The Rich Roll Podcast - Osher Günsberg Is Back After The (Psychotic) Break
Episode Date: August 24, 2023Even in the darkest moments, there exists the potential for redemption, rebuilding, and the reclamation of one’s life. Today’s guest is a living embodiment of this truth. Meet Osher Günsberg—o...ne of the most celebrated television hosts and media personalities in Australia. Longtime listeners may recall Osher’s first appearance on the podcast over nine years ago (episode #76) where we discussed his journey to the big stage and his transformation from being a chubby kid to a plant-powered, marathon-running host of Australian Idol. Shortly after that conversation, Osher experienced a public psychotic breakdown that left him terrified, distressed and convinced the world was coming to an end. But rather than hide this experience and internalize his struggles with his mental health and substance abuse, Osher bravely began to talk openly about his recovery. Today he shares that terrifying experience in vivid detail, what happened, how he clawed his way back to sanity, and the hard-earned lessons he’s garnered along the way—which you can also read about in his powerful memoir, Back, After The Break. Note: Today we discuss suicidal thoughts and ideation. If that subject is too confronting, perhaps skip this episode. If you are struggling, please raise your hand and reach out for help. You can call SAMHSA’s National Helpline at 1-800-662-HELP and if you are experiencing suicidal ideation, I encourage you to call the Suicide Prevention Hotline at 1 (800) 273-TALK. Osher demonstrated a huge amount of courage and vulnerability to share his story. My hope is that his narrative serves as a powerful reminder that taking responsibility for your mental health is crucial, and the bravest thing you can do is ask for help. Show notes + MORE Watch on YouTube Newsletter Sign-Up Today’s Sponsors: AG1: drinkag1.com/RICHROLL Peak Design: peakdesign.com/RICHROLL Indeed: Indeed.com/RICHROLL Plant Power Meal Planner: https://meals.richroll.com Peace + Plants, Rich
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It's not like the gold medal you hold at the end is the prize.
Who you became to hold the gold medal is the prize.
It's not like everything's going to be fine when I hold this thing.
No.
Who you become to hold this thing, that's it.
The Rich Roll Podcast.
Hey, everybody. How are you guys doing? Welcome to the podcast.
Today's guest is one of my very best friends in the world,
who, I got to say, up front, demonstrated a huge amount of courage and vulnerability
to come on the podcast and share, quite quite openly his rather harrowing brush with
mental illness, more specifically psychosis, in which he became altogether untethered from reality.
Can you imagine anything more frightening? And his profoundly inspiring journey back to sanity,
back to well-being and happiness. His name is Osher
Gunzberg, which will no doubt be a name familiar to pretty much everyone tuning in from Australia,
where he is one of the most, if not the most, prominent and celebrated television hosts and
media personalities. Over the course of his career, Osher has hosted Australian Idol,
The Bachelor Australia, The Bachelorette Australia,
and The Masked Singer Australia. He narrates the Australian TV series Bondi Rescue, and he hosts
his own podcast called Better Than Yesterday. RRP Hardcores may recall Usher's first appearance on
the podcast over nine years ago, that was episode 76, where we discussed his journey to the big
stage and his transformation from being a
chubby kid to a plant-powered marathon running host of Australian Idol. But shortly after that
conversation, Osher, who is then living in Los Angeles, experienced a complete psychotic
breakdown. It's a breakdown that left him terrified and distressed, wandering aimlessly
around Venice Beach, convinced that the world was coming to an end. But rather than hide this
experience and internalize his struggles with mental health and drug and alcohol use,
Osher began to talk openly about his recovery journey. This experience ends up becoming the backbone
for his beautiful memoir entitled Back After the Break,
very cheeky title, which chronicles his journey
through the depths of addiction, mental health battles,
and the arduous quest for self-discovery,
all important topics that we, of course, dive into today.
In this conversation, he shares that terrifying experience in vivid detail,
what happened, how he clawed his way back to sanity,
the hard-earned lessons he's garnered along the way,
and what we can all learn from his experience about mental health generally,
mental health hygiene specifically,
and the critical importance of mental health advocacy. I got a
couple more things I would very much like to mention before we dig into this one, but first.
We're brought to you today by recovery.com. I've been in recovery for a long time. It's not hyperbolic
to say that I owe everything good in my life to sobriety. And it all began with treatment
and experience that I had that quite literally saved my life. And in the many years since,
I've in turn helped many suffering addicts and their loved ones find treatment. And with that,
I know all too well just how confusing and how overwhelming
and how challenging it can be to find the right place
and the right level of care,
especially because unfortunately,
not all treatment resources adhere to ethical practices.
It's a real problem,
a problem I'm now happy and proud to share
has been solved by the people at recovery.com
who created an online support portal
designed to guide, to support, and empower you to find the ideal level of care tailored to your
personal needs. They've partnered with the best global behavioral health providers to cover the
full spectrum of behavioral health disorders, including substance use disorders, depression, Thank you.
I empathize with you.
I really do.
And they have treatment options for you.
Life in recovery is wonderful, and recovery.com is your partner in starting that journey.
When you or a loved one need help, go to recovery.com and take the first step towards recovery.
To find the best treatment option for you or a loved one, again, go to recovery.com.
Okay, this episode is absolute gold and Asher's narrative serves as this powerful reminder that
even in the darkest moments, there exists this potential for
redemption, for rebuilding, and for reclamation of one's life. My hope is that Asher's story
inspires you to deepen your own resilience and serves as a call to embrace your own journey
towards personal growth. A bit of forewarning before we dive in, however,
suicidal thoughts, suicidal ideation is a topic that comes up. So if you find that subject a bit
too confronting, perhaps skip this episode. And for anyone who is suffering, who finds themselves
right now in the acute grips, I want to say, please don't keep it to yourself.
Please reach out. Help is available. And towards that end, a list of resources can be found in the
show notes to the episode at richroll.com. So check that out. With that said, please enjoy my
conversation with Osher Gunsberg. I love you. I'm so happy to be here and and you know we've known each other for a long time I
think since 2012 maybe a little before that yeah oh yeah no it was it was 2011 12 12 I just I think
so yeah and I do remember when Finding Ultra came out and I did a book signing in LA. The Park La Brea. Three people came, two of which were you and Dan McPherson.
That's right.
Yeah.
My boy Dan.
Oh man.
Yeah.
And the moment you spoke, you spoke to Dan,
you're like, all of a sudden you're like 10 people
who you both know because of Ironman community.
Because he'd only just finished racing Ironman
a little while back.
Anyway, so you, know, you, Dan, Australia in general,
always have a strong place in my heart,
but I really wanna get into your mental health journey.
You've gone through a lot.
You've come out the other side, but of all of my friends,
you've weathered perhaps the most intense experience
and survived to tell the tale.
And it's really, it's very impactful.
I'm not laying, being tied into a mountain of water, dude.
I know, like I wanna go there,
like do you wanna go there?
Yeah, absolutely, I'll be happy to.
It's really important that we do.
So walk me through this,
because I know from our history,
obviously through the recovery community,
I know your story with drugs and alcohol quite well.
It's been so long since you've been on the podcast.
So we can kind of get into that a little bit.
But then what's really interesting
is all the stuff that came after sobriety.
What's interesting is where we're sitting right now,
we're in the suburb of Sydney called North Bondi
and we are about 215 meters,
which is a unit of measured measurement
the rest of the world uses.
But for our isolationist North American or American friends,
it's about 900 feet, no, 600 feet
from one of the places that it all really started to fall apart
about something years ago.
Because like, look, I was a jumpy kid.
I'm 49 as we're recording this.
I was a pretty jumpy kid.
I remember going to,
my parents took me to a psychiatrist at the age of five.
Now what's going on with a kid that you go to a psychiatrist?
I don't know.
I just remember going.
But they were trying to help me best they could
and realized that whatever they were dealing with was beyond their skillset.
Jumpy, meaning like hyperactive.
Terrified and anxious.
ADHD.
Like, no, that stuff didn't come to quite later.
It was just like full mega, mega panic attack, like ultra panic attacks.
I remember like the kind of panic attacks that were just so overwhelming.
And I distinctly remember being so terrified and going to hide under my bed
at the age of five, I think.
And I couldn't, but hiding under the bed didn't make it go away
because the thing that was terrifying was in my own body.
I couldn't escape it.
It was just a feeling that had kind of no real trigger
to it. Um, and I couldn't get away from it and it was really, really bad. Um, and then I think,
so my stomach would feel really bad. And then, um, I found that, you know, a way to make my
stomach not feel bad was to put things in it. So I started to eat quite compulsively. And, um,
at the age of eight, I ended up in Weight Watchers. So when I went to my first 12-step meeting, I'm like, I know this.
I've been here before. And so, yeah, I mean, my mom and my dad, they tried really hard.
You know, they really did. Did everything they could. Mom took me because that was the
only, this is before kind of pediatric kind of weight control shit. This is in the 80s.
This is before kind of pediatric kind of weight control shit.
This is in the 80s.
And that was all there was in Brisbane.
And I think by about the age of 17, I left high school at 112 kilos,
which is 250-something pounds.
Like, it was big.
I didn't realize you were that big. Yeah, yeah, I was big.
I was big.
And I still got the stretch marks.
Yeah, that's, you know know mega body shame and bullying and
like terrified of having my shirt off and like so afraid of having my shirt off like would and i
remember being i was so big that i would always swim with a t-shirt on because i was so ashamed
of my own body and um i distinctly remember being on holidays once with a mate up in Caloundra,
oh no, Malula Bar.
I was like 15, 16. I remember swimming in the ocean and the surf.
I was body surfing because I always loved body surfing.
And I stood up out of a wave and I looked down
and there was blood spots on my t-shirt
because the t-shirt had rubbed my nipples so much I was bleeding.
Yeah, it was no fun.
so much. I was bleeding. Yeah, it was no fun. So how did you lose the weight and become this iconic surfer? The emblematic of everything youthful in Australia as like Andrew G on
Channel B. Yeah, I know, right? Well, the first thing that happened is like I got unemployed in the early 90s.
We were at, I think, 12% youth unemployment in Queensland.
It was a lot.
And I couldn't get a job anywhere.
And I didn't do very well in high school.
And I ended up sitting at home.
I was on the dole.
And I just felt my brain just going to mush
because I wasn't being, it's before the internet, you know.
So I'd read all my books twice.
I'd just sit there and watch TV all day
and I could just feel my brain just going to porridge
because I wasn't getting stimulated and I wasn't able to do anything.
And I just got fatter and fatter.
And then one day I just felt and it's like,
oh shit, I've got to go for a walk.
I've got to go do something.
But I've been trying to go for a walk,
but I couldn't go out.
I couldn't get out of the house for a couple of days
and knew I had to do something.
And so I tricked myself by saying,
I'll just go check the mail
because this is before the internet.
The most exciting thing that happened in the day
was when the mailman came.
And, ooh, a sales catalog.
And so my mailbox was over here down my driveway, but I went that way.
And I walked that way and went up around the block.
And I came back.
It was about 800 meters or so.
And I picked up the mail.
I went, oh, I've got the mail.
And then I went and basically laid down for about four hours.
That was the most exercise I'd done in a long time.
And I did that again the next day
and then the next and the next
and it kind of got easier
and I was less breathless every time, just walking.
And then there was a larger block around,
it was about a mile, one and a half Ks or so.
And I started doing that
and I did that for about a week and a half, two weeks.
And then one day I just, I was doing this every day.
And then one day I was like, I started to feel this thing.
And when I read your book, I was like,
huh, that's the thing that happened to me.
I just felt this thing.
I was like, I just have to.
And I was suddenly, you know,
Connor McLeod on the beach with Sean Connery in Highlander,
that terrible film, but it's amazing.
I just had to start running.
And I ran and like, you know, wind in my face.
And I'm like, ah, and then I could feel my chest was exploding
and my heart was going to explode.
And I stopped and I just kept walking.
I looked back and I'd run the distance between two telephone poles,
which is about 30 metres.
And then the next day I ran between one and then I passed the telephone pole
and I stopped at one after that. So I ran three. And the next day I ran between one and then I passed the telephone pole and I stopped at one after that.
So I ran three and the next day I ran four. It was literally just increasing above by 30 meters
at a time. And then soon enough, I was running the whole thing. And once I started that, the
weight just fell off me, man. And I was about 19. So I had metabolisms on my side and I lost so
much weight so fast. I reckon I lost maybe 10,
10 or 20 kilos about three months, like really quick, really, really quick.
So I wasn't eating terrible food. I was actually eating okay. And I remember sitting next to a
bloke I went to school with at a bar and he looked straight at me and didn't recognize me. I was
like, holy shit. Oh, it's cause I've got a chin. Um, it's been, you know, and then there was,
there was a couple of times that I went up and down through that. Um, I got bigger, I got smaller, I got bigger, I got smaller. I never
really got a handle on what it was to understand my own hunger. Um, but it was, um, quite a bit
later that, that I did, um, eventually, cause I found out that my relationship to hunger was,
I treated it like my, both my parents were refugees.
Well, we grew up with my grandmother who survived World War II
and, you know, victory over Hitler was fat kids.
So, you know, get those calories in, buddy.
And, you know, that was it.
So hunger was a thing to be terrified of.
And this is not uncommon in the children of immigrants
or, you know, children of people who've, you know, been through, you know, war or something like that.
And so I, you know, kind of understood that, oh, hunger is just a signal.
After a while, hunger is just a signal and I'll be okay.
And after a while, I figured out I was, but that didn't come until only a little while ago.
And after a while, I figured out I was,
but that didn't come until only a little while ago.
As far as getting,
it was around about that time when I was running a lot.
Even though I was running, things were still hard.
I did feel better in my head,
but things started to get quite hard and I was very, very hung up
and having really intensive obsessive thoughts
about,
of all things, sexually transmitted diseases, all right?
And this is at a time when AIDS could kill you.
It's a miracle that in my lifetime,
you can be HIV positive and have an amazing life
and take PrEP every day
and not pass it on to somebody else.
That's like unbelievable.
That is Apollo program level breakthrough.
It's astonishing.
Because it was a death sentence.
You remember it?
Sure, of course.
I was living in New York City in my early 20s.
And yeah, it just occupied a huge part
of your conscious awareness.
This lingering fear that, you know.
