that came up
through that experience forced itself to be handled.
I spent several months kind of muscling through or trying to do things the ways I knew how,
but at some point I just realized that I wanted to fully commit myself to... We talked about
the nervous system.
That really became my lens.
What's the optimal environment to do this kind of work?
Nature is extremely nourishing. Living in community can be really nourishing. There's
yoga classes every day here. There's healthy vegetarian meals cooked every day here.
There's a shared commitment to personal growth here. There's a lot of
ancient teachings that are really profound that we talk about on a daily basis here.
So it was really for me was, I want to try and experiment in what's the best and I sort
of joke, it's like focus mate for my whole life.
As opposed to just a one hour experience, I want to see what this is like. And I'll
say it's been really a lifelong interest of mine to live in community and experiment with what I feel
are more intuitive, healthy ways of living that are just really hard to come by in modern society.
So I guess I reached a tipping point within myself where I was like, screw it, I'm going to do this,
I'm going to try this for my own sake to try this, you know, for my own sake. But it's also,
it certainly inspired me and provided a lot of learning in terms of, you know, stuff I want to
take out into the world too. And is it the sort of situation in which you can also continue to work
to some extent or is it one of the spiritual communities that sort of asks you to withdraw
from all that? Both. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, you know, it's actually been a really challenging and fun experiment in that
regard because I've been really playing with that edge of, yeah, there's a way that they've sort of
asked me to show up here that adheres to their way of doing things. And yet my commitment to my own inner truth
is higher than that.
And so I'm really using this experience
to try to thread that needle where I say,
you know what, there's been moments where,
you know, I skipped satsang, which is, you know,
like we all gather to meditate and chant and these things.
And I skipped it and I got some pushback. And
immediately where my mind goes to is I'm going to get kicked out. And then I kind of walk
it back and I say, well, did they say anything about kicking me out? Am I reacting to reality
right now or am I just creating a fear-based story that I can't live my truth and have
it work here as well. And so, you know, this is a thing that we all do in relationships.
It's like, we're so scared of abandonment or getting hurt.
We've run away from the dynamic rather than just saying, Oh, let me, let me like
try to be true to myself, but in a very loving and gentle way.
And so it's helped that this is a short-term residence for me
with people I've never met before where I can say, all right, I'm really committed
to that experiment. I'm not going to run away from this place. I want to be here, but
I also want to skip satsang sometimes. I have work stuff that I want to do. And so how can
I be very loving in communicating that rather than defiant or angry or pushing back against
them.
And honestly, it's shocked me in some ways how well that's gone.
I will say, you know what?
The really loving thing to do here would be to communicate where I'm coming from and why
I'm choosing this.
Not because I'm asking for permission to do this, but because I want this relationship
to work.
Yeah.
And then to hear the responses back,
that's like, okay, cool. You know, like, I never would have expected that. But so it's been,
it's been really eye opening for me in terms of this is healthy relating.
When you're there, is it harder for you to put down work and go towards the spiritual? Or is it
harder to put down the spiritual and go towards work? Or is it just
go back and forth?
Well, to me, that's a false dichotomy. Like, because I think we have a lot of concepts
about what spirituality is that we haven't directly experienced. And so I think those
are just ideas. But to me, the strongest access point that I have to spirituality is this thing that I will often
call my inner truth. And to me, that is spiritual because where does that come from? It's not
something I analyzed. It's not rational. It's intuitive. But like, what is intuition? Where
does that come from? I don't know. But to me, there's a certain like what I would call divinity or kind of like inexplicable
higher power that's at work in all of us that is that voice, your inner compass, whatever
it is.
And so to me, kind of the ultimate spiritual practice is I'm going to trust that inner GPS.
I'm going to listen to that inner truth right now.
And, you know, in spiritual communities, people use the word ego a lot, which I
think ego is just, it's the collection of all of our fears and under one umbrella
called ego.
So when we choose our truth, the only reason it's hard is because we're scared to do it.