It's terrifying.
And I was becoming kind of somewhat sexually active
and, you know, I had this completely irrational responses
to having a pash or not essentially sex,
but something between that with somebody that I'd met.
I was working as a roadie.
I was on the road with a bunch of old road dogs.
That's right. I forgot about that. You showed me how to coil. I didn't. Never forget.
Over under, Rich. Over under. I still think about that. I'll teach you how to, I'll teach you how to deliver a sick K-night and roll a good cable. That's, you know, there's two things you'd be
fine. And so these really quite benign and non-risky at all sexual behaviors,
I was 100% convinced I was going to die.
And so I would show up at the clinic and demand a blood test
and go, I need you to give me this test
because I'm sure I've contracted this disease.
And then you have to wait six weeks for the results.
And then six weeks I'll be planning my funeral.
I'm not even joking.
It was so terrible.
I think about the third time this happened
within about six months,
this person in the clinic said,
why don't you go see someone for me?
Because you've come here a few times now.
I want you to go see someone.
And amazingly, you know,
we've got this incredible public health system
here in Australia that's free.
Your country may want to look into that.
It's fucking great.
It's a whole other podcast.
I know, right?
We also have no guns on the streets, but that's unbelievable.
As much as I dislike the person and the government that did do that, they fucking did something with that.
But I got extraordinarily lucky, so, so lucky.
Because I was starting to, by this point,
not really look at strangers in the eye.
I was starting to get a bit kind of barky
rather than speaking to people who I didn't know
and starting to get it.
I was 19, and it was the first kind of tendrils
of really kind of serious shit was starting to happen.
Just neurosis driving your life.
Yes, but then quite,
quietly up into the point of like,
like literally not being able to look at people.
And instead of saying, excuse me,
just go, well, like just not really being,
that started to happen.
Not all the time, but it was starting to happen.
And so I went to this outpatient clinic
in Fort Etude Valley in Brisbane,
which is, I guess, now it's gentrified and amazing.
But then it was like Skid Row or Hollywood.
Like Hollywood's not a nice place.
Hollywood's a fucking awful, awful, awful place with-
Hollywood is an idea, Usher.
Not a geographic location.
What does Greg Proop say?
There's no such thing,
there's no such place as Hollywood.
It's a collective idea held at the same time
by a hundred thousand assholes.
Basically.
It's a perfect,
but like the actual place Hollywood-
But the intersection,
well, the intersection of Hollywood and Vine
has changed quite a bit in the last decade,
but the idea,
I understand what you're saying.
It's not like when you see a bunch of tourists
lingering around there-
Dodge Place.
Looking for Hollywood. Yeah, Dodge Place, Dodge Place- When you see a bunch of tourists lingering around there- Dodgy place. Looking for Hollywood.
Yeah, dodgy place, dodgy place.
Methadone clinics and stuff like that.
And I went to this outpatient,
this mental health outpatient clinic there.
And I remember walking in
and if you've never been to an outpatient clinic
for a psych unit,
you'll never, you'll like this smell,
you'll never forget
because you're dealing with
people who look i'm literally spending my days escaping tyrian landis they're coming at me on
a dragon while a drummer bass party of hell angels is screaming in every ear i don't have time to
think about turning on a shower you know that's just not even anywhere near what they're thinking about because there's
no space.
And so that and cigarettes at the time, nicotine obviously, you know, easily available down
regulator.
I remember going in there going, fuck, I don't belong here.
I don't belong here.
And then I saw this really kind and lovely psychologist.
His name was Mari.
And Mari started to, I kept saying, look, I don't belong here.
There's people out there that, you know, you should be saying, not me. I don't, I'm not crazy.
And then over time, it turns out I was, I did belong there. And it's terrifying. It's a terrifying
realization, especially in the context of a place like that, where you see people that are very
unlikely to rebound and reintegrate. I was very lucky. I was so lucky to be caught by a public
health system. And I love my country so much and I'll defend it to the end because stuff like that,
you know, there's this safety net, this public health system caught me I don't know where I would have ended up had those incredible people not seen something
and gone you should really go and have a chat and she got me to a pretty good spot I ended up um
you know then I finally I ended up in an actual relationship with an actual human being
and that was nice and I kind of got into radio and, but it was about then that I started really quite intensely using alcohol and drugs
to manage what was going on in my brain. Because look, if you don't know what's happening,
but when you, like for me, I didn't really know what was going on, but I knew that when I drank
or when I smoked weed,
it was a little bit better.
It wasn't all the way better.
It's also highly reliable.
You know exactly what you're gonna get.
At first.
And if you're walking around,
you know what this like low grade to high grade anxiety
and this bundle of nerves
and the energy that you don't know how to contain or manage.
And you drink a few pops or you do what you do
and it's like, oh, there's a relief.
It's hard to describe for somebody
who doesn't have the itch.
I would say it's a release, not a relief.
Because a relief has an idea of like,
it's going or gone.
For me, it was just- A reprieve. Yeah, it was like, oh, it's going or gone. For me, it was just-
A reprieve.
Yeah, it was like, oh, just,
but the true piece from it was always another beer
or another bump or another whatever away.
And unfortunately, the more that you drink or use,
that gets further away, like you're in a nightmare.
Yeah, but we deal with that later.
Yeah.
In the meantime, like this works,
it works until it doesn't work.
But I think it's important to say
that it does work in the short term.
It works.
You wouldn't keep doing it.
It was my solution.
It's the oldest thing in the world.
It's like it was alcohol was my problem,
it was my solution.
But then the amount that I needed
to feel at all okay to be around other
people or when I was in my house by myself to feel that noises and the shitty thinking and all
the horrible brain stuff going on to make sure all that stuff was quiet enough that I could just be
still. That dosage became just too dangerous. Right. How long did it take for that to happen,
for that to get unleashed?
I mean, did you have,
because it's socially approved of
and you can do it out in the open in public,
there is a sense of like,
oh, okay, well, I'm okay for now.
I can do this.
Did you have an awareness from the get-go
like that this is problematic?
I think I was about 24
when my longtime girlfriend at the time,
I remember being just so hammered, trying to walk, couldn't walk.
And I was in her lap.
She had a cross leg, so I'm in her lap.
And I had very, very, very long hair at the time.
I was in a funk metal band.
It was very long shorts.
It was the 90s.
And she was brushing kind of chunky vomit-soaked hair out of my mouth
so I could breathe properly.
And she looked down at me and she's like, you maybe want to think about why you keep
doing this to yourself because it's starting to get pretty bad. And I'm like, I'm not an
alcoholic. Fuck off. I can stop whenever I want. So I think I was about 22. Made it
I'm having to stop drinking. I ended up actually stopping drinking like six, 14 years later.
So it took 14 years. years um and that wasn't the
first that was kind of the first time someone had really seen that because i was getting into
amphetamines and things like that by the point um which was great because i could keep drinking
uh but it kept getting told to me again and again and again and there's that reaction just kept
coming going i can sit whenever i want i'm meanwhile, your, your kind of star is ascending. That seems to have all happened really fast. Yeah.
Did you always like want the spotlight in that way? Were you somebody who was like,
I want to be on TV or I want to have this kind of publicly facing role? Like how did that all
come about from being a roadie to being on radio and then being on television? It started before that actually.
I remember like that same nervous kid that would, you know, be terrified and, you know, be possibly eating and going to Weight Watchers.
I think I was about nine, eight or nine years old.
We had a school assembly every Friday and our class had a, it was every class would put on a sketch or something,
a little play that we worked on it that week and we all took it in turns.
And cause you know, it was always like, I don't know,
pick up rubbish at school time or whatever you're doing.
Don't masturbate cause Jesus is always watching you.
Like it was that kind of school. Right. So it was our play, our turn. And I'm on, I'm ready,
I'm ready to go on stage and I hear my cue and I walk out and I see all these like hundreds
of kids all staring up at me like that. The play was
about picking up rubbish.
I think the line was along the line, it was something along the lines of, don't commit
a sin, put it in the bin. And they all fucking laughed. And that
was like, oh, like when I first did, you know,
proper class A drugs, it was like, I know this feeling. I had this feeling on stage once.
And it was where, like, what was anxiety for me? Anxiety was a lack of control and lack of
understanding what was about to happen next and lack of control of the situation and lack of
uncertainty. When I'm on stage, I know everything that's gonna happen.
I know exactly what's gonna happen next.
I'm the only one talking.
Everyone else is quiet.
But my coping mechanism, I just started chasing that.
And that you're associating those two things
in a similar way.
Using drugs and being on stage
are giving you the same feeling.
Yeah. And it was a same feeling. It was the same feeling.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Wow.
And it was a,
unfortunately my coping mechanism became my career.
And that worked until it didn't.
But I think that's true for a lot of people.
Yeah.
Yeah, that worked until it didn't.
I have a very, very different approach to work now.
But for a while,
and it started to get quite toxic.
There was definitely parts towards
the very end of my drinking and using when I would just seethe in resentment. Like if we were doing a
TV show together, I would look at the script and go, Rich, excuse me, excuse me, Rich has 11 words
and then I have nine, then Rich has 10 and then I have seven. And I got all the jokes. It's such a
cliche. I wish it was different, mate. I wish it wasn't true, but it's fucking seven. And I got all the jokes. It's such a cliche. I wish it was different, mate.
I wish it wasn't true, but it's fucking true.
And I considered it a fucking wounding crime
that this had happened.
And how dare you?
That was just the worst.
It was awful.
It was an awful way to be.
I hated that it felt like that.
I hated that feeling.
I have a very different approach to work now. Yeah. No, I know that. I know that. So you become this Andrew G guy,
right? You're essentially like a VJ on this Channel V, which I'm trying to imagine was
probably not dissimilar from MTV in its heyday or whatever. Yeah, it was TRL. You're like a pop
culture figure at that point.
Yeah.
At least your generation, everybody knows who you are.
Yeah.
You got the hair, you got the looks.
Yeah.
You're sort of this symbol of Australian youth.
Somewhat.
And you're living large, right?
You're living here in Bondi.
Yes.
Lots of drugs, lots of partying, lots of girls, lots of attention.
Yes, all of that.
But it was also very much, stop looking at me.
Why aren't you looking at me?
Please stop looking.
How come you're not looking?
It was that complete oscillation that was unbearable.
It was really weird.
It was very, very weird.
really weird. It was very, very weird. Um, the, the, the weird thing that happened when I was on music television, uh, was, you know, I was using alcohol to cope with this. It was a lot of stress
being on. I was 25, you know, uh, been in radio for a long time and then moved to Sydney, left
everyone. Um, my girlfriend and I came here and, and I was a heap, a heap of pressure. It was so
much fun. It was the best job I ever had. It was un-fucking-believable.
I love music, man.
I don't get paid to talk about music every day.
Three hours live TV a day.
You get to talk to all the biggest rock stars in the world
when they pass through.
Yeah, but not only that,
it was also talking to like just fans of music who live,
you know how huge,
our country is as big as yours, all right?
The lower 48 at least.
And people live 400Ks from a post office.
And I'm talking to people on satellite phones
who really want to hear their favorite Ice Cube song.
And how do you love Ice Cube?
I love him.
Like, you know, what do you do?
Oh, I'm on a farm, you know.
And it was unbelievable speaking to people from all across our community.
It was amazing.
And, you know, working in live TV, there's nothing like it, mate.
It's just the best, working as a team, and it's just so much fun.
But it was a lot of stress.
And the thing was, it's like the kind of reps per minute
you need to get up to to perform that kind of thinking
three hours at a time.
That doesn't stop at 7 o'clock when you go off air.
You know, it's like, well, what do I do? What do I do now? What do I do? It's like I've got a time. That doesn't stop at seven o'clock when you go off air. You know, it's like,
what do I do? What do I do now? What do I do? It's like, I've got a lot, I'm coming in.
With no healthy tools for down-regulating yourself.
No, no. And to the point where we're like, we would, I remember we would go on the road and
my floor manager would hand me a beer as I walked off stage. He'd take my mic off me
and hand me a cold beer. And, you know, I'm in the music industry.
In 2001, I was on a work trip.
I went to America for a work trip.
And it was me and my producer Ben, our cameraman Mike,
and our sounder Andy.
And it was my first time in Los Angeles. and we got caught in a riot in Hollywood,
of all goddamn places, sketchy.
And it was a band called System of a Down
and they had no, it was put on by a radio station there
and they had no real security.
And I'd been around venues
and I'd seen some
pretty wild stuff happening, both as a roadie and then later on with the bigger gigs working at V,
backstage and stuff like that, and going on tours, big festivals. So I'd seen how badly it can go
when even a couple of hundred people decide they want to go that way and then everybody else wants
to go that way. It can be, people can die. All right. And I saw it happen once. It was awful, awful, awful. And so we could see that this gig was five minutes late and it was 10 minutes late
and the capacity was probably, I don't know, they probably thought they were going to have
1500 people, like 8,000 people showed up. And I don't have to tell you.
I think I remember that. Was it K-Rock put that on maybe?
Yeah, exactly. Was it out in the streets? That's right, it was. Yeah. I think I remember that. Was it K-Rock put that on maybe? Yeah, exactly.
Was it out in the streets?
That's right, it was.
Yeah, I do remember when that happened.
And I was heavy.
No body searches, no weapons checks,
no nothing going into the place.
And it got later and later and later.
And then it became,
we sort of looked around and realized,
we were standing with a bunch of media
and we realized everyone else has left.
Oh shit.
And we were kind of cornered
in the back of this gigantic parking lot
and there was about between five and 8,000 people
between us and the street.
And they started to take the backdrop down
and that was it.
The place just erupted
and they were pushing over speaker stacks.
We watched a kid,
like she nearly got crushed by this speaker stack.
We got footage of it.
Like it like brushed the back of her T-shirt.
And everyone's looking around and there's my cameraman, Jacko.
We're filming all this and someone just grabs his camera.
It's about 120 grand worth of camera and everything pulled together.
And they grab it and he pulls it back.
And then it became this like eight people are on top of him
and they're punching onto him.
And, you know, my producer Ben drags him out of there.
And then one security guy stayed behind
and he had an unscrewed mic stand
and this metal bar just starts raining down
on these people that are on top of Jacko.
And I'm seeing four arms and shit like that.
And then we drag Jacko out of there
and I pull up a chain link cyclone fence
because it was right behind Hollywood High.
I pull up this chain link cyclone fence
and we got out underneath.
But then now we're in a school
with these 20 meter high,
like 10 meter high fences all around it.
Like, how do we get out of here?
And some of those kids followed us in.
Like, Jesus, how are we going to get out of this?
And we climbed over another fence
and we get out.
And so I can't remember what street it was.
It was one that ends up right
by the Montalban Theater, right?
And we get out and we look
and there's like horses
and riot cops loading up rubber bullets
and like jackals covered in blood.
I'm like, what the fuck is this?
And then out of nowhere between all these cops
who were staging around the corner ready to go,
this cab just appears out of nowhere.
And like, have you ever hailed a cab on the streets in LA?
No, never.
It was really scary
and we thought
you know what's gonna be amazing
if we
oh fuck
let's get out of here
Jacko went to see Design
he was pretty fucked up
and
like yeah it's gonna be amazing
let's get the fuck out of here
this was September the 3rd
like in a week from now
we'll be in New York City
and we'll be interviewing bands
and we'll be having a great time
oh shit
yeah
yeah
and then we were there.
We woke up.
You were in New York City on 9-11.
Yeah.
I didn't know that.
Yeah, I was.
And we were safe, you know, but we were on like 51st,
something like that.
But it was terrifying.
It was terrifying.
And I've had like the an unbelievable panic attack.
And I had a panic attack so intense I fell asleep.
My body just went and shut down and that was it.
And it was terrifying.
And it took us ages to get out.
And like physically we were fine.
It took us about two weeks, two and a half weeks to end up getting home to Sydney.
We were coughing up black stuff for about six weeks, but that was about it.
And I was physically fine,
but I remember being back at work
and just staring at the thumbtacks
on the squishy wall of my cubicle.
At four o'clock, I'd go on air and go,
and Rich is asking for a Britney Spears song
and da-da-da-da-da-da-da.
Hey, McLean.
And I would do that.
And I'm just staring there.
I'm normally a fairly boisterous person sometimes.
And my boss, Jackie, she comes by.
She goes, are you okay?
I said, no.
She said, would you like to see someone?
Yeah.
And amazingly, she organized a psychologist for me to go see.
She specializes in debriefing trauma response and things like that. And I went to go see, who specializes in debriefing, you know, trauma response and things like that.
And I went to go see this guy called Phil and he had this amazing office up in Manly. So,
you know, I went surfing with him, you know, we'd finish our session and go surfing. It was unreal,
unreal. And he says, you've got PTSD. I'm like, fuck off. I don't have PTSD. I'm fine, mate.
And he went, oh, okay then. And he gets up and he walks over to his bookshelf and he pulls off this book, the DSM-IV,
which is like the back of the four maps on your phone.
You would have this big map of the streets, right?
So it's essentially a street map
where psychiatrists can basically talk to each other.
Every condition defined.
Yeah, well, it helps people
who are talking about the same patient
to have an idea of what's going on.
Are we on DSM-5 now?
By now we are.
It was four back then.
And he opens it to,
and he hands it and goes,
read that.
And I was like, fine.
And I looked down and I was like,
okay, so someone snuck in here
and written some shit out that they saw while watching me
and then put it in the same font on the same grade of paper
and snuck it into this book
because it was like exactly what was going on.
And I had to be in acceptance that this was happening.
And because of that, I was like, okay, then, well, what do I do about this?
He taught me cognitive behavioral therapy, which I'd never known before.
I'd never known that you could, just because I think it doesn't make it real.
It took a lot of practice, but I started to work on that.
And that was really interesting to get that
initial kind of idea that just because I feel it doesn't mean it's real. And just because I think
this is happening, where's the evidence for that? Maybe I'm not saying that. And developing that
awareness and that recognition is going to come into play later. Well, in a bigger way.
But the recurring theme here is a willingness
to seek out and receive help.
Not as willing as I was to go,
you know what, alcohol is way easier.
Let's delay that one, right?
Yeah, it's easier if I just drink.
And I'm drinking red wine by this point, Rich.
I'm not just drinking beer.
I'm a connoisseur. Come on.
I remember buying this really expensive bottle of red and hammered,
and I was going to open another one,
and an older bloke I work with, he goes,
don't open it.
It'll be like feeding strawberries to pigs.
You can do all the CBT you want and talk your ears off with a shrink.
Yeah.
But if you're just hitting the bottle and doing all the other stuff,
it's only going to go so far.
But all that, the ability to question and double check my thinking
came in really handy when it finally came time to stop drinking
because that's really quite fun.
That's a fundamental leap you need to make when you first stop drinking.
You actually need to understand that just because you see it that way
doesn't mean that's the way it is.
Right.
And that would have been a very hard thing for me to get to
at the same time as everything else.
But thankfully, I had that experience
and I was very grateful for that.
Like most people, I reckon I took a good,
I white knuckled it for a year.
And all that was, well, it's alcohol.
It's a fucking freely available,
widely legal, self-administered depressant.
When in this country, there's so many drugs
that are illegal
because they're worried that kids are going to overdose,
but I can walk across the street
and buy enough gin to kill me for 20 bucks.
But it's completely fine.
That's bullshit.
That's fucking bullshit.
All right.
There's a debate in this country going on at the moment
about legalizing medical marijuana or legalizing marijuana.
Like, mate, there's two drugs, Rich,
two drugs that if you are drinking them
or using them to enough point
and you stop straight away, you'll die.
Alcohol and benzodiazepines, both illegal.
That's not okay.
That's not okay.
And yeah, here we are.
It's just that culturally,
alcohols, I didn't know that you could not drink.
I didn't know that it could ever happen.
I feel like that's changing though.
The younger generation
has a very different relationship with alcohol.
And I don't know what it's like in Australia,
but in North America,
the habits of young people are very different.
And possibly that's because other drugs
are just more widely available
or cheaper or more accessible
or don't give you the same hangover or what have you.
Do we dare admit it's because they don't want to look sloppy
on a-
Maybe.
On a Instagram thing, it's never going to go away.
Yeah, there's that.
And the whole, you know, marijuana thing is also,
you know, kind of a whole other podcast as well.
I have lots of opinions about that.
I have thoughts about that, man.
Yeah.
But anyway, so you get back, you're dealing with,
you get back from New York, you're dealing with the PTSD, you're doing the get back, you're dealing with, you get back from New York,
you're dealing with the PTSD, you're doing the CBT, you're drinking, your career is advancing.
Yeah. At some point, you know, you move on and you're doing like,
you become the host of American Idol. Yeah. Or Australian Idol. Yeah.
Yeah. Australia, of course. Yeah. It's like a McDonald's franchise, all right?
You sell the franchise, all right?
You know, so, I don't know.
Say you create Finding Ultra, the reality show, right?
You would then, this is the format.
There's the coach, you know, Coach Houth or whatever.
You know it works.
Plug it in.
Plug it in over here.
Yeah, yeah.
You need the champion.
You need the one who's got,
everyone's got to have somewhere to go. You need the one who's trying to find redemption. You need the one who's trying to find, you need the champion. You need the one who's got, everyone's got to have somewhere to go.
You need the one who's trying to find redemption.
You need the one who's trying to find
a reconnect with her daughter.
You need the one who cries.
You need the one who, mate, this is-
And you need the right host.
And it comes in a Bible, Rich Roll.
It's going to be a host.
All right, we'll get Simon Hill to be the chef.
It's going to be amazing.
And then when you sell that turkey, they go, huh, okay.
So who's the Australian, Turkish version of this,
this, this, this, this, this, this,
and you make money in your sleep.
It's a franchise like anything else.
And so, yeah, I was one of the hosts of Australian Idol.
Me and Jimmy hosted it for,
I hosted it for seven years, he did it for six.
It was unbelievable.
It was incredible.
It was unreal.
And it's capturing an audience share
that probably would be impossible.
It's never gonna happen again.
Right?
So when you're hosting that,
it had to be relatively surreal.
I know that like even,
wasn't there,
what year was it where the finale
was at the Opera House?
Yeah, we did everyone there.
Yeah.
Right.
Yeah, we did the first,
I think the first finale,
the one in four adult Australians watched that.
It was like the Olympics
don't get those kinds of numbers, you know?
And it was just a cornerstone of Australian pop culture.
And thankfully, you know, everything that, I mean,
Jim and I had been on air at Channel V doing hundreds and hundreds of hours
of live TV every week, every year, sorry.
And so by the time we get to Idol, it was very funny
because all that kind of network people were like,
yeah, but this is real television boys.
Like, you know what, get fucked, all right?
We put our reps in.
Yeah, yeah, don't worry, mate.
We're in this spot.
And where are you with your mental health
and with drugs and alcohol at this point?
I was pretty jumpy.
I was very much, you know, it was odd
because while I was thinking everyone was looking at me, everyone was looking at me, you know, it was odd because while I was thinking everyone was looking at me,
everyone was looking at me, you know.
And I had people walking up to me in the street.
It's wild because it's 20 years later right now.
I've got the same haircut.
You're back.
I've had like five haircuts.
Yeah, you got-
Five haircuts and two names.
This is the closest to Andrew that you've looked at in a long time.
Oh, yeah, yeah, absolutely, without a doubt.
The current deal.
Yeah, totally.
And people, I'd just be doing my groceries, man,
and people would come up to me and grab my hair and pull it
and turn it, oh, it's not a wig.
You know, and their mate's filming on a shitty phone.
And, like, that would happen in the middle of the day.
You know, I'd be at a bar or whatever, and people would come by,
and someone would bump my, and a beer would fly everywhere.
And, you know, the guy would then turn around like,
fuck, whatever.
And I knew enough to start, I knew what to look for.
And if a guy was there and he'd opened his body that way,
if I looked that way,
there was someone filming on their phone there,
I'm like, sorry, mate, I'm sorry I was in your way.
You know, that would happen all the time.
Wow.
All the time.
It was,
yeah,
I mean,
look,
the thing,
the thing when you,
when you got a job like that,
and I'm sure you,
you know,
understand what I'm talking about,
but you don't end up having to pay for drugs.
They're just always there.
It's people like,
hey mate,
that's mine.
Oh,
thank you very much.
Don't mind if I do.
Right.
You know,
and it was just,
it was just half of the course,
man.
It was just,
it was just all over the shop. man. It was just, it was just
all over the shop. And I remember trying, I started to understand that I had a problem,
real problem with alcohol when I met my ex-wife now. And there's a joke among the acting community
in Australia. I won't say her name because she's quite a high profile Australian actress, but she
said, oh, you don't think you've got a drinking problem until you leave Australia.
And then you get to America and go,
so anyway, it's five past 12 on a Saturday.
I mean, okay, more for me.
And I kind of realised,
I went to the Middle East for the first time
and I was like, oh, wow,
our cultural relationship with alcohol here
is quite fucking weird and not okay and quite damaging.
And I came back and I tried to not drink beer for a year.
So I drank heaps of vodka.
It was quite a classic.
I changed horses.
But eventually, just like a duck to water, mate, I was back on it.
And then by about 2009, I was bloated again. I was really fat.
I understood that I needed to stop. I knew that. And I tried to stop a few times by myself. I
tried a bunch of times by myself. Couldn't do it. I reckon I got a couple of weeks up at a time,
maybe six, maybe seven. And then I'll be right. And then half a sip of Heineken and then it's 2 a.m. and I'm doing Jagermeister.
And you're off.
There was no ability.
You kind of have to have that experience
to really lock into the powerlessness of the whole thing.
Yeah, but it got worse.
And then it got worse.
And then that TV show ended
and I had put no work in at all
to see if I was gonna have any kind of continuity career.
I just expected that the...
I was turning away more than I could say yes to.
I just expected the phone would never stop ringing.
I just expected that it would just keep going and going and going
and going and going and going.
And then that show went away
and I didn't know what to do.
It was right around the same time that I was in America
and actually Dan McPherson
was in town and he and I went for a hike on the Runyon Canyon and we were just talking
about shit. He was over there for pirate season and I slipped at the very top of Runyon Canyon.
We were descending. It can be rocky and slippery there. And I slipped and I did like a kind
of exaggerated runner's lunge essentially and I blew my MCL in my right knee.
And at that point, it was the most painful thing I'd ever experienced.
And I took about 600 milligrams of ibuprofen that night.
And I went to go see my doctor the next day.
I was like, this happened to my knee and like it really hurts.
And he goes, oh, just take some ibuprofen.
I was like, man, I took 600 milligrams last night.
It didn't work.
He goes, oh, I'll give you some Vicodin.
And like five minutes later,
I'm standing downstairs with 100 Vicodin pills in my hand.
He didn't ask me any questions, didn't ask anything.
And now that's a slippery slope
because it still fucking hurts.
You just don't care.
And when I mixed it with beer, it was like,
so needless to say, that was, I reckon that was January.
Yeah, it was like January, 2010.
I was in meetings by the middle of March.
So that's what ultimately brought you to your knees.
Yeah, absolutely.
Literally, literally.
Cause I just could, I couldn't not do it.
I couldn't not do it.
And it's a very, very slippery slope, that stuff.
And so like cut to like the last couple of years,
I've been through some pretty interesting stuff with my hip
and I've had a hip replacement
and some stuff didn't go right with the surgery
and the pain was unfathomable,
but I couldn't touch those kinds of drugs.
Right.
Because like there was one point where we have,
our Emmys are called the Logies here.
That's TV's night of nights, you know.
And the first Logie out, Australian Idol, ever won.
I've still got the scar on my hand.
I've broken my hand snowboarding.
And I'd come back here and I was off my guts on Percocet
because I was in North America.
And I said, I've got to fly back and I'm worried about my hand.
And they gave me this big tub of Percocet like that.
And it's the kind of thing where I took a pill in Vancouver and I woke up in my hand. And he gave me this big tub of Percocet like that.
And it was the kind of thing where I took a pill in Vancouver and I woke up in Sydney, you know.
And I in no way held the Logie in my hand.
I do not remember.
You don't remember anything.
Not a thing.
Wow.
Not a thing.
Yeah.
I'm on national television at the peak of my career.
You know, I could have done anything. And there was a bloke I now work with, a guy by the name of my career. You know, I could have done anything.
And there was a bloke I now work with,
a guy by the name of Dave Hughes.