There's a fear that it's coming up against. So for me, choosing to skip satsang because what's
authentic for me is I want to actually go take a hike up to the top of this hill and do whatever.
That's the truth that's coming up for me right now. And in order to choose that truth, I have
to face this fear that people are going to be pissed that I skipped satsang. I'm going to get kicked out. I'm going to get scolded,
whatever. I'm not going to have a home. All these fears come up. And so how do you
conquer your ego, let's say? To me, the answer is you just choose your truth.
Because in the process of choosing your truth over and over again, you're going to experience fear
and maybe you'll heal a little bit of it or you'll peel a little bit of it back and you'll see that actually the thing that I was scared of isn't so scary after all.
And in the process, yeah, I think you get closer to ultimate truth. And to me, that
is spirit. That's God. To me, the words aren't so important.
Boy, there's a lot in there that we're only going to get to a little bit of before we
need to probably go into post-show conversation.
I'm trying to pick which part of that I want to grab.
Let's start with this one.
You talk about intuition, your inner GPS, that inner knowing.
Do you believe that there's inner characteristics that are true in you that are different than
me at the most basic level?
Oh, yeah.
There's a notion I've heard at times of the idea of the healthy ego, which is it's sort
of your individuality, your uniqueness, right?
And so one way that I think about this is like all of the experiences
that we've had and especially the trauma that we've had deeply inform the gifts that
we can give to the world. And when we are living from the fear, we are not giving those
gifts. We're basically just trying to protect ourselves. That's kind of our full-time job
unconsciously.
But as we heal those things and we tap into those gifts, now we're tapping into what I
would call your soul or your truth. And I think that true nature is intrinsically loving.
That's just kind of what comes when you're not scared is we just find that we want to
love and serve and give. But the way that we do that,
sometimes it's like it has the same shape, the same outline as our trauma, the same outline as
our fears. So like, let's say it's, you know, the shape of your handprint, it might start out being
all fear and it's an expression of fear. But as you heal those things, it's like, now the light is
coming through, but the light is coming
through in the same shape because your unique gift is a function of your history with addiction
or that traumatic breakup of your marriage or these other things that have helped you
become who you are.
I think of that the same way as like, you know, a fish and a dog are not the same thing.
They're occupying what Bill
Plotkin calls their unique eco niche. They don't have the same problems that
we have in doing that. But yeah, it's like when we're really being true to
ourselves, we're occupying our kind of correct role within the oneness of all
things. It's a nice way to say it. And I would say, you know, our traumas and our
fears may be one of the major shaping forces of that role.
But I certainly think everything that happens to us shapes us.
And I think obviously we're clearly shaped by some genetic capability.
There is a unique creation here that is Eric and it is informed by everything that has ever happened to me good and bad.
It's informed by the genes that I got is informed by all those things.
And then I do believe this is a Zen idea emptiness and form form and emptiness right that emptiness
is pure potentiality.
It's the it's the energy underneath everything.
But then it pops into form based on all sorts of things.
You know, echo niche, all these different things.
So I think we're kind of talking about the same thing and that there are versions of
me that are truer to essence the more I'm healed.
Yeah, beautifully put.
I hadn't heard some of those kind of Zen concepts, but it really resonates.
Yeah, you should look into, you know, the ideas of form and emptiness, though,
I think they'll really resonate. They resonate very much with what you just said before I started
talking, which is that idea. All right, we're going to wrap up. You and I are going to continue in the
post-show conversation because I want to talk about how do you know whether to trust your intuition.
A former drug addict like me is hesitant to trust strong inner feelings because, you know,
I had pretty strong feelings that were coming from inside me that destroyed me.
And so I think, you know, how do we know what inner voice to listen to, which inner voice
to trust?
I think we're going to pursue that in the post-show conversation.
Listeners, you can get access to that and ad- free episodes and all kinds of other great things by going to
onewfeed.net slash join. Taylor, thank you so much for coming on the show. It's really been fun.
Oh yeah. Thank you so much for having me, Eric. This is awesome.
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