He's amazing.
He doesn't drink.
And a couple months later, I'd seen him on radio
and I'd, you know, typical fuckwit, you know,
sunglasses in the morning and, you know, 6 a.m., 6.30 radio.
I mean, they go, this is Dave.
G'day, mate.
Mate, we've met before.
I've never met you. Mate, I gave, this is Dave. G'day, mate. Mate, we've met before. I've never met you.
Mate, I gave you your logi.
I don't remember.
Oh, my God.
But the thing is, like, in the, you know, canon of, like, hitting bottom, it's, you know, it's, you could have gone a lot lower, you know, but it is what it is.
The pain threshold is what it is.
You know, it brought you in.
You know, and I've heard you speak about this
and I really related to it in that I just have this ability
to withstand discomfort that is different to other people
and what would probably have stopped others.
And I've had a number of doctors now tell me going,
how are you still moving?
How did you walk in here? And they're looking doctors now tell me going, how are you still moving? How did you walk in here?
They're looking at my blood tests going,
how are you standing upright?
This doesn't work.
How do you do this?
I don't know, man.
I just, there's a bit of my brain that won't stop.
Part of it has given me the life and the career I have.
But part of that has tried to kill me.
And it's managing the shitty part.
Yeah, and untangling that is so difficult
because when you're forced to confront
and break up with your best friend,
this thing that you think gives you superpowers,
you also have to contend with that disposition
to go the extra mile that you're convinced
is the reason why you've been able to make your way
in the world and be successful and do all the things that you do and finding a, you know, a healthier,
more sustainable fuel source, energy source, and, and, and putting like, putting that idea,
you know, away and understanding that it's a lie is, is a very, you know, steep mountain to climb.
It is. I was very lucky in that.
There's an incredible doctor here by the name of Dr. Ian Chung.
I've had him on the show.
He's an amazing guy.
He really, really helped me.
And he just kind of matter-of-factly told me,
he goes, I don't know, yeah, this is OCD.
And I was like, oh.
And I deflated like a bouncy castle after a toddler's birthday party.
Like, you know, huh?
And he goes, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.
Like, I can't tell you how many Olympians,
how many, you know, Wallabies,
it's a national rugby union football team,
you know, like lawyers,
like the amount of people that have sat there in that chair
and I've told the same thing to,
like, come on, why do you think you got the career you've got?
I was like, what?
And he goes, he said, do you think,
and he was talking about particularly like there's an Olympic swimmer. He says, do you really think that that kid who will
stare at a black line on the bottom of a pool four mornings a week from the age of eight,
so he can do it in Tokyo in 12 years from now, doesn't have something like that going on?
Six mornings a week and then six afternoons a week.
Precisely.
12 times a day for two hours at a pop.
Do you think they don't have something like that going on?
Of course they've got something like that going on.
Of course they do.
That's how they can do that.
It's making sure that you only use it for,
you know, see it as a superpower.
And I was so grateful that he helped me reframe it like that.
It's like the bits that have given you the life you've got,
you don't want to lose those.
The parts that can really, you know,
be bad is when it gets out of control.
And then it has, you know,
it has got to the point where it's nearly killed me.
And it's learning how to manage that stuff
that is the kind of ongoing effort.
And it takes, I know there's this amazing TV show
that I really implore you to watch.
It's called Bluey.
And there's a game in Bluey called Keepy Uppy
where they basically just try to keep a balloon in the air.
And it's basically that.
So we're at the balloon in the air part.
It was holding the Atlas ball above my head
like I'm Thor Bjornsson in the,
whatever it is, the strongest man in the world thing.
But now it's just keeping a balloon in the air.
But if I keep my eye off that,
if I let the balloon fall,
pretty soon,
within a couple of days,
things start to get pretty grim.
Yeah, what's interesting is with sobriety,
so I meet you when you're like, I don't know,
two years in or something like that at that point.
Yeah, but only a year of meetings.
Really, okay.
I'd only just on my fourth and fifth when I met you.
Yeah, yeah.
I was pretty white knuckle, yeah.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, but I was like-
I didn't realize you were that raw.
Yeah, well, I thought I could do it, but by not drinking and then doing all the work, not doing any work, I was essentially just come off my meds without anything.
Yeah.
You know, so I was like, you ever go on like butter smooth tarmac and then you miss a turnoff and suddenly you're on an ungraded gravel road?
It was that.
Yeah.
I was like, suddenly I was like, what the fuck is this?
I don't know what to do here.
Yeah.
So that brings you in.
But this is on some level,
still the very beginning of your mental health journey
and adventures.
I was really lucky.
Like the bottoms that you've had with mental health
in sobriety are much lower
than the one that brought you in
into the rooms in the first place.
And I was so lucky that I'd stopped drinking by then.
So, so, so lucky.
Oh, you wouldn't have made it.
No fucking way.
There's no way.
No way.
I would be dead.
Absolutely.
Yeah, things got really bad.
And it was like many things.
It's, you know, I'm a fan of the Robert Gonzalez book.
I think that's his name.
Lawrence Gonzalez book, Deep Survival.
It's really good.
I try to read it like once a year. It's a fantastic read. It's about what happens to your
brain in survival situations. And he talks about like real proper, proper cataclysms, like mega,
mega airline disasters and things like that. It's not one thing. It's not two things. It's like
five to seven things in a row that happen. And by the time number seven happens, it doesn't matter
because you got nowhere to go. And it was like that. I was living in Venice Beach.
We had yet to get the green light for another season of the show that I was working on. So I
had no work. I was paying rent out of my savings. I was in a relationship with someone who was wildly inappropriate. It was extraordinarily
interesting and volatile, but wildly inappropriate. And I was under a lot of stress.
My father was ill back here in Australia., I was not sleeping. It'd been weeks
since I'd had actual sleep and I would, if I did sleep, I would wake up and I'd strip
the bed like it was laundry day. I was thrashing around that much that I would like pull the
actual elastic corners off the bed. I was thrashing around in my sleep that much. So it had been
weeks since I'd had a decent sleep. And that's pretty bad. That's happening. There's a lot of
red flags that I was totally walking straight past. And then just one day, I woke up and I
had a mate coffee like I always do. And I picked up my iPad and I was reading the New York Times
like I always do. And like they always do, they I was reading the New York Times like I always do.
And like they always do, they wrote in the corner,
oh, it's going to be, you know, sunny in 72 because it's LA
and that's what it is every goddamn day.
But then they wrote in the tiny little Times New Roman font,
oh, by the way, this is the 114th warmest consecutive month ever recorded.
Passive aggressive bastards that they are, but they would do that.
And something in my head just
went like that. And as far as I was concerned, like there was absolutely nothing we could do
to stop the full and completely cataclysmic, untold terror, destruction, end of the world,
climate change, disasters. And it was, as far as I was concerned, it was happening today,
it was happening right now. And I was the only one that knew about it. And it was, as far as I was concerned, it was happening today, it was happening right now and I was the only one that knew about it.
And it was terrifying.
My brain just went on this cascade of horror and fear
and I couldn't stop the thoughts
and what I normally would do is I would run
to manage my mental health
and that would have been really useful
and I'd got to the point and I loved it.
I'd got to the point where I was running 10Ks a day,
just that's what I do.
I'd run from my house, I go touch a Santa Monica pier, turn around, run back.
And, um, on the weekends you showed me that, um, where the Nike missile silo was. All right. I'll
just go run that on a Saturday. I go run a trail half on the, on a weekend to do that. That's what
I did on Saturdays. I just, and that was that fit. I loved it. And I was, and it used to make
things pretty okay. You know, that did a lot to regulate
me. But I remember running and I reckon I got about, I got past the skate park and I think I got,
I got almost to somewhere a little further past the skate park. And, you know, I'm, I'm seeing
things. I'm seeing like those kind of Baywatch towers and they're floating like they're on there.
They've got a big concrete block and a chain underneath them, right? And they're pushing
against these chains floating in a now higher sea level, right? And I look up and the tops of the
palm trees, I look up and now I'm looking at them as if they're underneath of lily pads,
you know, because I'm now on the new sea floor and I can see, I'm seeing like, do you ever watch Mr. Robot?
Yeah.
Yeah.
They did that really well.
When I watch Mr. Robot.
When he's having those breaks from reality.
It's like when I watch BoJack Horseman, I'm like, someone knows.
Someone knows.
In the writer's room, someone knows.
So in Mr. Robot, I remember talking to Audrey going, it's that.
It was that.
It was that.
Where it kind of glitches in and out.
Yeah.
Like it wasn't all the time.
But I wanted to warn people.
I wanted to grab people and go, don't you understand?
Like it's all going to...
And I knew enough like if I want to grab people and warn people,
and you see that.
You see people who are struggling really badly shouting on the streets.
You see that because that's the symptom of you want to try and help everybody. I was like, fucking hell. Their thoughts hurt. They were coming and they
wouldn't stop. And they hurt like I was chewing on alfile or you'd poked me with a barbecue skewer.
And so it's like this and they would come at me and I started to flinch and push them away like
they were mosquitoes. I was like, fuck, I got to get home. So I turn around. I didn't run that far, maybe only two, three Ks.
I turn around and came back and I'm running and I'm grunting.
I'm making noises like every time it hit and I'm flinching like this.
And up ahead of me on the path, I see this guy and he's shuffling.
Now, if you've never been to that part of the city or that part of the world,
like complex, untreated complex mental
illness on the streets in california is terrible it's terrible it's a complete tragedy that the
richest country in the world allows it to happen and the police are untrained and unable to deal
with it when it goes bad and they people would die by cops all the time and it was awful awful
tragic and up ahead of me on the path,
I see this guy, he's kind of shuffling along. He's got no shoes on. His pants are too big for him.
So he's clearly not eaten in a while. He's got this big bloom of urine. He's clearly peed himself.
And I run up along next to him and two things really hit me. It's like, he's younger than me.
He's got this kind of shaved piece of his scalp there. So I don't know what's going on,
but he's got a shaved part of his scalp and he's doing the same thing. He's going,
and he's doing this. I was like, oh fuck. And I knew at that moment, the only thing was,
I knew something was wrong. I don't know if he knew something was wrong. I ran home, I ran upstairs, and I called my mentor, David.
He's a guy that guides me on my sponsorship.
He's my sponsor.
So I called David, and I'm like, he's like, hey, buddy.
I'm like, climate change is going to fucking...
I did not draw breath.
And the forest fires are going to...
The whales are going to die.
There's no food.
There's no water. Get your family out of here. I know you live in San Diego. I just couldn draw breath. And the forest fires are going to, the whales are going to die. There's no food. There's no water.
Get your family out of here.
I know you live in San Diego.
I just couldn't stop.
It was like,
it's called,
um,
plosive speech,
right?
I was just,
and he says,
okay,
two things,
mate.
Number one,
this is way beyond my pay grade.
You need to get to a doctor right now.
And number two,
you're really lucky because crazy people don't know they're crazy.
So you better get to see your doctor fast.
Yeah. You had a little bit of self-awareness of what was happening, but at the same time, this is real. Like in your mind, these things are actually happening.
Oh yeah. It was, they were, and they weren't. And that also caused a huge amount of pain
because I knew they kind of were and kind of weren't. And I didn't want to accept that it was happening.
And it was enormously painful.
And this went on and on and on and on.
And eventually I went to go see my psychologist.
I finally got to go see him.
I had to wait the whole weekend.
And then I go see him. Did it fade or you were in this persistent state?
It was pretty bad.
It kind of came and went quite a bit.
It was really bad.
And I went to go see him.
And he had these Eames recliners,
like it was a beautiful, beautiful place.
And I sat on the edge of his and I said,
mate, do you have a gun?
Do you get a gun?
Can you hide up in Big Bear?
Because like, you remember Rodney King?
You remember the riots?
Remember how the seed was on fire?
That's going to happen again.
There's going to be... And I was just like going for it.
And he goes,
mate, you're experiencing a form of psychosis. This is paranoid delusions.
And at a moment I was like, he's in on it. He's a fucking climate denier. And at that
point I was like, oh fuck, part of me, whether it's God or Buddha or Prince or whoever it
is that watches over me, I was like, hang on a second. If you don't believe him, you're in trouble.
And I was like, okay, well, what does that mean?
But that was the first thought in my head.
You had a shroud that was still tethered to the real world.
My first thought was like, he's in on it.
He doesn't know.
He doesn't know.
Wow.
It was so scary.
It was so scary.
And he told me what psychosis was
and that you're really going to need proper medication
and you need to go see a psychiatrist.
And I'm like, yeah, I'll be fine without meds.
Dumb idea.
Dumb idea.
Eventually I did get meds.
And it was terrible because,
and this is a really hard part,
it's like this shit doesn't stop.
And it's really painful.
And it was happening every five to eight seconds.
And eventually, my brain started to consider
and come up with ways to make it stop.
Unfortunately, it was a very permanent solution
to what was a temporary problem.
I was back in the Middle East.
I was shooting a TV show.
I had a job that I was going to go do. And so I was doing this back in the Middle East. I was shooting a TV show. I had a job that I was
going to go do. And so I was doing this job in the Middle East and I was in this hotel room and
this idea popped into my head. And it wasn't like, oh my God, I've got to, it's just not working out
with this girl I'm seeing. I'm going to have to call her. I've got to be a man. I've got to fucking
call her and I'm going to see her and I'm going to look her in the eye and tell her it's not.
And like, you know, the kind of nervousness you might feel
with an idea like that, like, I'm going to have to break up
or whatever, I'm going to have to fire someone.
It wasn't that.
It was like when you're doing your ocean swimming, right?
When you're doing your Otolo thing,
around about, I don't know, mile 40,
that thought of a hot shower and you went,, man, that's going to be so good.
I'm going to get out of the hot shower, and I'm going to peel this wetsuit off,
and I'm going to do a wee, and I was going to care,
and I was going to feel so amazing.
I'm going to feel my body warm up.
That's what it showed up as.
I thought it would show up as some super scary thing.
It showed up as like the best, kindest, most amazing thing that I could do.
And again, Rich, I was so lucky because I'm like, hang on a fucking second. If I'm convinced that
the forests are on fire right now and the sea is rising, how is this not also a distortion? How is
this not also not real? And I got on the phone. I just started calling people because I had been
trained through my time and sobriety is like before you pick up a drink, pick on the phone. I just started calling people because I had been trained through my time
and sobriety is like before you pick up a drink,
pick up the phone.
So I just started calling people
and I reckon I was on the phone.
I just looked at where the sun was,
wherever it was in the world.
I'm like, I know someone that lives near there.
Hi, you haven't spoke to me for about a year.
I just started calling people.
Wow.
Just to check on the,
I just called my brothers
because Australia was awake.
So I called two of my brothers
and we were FaceTiming and Skyping and stuff and just checking on the world with their
brain and being really aware that I wasn't able to process things very well. It was so frightening,
and this went on for a long time.
That vacillation between catastrophe and then that blissful state
and understanding that that's just a different version
of the same thing is also a level of self-awareness
that probably saved your life.
But the thing is, dude,
like I remember when you went to the Middle East,
like we were hanging out around that
and you would share with me,
like I'm having issues with my mental health
and I didn't fully appreciate or understand
what you were actually going through.
Right.
I don't think it was until,
and this I think was much later,
when you came over to the house
and Mel, our friend Mel was over
and we were having like a tea ceremony.
Oh, with Uday.
We served you tea.
Oh yeah, when Uday was there.
Yeah, yeah.
And you were convinced that the tea
contained some kind of mind-altering substance.
Without a shadow of a doubt,
as far as I was concerned.
And you literally freaked out and laughed
and it really scared me.
I may as well have done ayahuasca.
Because I bore witness to a small slice
of what you were going through.
And it wasn't until then.
And this probably, this was a couple of years after that.
I was still pretty fragile.
I was still pretty fragile.
Yeah.
And that's when I realized like, oh, wow.
Like this is serious.
And what was the diagnosis?
I mean, you have this psychosis,
this episode with psychosis,
but is it bipolar?
Is it like schizophrenia?
No, it wasn't schizophrenia.
It was, from what I understand is like,
what I was experiencing was a really acute,
it was like, this is what like untreated anxiety
and OCD and as I found out later on ADHD,
all that stuff spinning me up
into this place of extraordinary anxiety
will then start to pop up into psychosis
because what's neurosis is when you break a leg
or you lose a job or your partner leaves you.
You have an irrational fear.
Well, it's the pain caused
by not being able to accept reality.
All right, that's essentially neurosis.
Like this is the thing that is actually happening.
I don't want to accept it.
So it really hurts.
All right, because I don't want to have this job
or my lover or can walk.
Psychosis, I've got to explain to me that psychosis,
when that pain becomes so great,
your brain starts to reinterpret the reality to keep you safe.
And so I started to realize that I was observing things through my sight,
my taste, every input that i could touch was being filtered through this bizarre kind of distorted
cataclysm of doom and i wonderfully and very gratefully i'd learned how to meditate at some
point and um just light watkins oh yeah too late god we're just dropping every vernis beach name
ever here and he's coming back on the show pretty soon.
Oh, cool, man.
Tell him, hey.
He's got a new book out.
And I was in Amsterdam because I was going to business school over there.
And I'm meditating in this amazing Airbnb on the canal.
It was unbelievable.
And I'm in meditation and I'm doing that thing that, what's his name?
He's got a funky voice.
The Austrian, sat on a bench.
Eckhart Tolle?
Yeah.
You are looking at the pen, buddy.
What you see?
Like I was doing that, right?
Okay.
So I'm meditating, I'm meditating,
and just enough breath between me and the thoughts,
just to watch them all go by like that.
And I was like, huh, I don't see anybody else freaking out.
I don't see anybody else worried about that.
I mean, people are concerned and that's normal, but I'm the only, huh, maybe something's,
and it was only in that, it was only being able to meditate and observe my own thoughts
being that distorted, I understood the amount of trouble I was in.
So I pretty quickly went to go see a psychiatrist back in Santa Monica. Amazing guy. Super fucking smart. Really smart. And he
just looked at me and he said, mate, I never lose. The only tricky part is getting the dosages right.
But once we get the dosages right, you'll be fine. And I really wanted to believe him because I was
thinking about suicide 20 times a day. And that's a really fucking hard thing to do, hard thing to deal with.
And that went on for a really long time.
And this is the thing about meds.
I think I was on, I'm on my ninth different iteration of medication right now.
And it's actually doing pretty well, you know.
But it's all in titrating and it's all in getting the dosages right.
But, you know, for a while there, I was on two kinds of antipsychotics, an SSRI,
I was on an NSRI. I was putting on a kilo a week from all the, because they fuck with your insulin,
the antipsychotics. But eventually, it started to kind of get better. And the meds work,
but the meds don't do the job for you. And the way I would describe medication for this kind of thing, mate,
it's like you are in the world of cycling.
I can take all the EPO that I want, right?
I can dose myself like, you know, I was on the postal service team and whatever.
But I've still got to pedal my fucking balls off to get the top of the Alpe d'Huez, all right?
You've still got to do the work.
It's not like I inject this and my bike magically gets to the top of the mountain.
Hey, gold jersey.
No, you've seen photos of those guys who were on the gear.
They're pain faces.
They're all on it, but they're all, you know, not all of them.
Depends on which documentary you watch.
A lot of them are on it.
Like you've got to really do the work and the meds let you do the work.
If you don't do the work, it doesn't get better.
The meds give you the space to do the work.
And wonderfully through the support of a,
I have a psychologist and a psychiatrist.
So the psychiatrist is like the mechanic who makes sure that the engine works
right.
And the psychologist is the rally driver, the navigator.
Who's like, you know, 45 turn in five, three, 90 to return. You know, they shout out all the turns to the rally driver, the navigator. It was like, you know, 45 turn in five, three, 90 to return.
You know, they shout all the turns to the rally drivers.
They shout all the turns to the rally drivers.
So I've been working with two people for quite a while now.
And getting back here, I met this amazing guy.
I had him on the show the other day.
He's Dr. Adam Bays.
He's actually leading the research into psilocybin and the treatment of treatment
resistant depression here in Australia. It's amazingly smart. Yeah. That's interesting.
What is your perspective for yourself with respect to those compounds?
Mate, I did a whole documentary about suicide prevention. It was incredible. And I've met people who are going
through TMS and DTMS and experimental ketamine therapy and stuff like that. So I've actually
spent a fair bit of time with people who are dealing with chronic catastrophic treatment
of resistant depression. It's horrible, horrible. It's not the sort of thing you can have a smoothie
and nice walk and you'll feel better. Like there's your brain switches completely set to doom and you cannot move them.
What's really interesting about psilocybin is that the way, what it does to the brain is that,
and certainly the way that Adam describes his study is that with very little treatments,
maybe only two treatments, but they're quite intense. There's two psychologists,
they go on for a long time. And it's really, really important
that it's done in a very particular way.
With only one or two treatments,
you can have a humongous...
And that's amazing
because I'm someone who dealt
with the side effects of medications.
Like your testosterone goes out the window
and I met Audrey in the middle of all this, all right?
So for me, the woman is now my wife
and the mother of our kids.
With the testosterone,
that's like to try to explain
what no testosterone is like from these drugs it's like hey you're in the woods and it's raining and
you need a lot of fire here's a box of matches no matches in the box you're like it's really yeah
it's hard i mean it's not hard but you know you know what i mean like it's it's it's a real drag
um look unfortunately adam told me because i've had episodes of psychosis
i'm not allowed to participate in the trial oh wow that that that obviates you from yeah i'm not
allowed i'm not allowed to play interesting no i mean i i ask certainly you know there's all kinds
of of um evidence of the efficaciousness of these compounds with these resistant conditions.
I mean, there's no question about it.
And I think it's very exciting to see that unfold
and with the development of these new therapies
that are undoubtedly helping lots of people.
We just gotta be really careful.
But it's tricky, especially when you're in recovery.
Like, it's like, is this,
cause you know, my brain lights up and says, yes, please.
Well, this is the thing.
We're 50 years behind on the research because this stuff started to escape the labs.
And there was studies, I don't know how they got approved,
but there were studies where the doctors were taken at the same time as the patients
and all the research got shut down.
No, I know.
Yeah, and we lost decades of knowledge that would have advanced that.
And it's certainly, it's not something that you want to, you know,
do in your backyard with a bloke
whose name used to be John,
but now calls himself,
you know,
Panther Forest or whatever.
There's a lot of those people.
Wears a bearskin hat.
There's a lot of people.
Yeah,
there's a lot of that going on right now.
No,
you want a proper psychiatrist.
But my Adam,
so Adam was super smart
and is super smart
and was willing to question his initial hypothesis
because I'm on all these meds
and it still wasn't right.
It's like, what else is going on?
Something else is going on.
And so we came down off all these meds and I had to do a week without them.
And I was doing breakfast radio at the time.
And I had a, you know, I was fucking living the dream.
I was doing breakfast radio from my house.
I had a line in my house.
I remember that.
Unbelievable, man.
Just go down to the basement and you're on the radio.
It was the best.
And so he said, okay, you need to do a week without to give you, so it can work when you come back on the other ones. And he said, here's some Valiums. And I came home and I had
them in my hand and I gave them to Audra and I said, hide that, give them to me when I'm being
a bastard. Don't tell me where they are because me Valium are, Prince Valium has ridden me into the sunset.
But also you're titrating off
all of these powerful psych nodes.
It was over quite a while.
It was over a number of weeks.
But that one week, man,
I remember telling the radio people I was with,
it was one morning,
I had three people I was on the show with
within the space of the first hour.
Each of them texted me going,
fuck, you're fast this morning.
Fuck, you're funny this morning.
Man, what the fuck, you're amazing today.
And I was like the radio person
that I always wished I could be.
But the rest of the day, I was like,
I just couldn't handle that operating speed.
Like no wonder I used to, you know,
drink and use so much.
Yeah, to slow it down a little bit.
Yeah, I couldn't, I couldn't, I couldn't.
And that broke my heart a bit
because I was as funny and fast.
But also you must be thinking,
oh, wow, like, let me just like,
that's a, you know,
how can I have more of that
as my career superpower?
Well, maybe.
Is there a euphoric kind of feeling
with that also?
I think it was more the,
you know, that I,
it's the thing that I guess got me in the door and got me quite quickly up the ladder.
But by this point, it was unsustainable.
And it kind of broke my heart because I had to face that.
I wasn't able to, you know, I mean, even Lewis Hamilton's got breaks.
You know, I didn't, I wasn't able to stop it.
And that was the hard part.
I wasn't able to regulate from that.
And that was the hard part. I wasn't able to regulate from that. And that was a bit sad, but I understood I was able to come to like,
well, I can do this or I can be safe and have a life
and be able to have relationships with people.
And I think I'd rather the latter.
So Adam, he started treating me for OCD.
And once we changed on the OCD meds, things started to work really well.
And within a number of weeks, things got pretty good.
And then I went and saw a acceptance commitment therapy psychologist. And then I got really stuck into basically exposure therapy, which is terrifying and horrible. And I remember I was
on just kind of garden variety, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors by
this point, which just helped grease the wheels, you know, and help give me the space to do all the
work essentially and rewiring the neural pathways that I needed to do.
And my exposure therapy, like this is the point where I would drive my car in LA and I had my car
on the dashboard had the word climate control written on it. The word
climate made me want to shit my pants and vomit at the same time. Like I was so, so sensitive to
any kind of trigger. Like I would walk out the door and if I felt the warm sun on my skin,
I'd be terrified. And this is years later, this is like 2016, 2017, this is still happening.
It was the worst. And so I was like, I can't live like this. I cannot do this every day. I will not do this. There's got to be another way. There's got to be
another way. And so I went and found Janine, who's amazing. And I would sit there with her and
she had these really interesting pictures. And she'd sit next to me in her office.
She had an iPad and it was an art project, I think, where they took photos of really famous parts of London and New York
and I think it was one other city.
I think it was Los Angeles.
Like the bull in downtown.
We're near Wall Street, that big bull statue.
It's like 90 centimetres above the high tide mark.
And there was this picture and you could put your finger on it
and swipe it that way.
And it would give you an artist's impression of what, you know, when the West Antarctic ice shelf melts,
which is three meters or so of sea level, what that's going to be.
And I would swipe it back.
And I would do this for about 10 minutes, just shaking in terror and wanting to shit myself and wanting to vomit.
And then she would kind of talk me down through it.
And then we would, I'd go back, you know, a little while
and then we'd do something very similar
and do it again and do it again.
And then it got to the point
where I was shooting a TV show in Fiji.
My wife's from Fiji.
And people don't give a shit about sea levels in Australia
because like it doesn't affect them.
But let me tell you, in Fiji,
there's villages that have been there for hundreds of years
where, you know, the village used to be as big as this table.
Now the village is this big
because it's just been washed away, All right. And I would sit there and there
was a village right next to where I was staying and I would sit there every afternoon. Sometimes
when the tide was high. And so I'd sit there as the tide was coming in and I'd look to my right
and I'd see the water washing up underneath the houses. And, you know, you could see where they
bury their ancestors on the land.
And you can see where their ancestors were buried.
And pretty soon they're going to have to move the grave or they're going to be seeing bodies.
And it was horrible.
But I did that every day.
I did that.
I just forced myself to be with it every single day.
And I still do it every day.
If I see a headline that I would otherwise have previously shied away from,
I will click on it and I will read it and I will be with the discomfort.
And it is only, it's like anything, Rich.
It's only in being willing to be with the discomfort
that we then get the adaptation response.
And that goes for your muscles, it goes for your endurance,
it goes for your mental health.
The more you run away from it, the worse it gets, unfortunately. The less you run,
you don't run faster. The less you run, the slower you run. So it's only willing to be with the discomfort that any change happens. You don't have to do heaps, just a little bit. I think the
magic number is like 4% or something. It's just a little bit, but just enough, just enough to be with it.
And then it's just a little bit easier the next day.
But then you make the discomfort a little bit harder.
And then slowly, the thing is, mate, if I ran away from everything that scared me,
I'd live my life on the head of a pin.
And what does that give me?
It gives me no options.
It gives me binary.
It gives me,
I don't want that, so I'll hide. And that's not a lot of choices to go through life with.
But if I'm willing to be with the discomfort, suddenly I've got possibility. If I'm willing
to be with the discomfort and go, okay, this is awful. I wonder what could happen here? Because
I've only ever known what that looks like. What could this be like? If I approach it,
try to approach it with curiosity and be aware of how painful it is,
but also go, well,
what else is happening here?
Because it might not be as bad as I think,
or it might, I might,
I don't know all the answers.
Someone else has probably got a pretty good idea.
It's in being with that curiosity
and being with that willingness
to be uncomfortable
that that is what has allowed me
to actually have a life now.
I can sleep at night.
I'm so sorry that you've suffered so much.
And it's so much more than I originally realized.
And it's a credit to you and your commitment
to getting well that you're able to sit here.
Because I think a lot of people,
perhaps the majority of people
who might've found themselves in a situation sit here because I think, you know, a lot of people, perhaps the majority of people who have,
who might've found themselves in a situation where, you know, they're seeing things that aren't real.
They don't make it back from that. They end up in those institutions that have that smell that you can't forget. And unfortunately that's the common sort of scenario. That's how that generally
plays out.
I got really lucky.
As I said, I got really lucky
because I learned that
just because I think it doesn't make it real.
I learned that a long time ago.
I fought it, you know,
and I didn't want to talk about it.
And how do you know today
when to differentiate?
You know what I mean?
Like, is this happening right now?
Are we here?
Yeah, we're here.
I mean, we're here having this conversation, right? Yeah, everything's fine right now. You're locked in, you're anchored. I have no lot of checking. Is this happening right now? Are we here? Yeah, we're here. I mean, we're here having this conversation, right?
Yeah, everything's fine right now.
You're locked in.
You're anchored.
I have no problem reality checking.
I have no problem checking.
And for a while, I would be, I will check.
Sometimes I cannot understand emotions in a room.
And it turned out that it's the ADHD diagnosis,
but I'll not be able to understand things
and I'll check,
like say if I've done a promo thing
and I'm doing a radio interview
and I give one of the, you know,
one of the anchors, the hosts some shit
and they go, oh, 7.15, I'll see you later, man.
And I'll walk out and ask the publicist,
did I fucking blow that?
Are they upset at me?
No.
Like, okay, because my head is telling me
that I've just destroyed my career,
my relationship with that person. I'm like, nah, you'm like no you know okay okay so then every time my brain goes
you're fucking blown you're blown i'm like but hang on um no peter said it was fine and i just
remember that other thing that the other person talked about yeah like you know he doesn't have
my brain i can't you know i can't imagine how terrifying it must be to not know whether
something that's happening is real or not.
Yeah, it's not fun.
It's absolutely terrifying.
It's because you've never,
yeah, it's so scary.
It's so, so, so scary.
But I don't know, man.
And is there a sense of,
like what's the origin story here?
Like, where does this come from?
Is this a genetic thing?
Is this, you know, a result of a series of traumas
that went untreated for a certain period of time?
Is it even worth trying to understand that?
Or is it just about like,
I know what I need to do now to be well and stay tethered?
I think it's worth trying to understand it
for the purposes of, you know,
well then what can I do about it? And how can I
deal with it properly? And, you know, I'm the son of two people that had to leave their countries
because of war. All right. And that's going to change you as a person and who they were when
we were little. So there's a possibility of like an epigenetic trauma passed down.
Yeah. When I wrote my book, I had to check.
And I said, yeah, yeah, you're about 50-50.
You're about 50-50, 50% of like what comes from your parents
and 50% of like what happens after you get born.
And so look, like I said, this is the brain I've got.
It's the brain that gave me the life I have.
I probably didn't help it by drinking and using so much.
And we're literally, you know,
given it the Jimi Hendrix Zippo on the strat,
you know, just drank holes in my brain.
Or maybe it saved you.
Maybe it was what you needed in that moment,
you know, to survive.
Sounds like a donic recall going on there, Richie.
Yeah.
Well, it was, you know,
on some level a coping mechanism, obviously.
Yeah, precisely.
Yeah, and that was- And you were living a very surreal life. Yeah, it was very weird know, on some level a coping mechanism. Yeah, precisely. Yeah.
And you were living a very surreal life.
Yeah, it was very weird.
I'm very lucky.
I'm very, and I don't, you know, like I'm a white, straight, middle-class man.
Okay.
So I can, you know, I could have been weird on the street and walked past the cop and they would have not looked at me twice because I had this job on TV.
I was just having a big night.
If I was any
other color, forget about it. I'm aware of that. It's not like I'm not aware of that. I'm very
lucky that I'm in a country that has access to healthcare. And I'm really lucky, really lucky
that when I really needed a lot of intervention, I could afford it. But you also volunteered for it.
A lot of people resist it or they don't have that tiny little piece
in the back of their mind.
I didn't want it, man.
That's still clinging to reality.
Like you're like, I need to call this person.
I need to call this person.
This person says, come here and let me help you.
And you show up.
Don't let me mislead you.
Okay.
Sir, like here's this antipsychotic.
I want you to take it only when you need it.
Aha.
If I don't take it, I don't need it.
I'm not sick.
And I would do that.
I did not want, I didn't want to accept that I had this.
I did not want it.
And I avoided dealing with it for a long time, way too long.
And I caused myself and others a lot of damage doing so.
It's one thing to raise your hand and say,
my name is Rich or my name is Osher
and I'm an alcoholic or I'm an addict.
We're in a culture now that's forgiving and understanding
and has a grasp on the recovery process.
And we understand that on some level.
It's another thing altogether to say,
my name's Osher and I have psychotic episodes
or sometimes I don't know what's real
and expect people to be like, cool, are you good?
You're gonna show up for work, it's okay.
So what I'm getting at is that I still think
we have a long way to go
in terms of understanding these types of conditions.
And I think what's important about you
and kind of how you advocate in this space
is your willingness to be open about it.
Like I remember when I was here a couple of years ago
and you did a live show and you got up in front
of that live audience.
And maybe, I don't know if it was the first time
you'd done that, but it was early in your journey of saying, I'm gonna get up and I'm gonna tell this story. And it, I don't know if it was the first time you'd done that, but it was early in your journey
of saying, I'm gonna get up
and I'm gonna tell this story.
And it's hard, you know, it's embarrassing.
I have to talk about things that,
like a lot of people might look at me
a little bit differently, you know, as a result of it.
But I think that there's so much power in your,
there's a lot of courage to be that vulnerable
in front of people.
Well, firstly, like it's been a long courage to be that vulnerable in front of people. Well,
firstly,
like,
it's been a long time
since I've had any breaks
with reality.
Like,
it's been a long time
since I've had any
of those episodes
and I'm,
I live every day
knowing that they are.
It won't be tomorrow,
it won't be in six months,
but they're not far
if I don't keep things
ship shape,
you know.
You got so little,
the balloon.
Keeping the balloon up. balloon yeah it's important
i gotta do i've got i've got all these things i need to do sure but because of the things that
i do every day i have this incredible life that i'm more productive and you know than i've ever
been in my career yeah and you have like a million jobs let's say let's be straight i mean you know
like i don't know how many tv shows you host but it's a lot and you seem to have many podcasts and
you're doing this news thing now like a live event it. It's a lot of fun. You know, this sort of live Colbert type experience with news and
comedians and performers here in Australia. Like you're incredibly productive. I don't know, man,
I've got a lot in my head and I've got to get it out and I'm trying to get it out in the healthiest
way possible. But there was something you talked about before that I've just lost it now. You were talking about, so coach.
Oh yeah.
So when I first got sober, all right,
I remember sitting,
there was a particular meeting I would go to.
And I'm a part of a fellowship of men and women
who count days and take steps.
There's more than 11, there's less than 13.
You can figure it out.
The secret thing that we're not supposed to talk about,
but everybody knows what you're talking about. It's less than 13. You can figure it out. The secret thing that we're not supposed to talk about, but everybody knows what you're talking about.
It's my super secret.
And I would sit there
and I remember this particular place
it was on, it was on Sunset, it was above
a bar. I don't know if you ever went to that one.
Oh, I know exactly what you're talking about.
It was a really good one.
And I was sitting in this bar in the middle of the day.
And it was really good.
I put my hand up and I had a chat.
And after the show,
I forgot, after the meeting,
after the show,
this guy comes up to me
and he's probably about my age now.
And he goes, mate, it's gonna be okay.
I said, I understand.
Like I was literally sleeping on my friend Nick's spare bed.
You know, I'd just been, you know,
I had to get kicked out of my house.
I was like getting divorced.
It was like all,
I was, no one could have told me anything.
And he goes, no, it's gonna be all right. Promise you it'll be okay. You just keep going. I was like getting divorced. It was like, no one could have told me anything. And he goes, no, it's going to be all right.
I promise you it'll be okay.
You just keep going.
Do this, do that.
Do the things that your man tells you.
You'll be all right.
He may as well have been telling me the story of Hansel and Gretel.
It was a fucking fairy tale, right?
It may as well have been, hey, Rich, come over and say hi to the kids.
Come say hi to Audrey.
But I'm going to blindfold you.
And when you get into the house, I'm going to take the blindfold off and say, hey, man,
describe the colors of the cars on the street
he'd be like
well I know they're there
he's just blank
like a complete blank
from where I was standing that day
to this guy
he was wearing a grey overcoat
I'll never forget him
but I just needed to believe
that that was possible
and he was telling me it was possible
and I had to believe
that he was telling me the truth
and all I had to do was just go he told me just do was just go, he told me, just do what your man tells you. Come here
every day. Do what your man tells you and it'll be all right. And guess what? It was. And I'm just
trying to give to others what was given to me because you can't be what you can't see. All
right. And when I first came back here and I was like, I'm going to go to these meetings,
I'm going to call my man, David. I'm like, I'm so famous. I don't want to go to a meeting, put my hand up. I don't know if you realize I'm real fucking here and I was like, I'm gonna go to these meetings, I'm gonna call my man, David. I'm like, I'm so famous.
I don't want to go to a meeting,
put my hand up.
I don't know if you realize I'm real fucking famous.
He's like,
dude,
shut the fuck up.
Put your fucking hand up and you'll fucking save someone's life,
man.
Fuck you.
I was like,
okay.
And, and since then,
you know,
it's not about me.
It's not about me.
It's about,
I want to, I want me at 22 getting his,
you know, long vomit-soaked hair getting pulled out of his mouth to see someone like me, not me,
but someone, whoever they relate to, talking about this and going, yeah, it doesn't have to be that.
You can have everything you've ever wanted more, more than you could have ever fucking dreamed of without that thing. It's okay. You've got a brain that when it gets
that thing, bad shit happens. Doesn't happen to everybody. Sorry. It's like peanut butter. Not
everyone gets to eat it. I'm just trying to give to others what was given to me, mate.
And I found that. If you can't, you've got to seek out stories of people who are where you want to be.
That's why people read your book because they want to run a 5K.
They read stories about you running Ultraman,
but they want to get off their ass and go and do something, all right?
So people go and read stories.
They read Goggins' book, right?
Because they want to read a story about someone who's where they want to be
and understand that another person has done this thing.
And I do the same thing.
Like when I was dealing with all the suicidality I started a podcast
I was doing with Movember
I convinced Movember
to fund the podcast
and I spoke with
I spoke with suicide survivors
for like
I don't know
I did 40 episodes or something
and so every like
I don't know
every third or fourth episode
I spoke with suicide survivors
and I'm talking to these guys
going wow
and I'm like literally
if you watch the footage
just before we did video podcast
you watch the footage
I'm like going through it
and I'm speaking with them and like this shit flying through my head
and I'm seeing shit.
Like it was all happening.
Oh my God.
Dude, it was all happening.
And I'm just going, hold, listen, listen.
And it was really important to hear that, you know,
these people had been through what I was,
the kind of thinking that I was going through,
having their brain try to tell them,
psst, there's a way out, psst, I can fix this, psst, it's going to be fine,
just do this, just do this.
And that after a while, just it's way more seductive than I thought.
And when I heard that, I know you'll do a big warning at the start of this
because there's a lot of, got to be really careful about how you communicate
about it, this sort of thing.
I didn't realize how seductive I thought it was.
I didn't realize that at all.
Talk more about that. What do you mean? I didn't, well, like I was saying earlier was. I didn't realize that at all. Talk more about that. What do you
mean? I didn't, well, like I was saying earlier, like I didn't realize, I thought it'd be a big,
scary, scary thought. Like, and this is what I'm going to have to do now. Oh, well, I've tried
and this is, I know it was, hey man, I gotcha. Come over here. Let me put my arm around you.
Just do this. It'll be all better because it was so
noisy mate it was so noisy it was like being i don't know stuck at the worst music fucking
worst edm music festival ever and it's at a drag strip and you're five hours from anywhere and you
can't get a ride home and you can't sleep because you've taken too many drugs and you can't get out
of there because your friends are somewhere and you're stuck between the drum and bass tent and
the trance tent and you got all this shit of there because your friends are somewhere and you're stuck between the drum and bass tent and the trance tent.
And you got all this shit blowing at you from speakers either side.
It was just so noisy.
My brain was so noisy.
I couldn't fucking think.
And you got this guy going, psst, I know how to make it quiet.
And that's fucking hell, man.
It was like, and it was my voice.
It was my feelings.
It was my idea.
You know, the same one that goes, oh man, I'm going to make a best chocolate smoothie.
It was the same thing.
It's like, oh, I'm really cold.
I'm going to put on my favorite jumper.
It was the same thing.
And I was very lucky that I knew that.
So scary.
Yeah.
And that's the thing I needed to tell people about.
It doesn't come out scary.
It comes out as the best idea I've ever had.
And no, it's not.'s not it's a it and five minutes later it's that thing we were talking about this yesterday like you're trying to solve the problem with the same brain that created the
problem like you're you're you're living inside a brain that is tweaked. Yeah. And you're trying to figure out a way forward.
Yeah.
But all you have is this tweaked brain,
but you don't really know that it's tweaked.
And so you're stuck.
It's like a strange kind of like hall of mirrors.
It is.
You can't use a sick brain
to think your way out of having a sick brain.
It's like trying to bite your own teeth
or trying to touch your right elbow
with your right index finger.
You can't do it.
And when you're in that state,
you don't know that your brain is sick.
No, you don't.
No, you don't.
And this is why things like,
things that I'd learned earlier,
things like writing things down,
things like talking to people,
observing, meditating,
had really helped.
Now, look,
I still have hard days.
I had a hard day today.
I rode a bicycle here because I needed to move my body a bit
to kind of down-regulate a bit from earlier in the day.
Like, it's still hard.
It's not, everything's not fucking roses.
And I'm punished to live with sometimes
because I can get very, very focused,
very focused to the point where
you might've moved on from a topic,
but I'm still talking about three sentences ago and I can't let it go. And it's really hard to
speak with me sometimes. And that's really tough on the people that I love. And I struggle with
what I put them through sometimes. Yeah. I've noticed in talking to you sometimes
your brain moves so quickly that we'll be talking about something, but then you'll throw a couple
other things in there. And then I'm like, wait, what is happening right now?
I'm not quite sure.
Sorry.
Yeah, and it's not, no, you know,
I think in this conversation, you've been very linear,
but I've noticed it like just socially a little bit.
It can happen.
It's just like a,
it's not like there's nothing negative about that.
It's just something that I've noticed.
It happens, yeah.
Like the meds that I'm on now,
they tend to wear off towards the end of the day.
And so evenings can be a bit difficult
because I can get back into those things.
But look, that's all, you know,
when I'm medicated, it works and it's okay, you know,
but it's still, it's, look, it's like,
you know, when I first got sober, I had to, I had the thing that people may not understand
about drinking is that people will understand that it affects your memory, right? But that
memory affecting, the effect of the memory also affects your ability to learn and feel the pain
and damage emotionally that you've caused. So you don't connect this
horrible feeling in your body with your own actions. And so ultimately I started drinking
to blackout at 14. So here I am suddenly I'm 36 with the emotional ability of a 14 year old
trying to get through life. And I had to learn all that shit. I had to really literally learn it, like reading books about how to do it
because I had no idea.
And similarly, you know,
I have to learn how to do other stuff
that people have figured out when they were six.
And that's hard when you're 49.
But I am here to learn and I'm here to grow
and I'm here to, like, I know I'm getting it wrong.
I know I probably get it wrong more than I'd like,
but I'm not here to pretend that life's fucking amazing and rosy.
It's not, it's hard.
But it's also, you know, it's worth it.
It's worth trying because who I get to be
because of the trying is worth it.
And look, I honestly, I would not, we've talked a lot about this,
but we haven't talked about how incredible Audrey was in all this.
So again, I met the woman who's now my wife
when I was going through all of this shit, through all of it.
And I remember speaking to her, just telling her about, you know,
like all these completely deluded things that are going on. And I'm like, you know, like all these completely diluted things
that are going on and I'm like, you know,
the Pacific Islands are getting washed away
and entire cultures are getting destroyed and, you know,
like as real as real could be to me.
And she just, she could see that I was in really, really bad
and she just said, look, if it does come to that,
I'll be with you and it'll be okay.
And that was the first time in years that I believed it might end up in a different way
to how I'd been convinced that it would end up.
And she, you know, it was like I was in a, they used to have these dance parties here
in Marrickville Bowls Club, Black Market, I don't know if anyone remembers them, but they used to cover the mirrors
in black plastic, right? And it was like someone had taken a pin, because the parties would go all
day from the night before. And they're like, someone had taken a pin and popped through the
black plastic. And there was just this tiny little pinprick of light, because I'd been in that
darkness for so long. And when she said that to me, I was like, oh, oh, all right. So all the
things that I'm thinking could happen and I could be holding her hand at the same time.
And that was the thing that changed everything. That woman absolutely saved my life, mate. There's no question. No question. I'm very lucky because of that.
Because it was, I needed someone.
It's worth it to be a better person for them.
I was living alone before I met them.
When you live alone, you don't have to,
you're not accountable to anyone.
You can be a bastard and, you know,
you put your social face on and whatever and that's it.
But then you're alone and alone's no fun um so yeah you also don't have anyone to give you that feedback and
accountability on your behavior yeah in real time absolutely yeah yeah and that's the you know
that's really that's the thing i suddenly had these two incredible people who I was I couldn't help but be
so completely hopelessly
in love with her
and
just
so much
paternal love
that just showed up
out of nowhere
for G
she was 11
she's 19 now
you know
and I didn't know
what to do with this
thing
because I'm a selfish prick
you know
and suddenly here's this
I'm no longer number one
fuckin' hell
you know and it was all it, I'm no longer number one. Fuck no.
And it was all, that's it.
That was like, okay, this is what I have to do this.
I have to. And now you have a son.
Now we are, yeah, Wolfie.
And so how does that change how you think about all of this
and keep you on track?
It's very, I guess it's very kind of twofold.
You know, part of it is I try to communicate whenever I can
as much as I can with about how much work needs to get done
because eventually everyone's going to get it.
You know, eventually everyone's going to get it. Eventually everyone's going to get how
much work needs to get done and the work will get done. It'll just be way harder. We don't have to
change the diet after the heart attack. We could eat better now and not even have the heart attack
or even just get a really kind of nasty scare, which is probably what we're having right now.
We're having a nasty climate scare. All right, but let's not go through the heart attack.
But humans are humans. We kind of wait for that, unfortunately. let's not go through the heart attack. But you know, humans are
humans. We kind of wait for that, unfortunately. It's shit, man. I know, it's shit. It's terrible.
It's terrible. So on one hand, it's like, well, but then again, I don't know anything. I don't
know everything. I rode a bicycle here. I could get taken out of the way home. All right. And so
all I have is this day. All I have is this moment. Literally all we have is now, as Wayne Coyne would say, like this is it.
And so when I'm, you know, every day with, it's very, you know,
it's really easy and very obvious when they're little because they change so much so fast.
But like, she's a new kid every six weeks.
She just, you know, it's subtly different, but she's very, you know, she changes so often.
She still grows and changes and thinks about things. And she's a very powerful woman and
just try to be as present as I can and witness to it. And, you know, know that you only have to do
today. You know, I look sometimes, I've got 13 years up the other day. And I said, I put up a
thing on my phone because I kind of stopped counting. And I put it up on my phone. I was like, fucking hell.
And they say, oh, it's a day at a time. But honestly, mate, some days it was five minutes at a time.
But you only have to do it for five more minutes. And just
trust that you'll be able to cope in five minutes from now. Because you will.
And so thinking about
your ass about what's going to happen, you asked about what's gonna happen,
you know, looking,
how do I think about everything?
Look, I just trust that whatever happens
that I'll be able to cope.
Whatever shows up,
I'll be able to cope.
It's not like some giant cataclysm
is gonna happen
and I'll suddenly forget how to do shit.
You have that muscle memory.
I mean, you've endured a lot
and so you know that you're able
and capable of like, you know, getting through difficult situations. I mean, you've endured a lot. And so you know that you're able and capable of like,
you know, getting through
difficult situations.
I have a lot of empathy for people
who haven't been through
that climate thing.
I think it's really important,
I think, to be with the reality of it
and sit down and really have a look.
All right.
Because during,
we had some bushfires here,
Black Summer, we called it.
Yeah, I was here. Yeah. It was devastating. All right. Because during, we had some bushfires here, Black Summer, we called it. Yeah, I was here.
Yeah.
When that was going on.
Devastating. All right. And people are texting me every day because I'd read the book and
stuff like that. Are you okay? Are you okay? I'm like, mate, I saw this when it wasn't
there for years. Like I'd close my eyes and it would be there. Like I've been through
what you're going through right now. Because suddenly for a lot of people that are in my life,
it was, oh, oh, fuck.
Like, yes, yes, I get it.
So I have a lot of empathy for people
who haven't been through that
and people who are resisting that.
But it's really important.
And I think a lot of the denialism
that we see around climate stuff
is trying to avoid that pain, all right?
When you start talking about climate change, people think, oh, it's, you know, seawater or whatever. It's like, mate,
it's food security. It's water coming out of your tap. It's immigration. It's national security.
It's everything. But the thing is, because it's everything, it means everything's a solution.
Everything in the right direction is a solution. There's everything to do. It's not like there's
nothing to do. There's everything to do. And so there's everywhere to get into action because being in action is a sense of
agency and being in action is freedom from the pain that you're in. The only way out of the
flames is through. Pun intended, the only way out of the flames is through. You just have to keep
moving. It just doesn't matter. Pick a spot, go in one direction, do that. And then at least you're moving.
And that can give you what you need to get to bed that night going,
well, what can I control?
I can control it, you know, do what I can,
do the next right thing.
I got really lucky to get all the skills that I got
from getting sober, really helped me in this part.
On the mental health stuff though,
in your journey, you your journey with the book
and the live events that you do
and the amount of time that you spend
talking about this kind of stuff behind a microphone,
you must have a sense of the impact that it's making.
You must have men, people coming up to you.
Like it's a lifeline for a lot of people.
There aren't that many people
who are talking
about mental health in its most severe form in the way that you do. Yeah. Once again, I got very
lucky and I got to come off the antipsychotics. Some people don't. And I got very, very lucky
because of that. But I think if I asked, what does complex mental illness look like? What does
psychosis look like? People might think, oh, it's the guy on the bus is shouting and stuff that I
can't see. It can be. It could be you know you in a finely tailored suit yeah that's it that's
but that's what it is so it shows up in unlikely forms as well one in five one in five one in five
australians is affected by complex mental illness all right and that could be person suffering a
bit like for every person that has been diagnosed five people are affected by it. So when you look at those stats, it's like-
Which means there's a lot of people walking around undiagnosed.
Oh no, diagnosed, but they're just not talking about it.
Oh, I see.
And they're managing it.
And you asked earlier about,
I got really lucky with my workplace
because I know I'm a high value employee.
And I was really honest with my boss and said like,
mate, this is what's going on. Just so you know, this is why I'm a bit strange. This is what's happening. This is the doctors I'm seeing. These are the meds I'm taking. This is the exercise I'm
doing. This is the mediums I'm going to. And all of these things mean that I'll still be able to,
and I really need to keep coming to work because giving me something to do, it's like when someone
gets injured at work, you want to get them back as quick as possible because that's a huge part
of them getting better. And having a reason to get out of bed
and a reason to go to work
is a really important thing in getting healthy.
And my boss, Stephen, amazing.
He just said, well, what do you need from us?
And I'm like, because in one breath,
I told him I disclosed,
and I wouldn't recommend,
I'm not saying you should disclose,
like only if you're really comfortable
and you feel you're going to be okay.
Because in one breath, I told him what was going on,
but I also told him how I was managing it
and told him that I was taking responsibility for it.
And then that made it not his problem to fix.
And I think that's a really important thing.
Like you can, you know, it can happen to you or it can happen for you.
You know, you can either let it have you or you can have it.
You know, it's really, it's really, that's all it is.
And if you take responsibility for it,
then you have a bit more sense
that you're not being sort of flayed around so much.
It still comes and grabs me sometimes
and kind of fucks up my day as it did today.
But it's, if I know that, you know,
look, well, I'm doing what I can with what I have
and it might not be the, you know, look, well, I'm doing what I can with what I have and it might not be that, you know.
And how has all of this informed your relationship with your career as somebody who, you know, used to have that kind of fuck you mentality?
Don't you know who I think I am?
Yeah, exactly.
Oh, that's exactly what it was.
Don't you know who you think I am?
I think I am kind of sensibility. Yeah, exactly.
Oh, that's exactly what it was.
Don't you know who you think I am?
To now, you know, being really successful
and being on these really popular television shows
and being somebody who's gonna get recognized
on the street and all of that.
Like, how does that influence,
like, you know, where does the ambition sit?
How have you right-sized yourself
and formed like a healthier relationship
with all of that?
It came from changing why I showed up at work.
And, you know, how do you be a worker among workers
when you're the fucking guy on the telly?
You know, how do you do that?
How do you have any humility around that?
And what I tried to do was try to just be the most professional.
What I tried to do was like,
how can I make everyone else's day at work the easiest that I can make it?
So I spent a long time probably not making it very easy.
So how can I make it the audio person's easiest day at work,
that camera person, that camera person, this person,
how can I make their day the easiest day?
By being on time, by being completely prepared,
by being as professional as I possibly can be,
by, you know, asking them about their day, you know, being, you know,
getting in and out,
getting it done, all right?
And that in turn makes me very good at what I do
because that's what I want to do it for, all right?
There was a time when I did it
because I wanted to have, you know,
the rating success and all that shit.
And we did, you know, Australia,
very risk averse when it comes to TV.
So we did The Masked Singer in Australia as well. And I host that. I'm very lucky too. It's a fucking super fun show.
But there was a big, it was a hit. The first season was a hit and people are texting and
calling and going, hey, congratulations, congratulations. I'm like, I didn't want
to say to them, but I appreciate you congratulating me. But it's not like we don't work as hard on the
ones that don't work. We work just as hard. This how or why it was successful has nothing to
do with me. All I can do is show up, do it as best I can, try to push myself, try to learn something,
try to make other people stay good, and then go home. And that's the job. I don't do marketing.
I don't do promos. I don't cut. I have no idea what the other network
is going to program against me.
I have no idea.
I can't attach myself.
Very different from podcasting.
Bro.
You have to do the whole thing, all of it.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
In network television, there's whole departments
in charge of all that kind of stuff.
You just, you say you do your bit
and then you leave and go home.
But I can't, I used to,
I would definitely get tied into the outcome.
And I know you've spoken about this,
like, you know,
and I've heard you talk about this
with people who've done, you know,
extraordinary athletic things.
It's not like the gold medal
that you hold at the end of it is the prize.
Who you became to hold the gold medal,
sorry, it's not like the gold medal
that you hold at the end is the prize.
Who you became
to hold the gold medal
is the prize.
And that's why you do it.
It's not like everything's
going to be fine
when I hold this thing.
No.
That's not it.
Who you become
to hold this thing,
that's it.
And we've got to kind of
ask backwards around that
with success in our society,
I think.
You know, this amount of money at the end of the year, you've made it.
Have you?
Because I've had that amount of money and it swiftly went away, trust me.
But it didn't make everything awesome.
It didn't.
Don't worry, it all went away because, you know, internet gambling.
Okay. It's all gone. Gone, gone, gone. All right.
Yeah. But it's who you become because of it. And that's the day-to-day stuff, you know,
because ultimately that's all there is. And who would you say that you've become?
Oh, man.
I'm trying to... I don't know, Rich.
I'm just...
I just...
I don't know, mate.
I don't know how to answer that question.
I don't know how to answer that question.
I just...
Every step I take away from the person I was
before I stopped drinking and using is a good place to be.
I think if any of us can try to transcend the patterns of behavior
that haven't served us and write new ones,
then we have done the universe a service
by not allowing those kind of things to carry forward any further. And that
might be, you know, someone's a racist granddad or someone's homophobic mom or whatever, like that
can stop with you. You can choose that. Or not that I had a racist granddad or a homophobic mom,
but you can choose to stop that. So identifying the parts of who I am that don't serve me and going, do I really need
that? Can I let go of that? Can I do something else? Like it's a bit hard because I can get a
bit robotic in my thinking sometimes. So it can be hard to get the new versions of things in,
but it takes time, but it eventually works. And if I can just do that, then I'm all right. And as far as everything else, mate,
fit, fit, fit, fit, dead. That's it. There's no glide path for me.
I like how you distilled it down. But I do think it's worth noting that piece around interrupting the intergenerational transfer of hereditary
or inherited traumas and behavior patterns that cause havoc.
And it could be from an ex-relationship.
It could be from a job.
And you become very present with that
when you become a parent, obviously,
and you're looking at your young child
and you're thinking about how you were raised
or what your grandparents endured.
And you realize that you can be a stop gap.
Like you can arrest whatever thing
that runs in the background on autopilot.
You have the agency to interrupt
and perhaps make it the last stop on that line.
So that Wolfie isn't like intuiting that
and like exuding that and then passing it on.
The worst thing about parenting,
it's not the sleep.
It's not the being tired all the time
or being crappy to each other.
That's not it.
They don't do what you tell them,
but they do what you show them.
That is the worst part.
Because you see some shit in them and go, you milliv...
Oh, you got that from me.
Fuck.
And then you have to...
And that's the clue as to what you need to look at.
Yeah, that thing.
Yeah.
Sorry.
Yeah.
And you have to sort that shit out.
Because, and I think stuff like that is how another way that we can get a little closer to the kind of like society-wide change we're going to need
to get us out of this mess.
Like that kind of fear of change, this idea that,
no, we always did it, that's how we're always going to have to do it.
No, no.
You know, we have the choice to help our children become more open to change and more open to new ideas.
We have that ability.
And that's really, really important because-
Well, and it starts with us and it starts in the home.
It bloody does, man.
Yeah.
It really does.
I think that's a good place to put a pin in it for today, my friend.
Just bringing it around the corner.
I love you, buddy.
You know, the journey that you've been on is just, it around the corner. I love you, buddy.
You know, the journey that you've been on is just,
it's fucking unbelievable, dude.
And the level of vulnerability and courage
that you've demonstrated to weather this
and come to the other side and be in a place
where you can talk about it, you know,
comfortably is an incredible service.
Thanks, mate.
Thank you so much, mate, for having me.
And like, I don't underestimate the role
that you and Julie and your family have played.
Because I don't know, like, I don't think you lived at,
you never lived in another country, did you?
Like, I was a long way, a long way from home,
a long way from my family, a long way from my friends.
And to be able to, like you felt it last night
when you were at our place, to go, oh, a family. Ah my friends, and to be able to, like you felt it last night when
you were at our place, to go, oh, a family.
It's not my family.
I can leave it there and go, warm, delicious food, nice dogs, rattlesnakes, nice dogs.
That is unbelievable.
It's a lifeboat on the other side of the planet.
You know, it really is.
And knowing you, you know,
I sometimes just ride past your house.
Not in a weird way, just to go,
I saw my friends live, you know,
just ride past your house just to-
Well, you always have a home at our home
and we didn't even get to the part about
the importance of kind of fitness and physical activity as part of the mental health journey.
Like we spent a lot of time on the bike together and the bike as a tool for, you know, kind of contending with demons and getting to the other side.
There's a huge part of me feeling better that involves, and I believe now because I listened to a man whose career you fucking jump-started, Andrew Huberman. There's a lot of references to people,
but he sure doesn't reference you enough. Come at me, Huberman. No, I love him. I'll listen to him
every week. He talks about the catecholamines, talks about dopamine, norepinephrine, serotonin.
Now, all these things exist within my body. And when my body was not well, I needed
to take meds to help stimulate the production of those things. But these things exist in my body.
Though there's things I need to do to release them into my body and that we're designed to move.
We're designed to lift. We're designed to be active. We're designed to move through space.
We're supposed to be out and about getting our food, walking around, doing things,
interacting with other human beings. All of these things, all of these hormones give my body what it needs to shift
mood states throughout the day. And if I don't have enough of those, that can be a problem. I
can get quite stuck. But, and I know you talk about it and Audrey certainly does to me. She's
like, go swing some kettlebells, mate. Go get on your bike. Just go. And I understand that.
You know, I sometimes, I've got an ergo now,
I've got a rowing machine.
Dude, it's great.
It's 25 minutes.
I can get whatever, you know, I can use that anxiety.
I can use that energy that has been released in my body.
There's a huge chunk of adrenaline.
It's like, I don't need no pre-workout.
Hit me, give me some deadlifts.
Sure.
And I remember like during some of your harder periods
where you were like,
you were just out on the bike for like the whole day.
Yes.
Right.
And I was like, I know what that's about.
Oh yeah.
It's Wednesday.
You call me, I'm like, where are you?
I'm here.
It's like, that's 30 miles from your house.
Yes, it is.
Upper mountain.
But that's what I needed to do on that day to stay okay. Because there's a sense of agency.
There's a great sense of I'm here under my own power. I have some control. I have some ability to move myself. Not everyone can do that. I'm very lucky that i could and just the sense of mental space that
you get and the kind of active meditative effect of of being in a elevated heart rate and connecting
with your breath that allows you to problem solve or make you know try to make sense of
yeah your situation and what you're trying to work through in a way that doesn't happen when you're at home on the couch.
No, and it's not like I sit there
and I'm working through it like a math problem.
No, it's in the background.
I'll just be like running and going like,
oh, seagull, tree.
It happens in the unconscious part of your brain
while you're doing that other thing.
Yeah, and then it just pops up.
Because you're not looking at it directly.
Yeah, it pops up and you go,
oh, there it is.
And there's never a problem that I went,
I took on a run that I didn't come back with a solution go, oh, there it is. There's never a problem that I went, I took on a run
that I didn't come back with a solution with.
Never, not once.
But I got to say that this is the tricky part about dosages increasing.
I got that feeling from just walking around my block
when I was super unfit.
The problem is now is like to get that again.
Yeah, you got it.
I push myself.
Ratchet it up a little.
Well, I've got a heart rate strap now.
Because the meds I'm on, I've got to be careful of my blood pressure and heart rate strap now. And, you know, cause the meds I'm on,
I've got to be careful of my blood pressure and stuff like that.
So I send them some regular updates to my man and my psychiatrist.
He's like, damn, like, I don't know.
Like when I got my leg done in the thing,
the alarm kept going off cause I thought I was Brady Cardic.
It's like fucking 50 beats a minute,
49 beats a minute, like proper. Like, cause I'd just been going into the first surgery. I went
in as fit as I possibly could be back in 2020. I went in so fit. They're like, are you okay?
Like, yeah, I'm fine. But I, you know, I know that I don't have to sustain that kind of heart rate
when I'm really like doing intervals, like really hard. But I know you only have to be there for a little bit, you know,
minute off, minute on for a little while.
And that's enough.
Just the fire hoses your brain down.
It's a major state change.
Oh, man.
Like you try to be angry or upset or scared after all that shit floods your brain.
And that's for free, you know.
That's for free.
You can get there doing burpees.
And not enough people know that, you know, it's amazing.
Yeah, man.
All right, well, we gotta get out of here,
but let's close it down with maybe a final thought for he or she who's still suffering.
Like I'm just imagining somebody who's watching this
or listening, who's thinking, you know,
maybe I have some stuff I need to look at.
Osher's, youher's kicking up some stuff and it feels a little uncomfortable right now.
I don't know where to direct that energy.
Like, do you have resources
that you can direct people towards
or a thought that you could share to help direct
or guide that person who's dancing around the outer edges
of seeking help?
Well, I would say, look, I play a lot of poker.
Like one of the things I'm really lucky for
is I play a poker game every Wednesday
and I've been playing a poker game since 2003.
So it's the same group of 10, 12 guys.
So I've got these guys in my life.
And so, and we've been through a lot together.
And there's a person who shows up at a poker table
who doesn't know how to play very well,
and everyone spots them, and they kind of play them,
and they basically treat them like a human ATM.
And that person's called the fish.
And there's this phrase going,
if you can't spot the fish at the table, it's you.
And so if you're going through life and you're like,
everyone fucking wasn't doing what I say,
what's going on, why is everyone, everyone's the asshole.
Might be you.
And just, that's okay.
It's okay.
You are where you are with the skills and the tools that you've got.
That's fine.
There's more skills and tools and ways to deal.
You just need to go ask someone to show you.
And that's fine.
It's okay.
There's no shame in figuring out better ways to do things.
If you're going through life and everything is kind of, it's constantly a rocky fucking road.
It's okay. You're going in the direction you want to go to, but maybe, maybe you want to get a
better set of tires. Maybe you want to get a better suspension. Maybe you need a better co-pilot.
Like there's plenty of things that you can get on board. There's no need to gut through it.
You're not alone. And there's plenty of help, plenty of help. And look, I know I live in this incredible country
with this amazing healthcare system, but there's just psychoeducation alone. Learn about cognitive
distortions. Learn about what happens when your body's captured by anxiety. Learn the difference
between an amygdala hijack and, what's the other one? There's an amygdala one. I can't remember what it was. Learn, like when you're in anxiety, learn what your amygdala
does to your body. Understand that, you know, if you're in a meeting and everyone's being an
asshole and da-da-da-da-da-da, and your hands are shaking, you've shouted the last three things
you've said, you know, oh, I'm in fight or flight. Right. Right. Someone said something
that has nothing to do with this situation,
but it has triggered a response from a long time ago,
and I should probably not have to claw and bite my way out of this room.
I might just take a bit of a breath here.
You know, understand that stuff and just kind of just learn.
And you know what's amazing is like, yeah,
YouTube can convince you some pretty wrong shit,
but it's also a huge amount of like really clever, go for people who are actual doctors,
go for people who are from universities. There's some really clever psychoeducation out there.
Just learning what it is, naming it to tame it is a really important thing. Cognitive distortions
is really powerful. Like learning what the big cognitive distortions are, learning what anxiety
is, learning what your prefrontal cortex does,
you know,
learning how to downregulate.
You can learn how to,
you know,
you can do a thing called polyvagal breathing,
which is really easy.
It's just three in,
six out.
I do that in meetings all the time.
I do that on air.
No one knows I'm doing it.
What am I doing?
I'm stimulating my vagus nerve,
like tricking my body into its relaxation response.
And it's super easy to do. Four in, eight out. Don't do any more than that if you're standing up
or driving. There's so many things you can do. Yeah, no, that's great. I mean, I would echo all
of that, but supplement it with this idea of not trying to, like we were talking about earlier,
solve it in the confines of your mind quietly.
Instead, raise your hand and let people in,
find somebody you trust.
It could be a friend, it could be a colleague,
it could be a professional,
but develop the habit of being open
with somebody who can help guide you.
Like if you use all of these things,
thrive in the darkness and in isolation.
And I think when you're in that situation, you like if you use all of these things thrive in the darkness and in isolation yeah and i think
when you're in that situation there's a there's shame attached to it which makes you want to kind
of deal with it privately yeah it makes it worse and all that's going to do is prolong it and
exacerbate it yeah if if you know you if i rode my bicycle here and if i got here and you you know, I'd fallen really badly and I had a mad double spiral fracture in my forearm, my hand was hanging down like that.
Like, dude, we're going to get you to a fucking doctor.
Nah, nah, she'll be right, mate.
You'd think I was fucking crazy, all right?
But people do that every day when it comes to mental health.
Get to a goddamn doctor and fast because these things don't get better.
They get worse, as I've spoken about today
because I wasn't treating it
and it was getting worse and worse
and worse and worse and worse.
And eventually it just, it nearly killed me.
But there's so much help
and there's a huge amount of power
that comes from taking control
and taking control is to ask for help.
And that's really
powerful, particularly with men. Men like to be in charge. Well, be in charge, pick up the phone,
pal. Go do something about it. And like, if you're, I use automotive analogies because they work.
You know, if you're- Well, there's this idea that it's weakness to do that,
but if it's weakness to do that, then why are you so scared to do it?
Yeah. Like, so I'm in the car and I'm
flying down the freeway, taking my entire family on holiday, right? And the front left tire blows
out. All right. Do I pull over or do I go, no, I'm going to keep going. Like I'm doing 110 Ks an
hour and everyone I love is in this vehicle and now it's super dangerous. Like, and if I then
pull over and refuse, if I don't have the tools to fix the car, what am I going to do? Mate, of course you're
going to call the roadside assistance. Of course you're going to pull the car over. It's the same
with your brain. If you find yourself getting really rigid in your thinking and you find
yourself kind of getting cranky all the time or just crying or wanting to vomit out of nowhere,
that happened to me as well. When I was in lockdown in Melbourne, I'm just like, out of nowhere, I just wanted to spew
just like, like I've been drinking tequila kind of vomit. I was like, that's not good.
It was just a signal going, boom. I was on the phone with my doctor like that, because I know
that happens about two weeks before the other shit starts. So being on top of that kind of stuff,
like get some tools, you'd pull a car over. Like if you don't have that shit, learn how to do it.
Get some tools
and get your family there safely
because that's ultimately
who's going to get hurt
if you don't look after things.
Sorry to come all heavy,
but that's the truth.
No, that's good.
That's good.
Maybe we'll get some links
and some other resources
we can fill the show notes out with.
Oh, please.
People with some places they can go and some phone numbers we can fill the show notes out with. Oh, please, yeah. Leave people with some places they can go
and some phone numbers they can call.
Start at Susan David and go from there.
There you go.
Start at Susan David.
That's right, right?
Dude, she is the business.
Uncomfortable feelings are the price of admission
to a meaningful life.
Be with that and that is half the work done.
Right on, man.
All right, to be continued.
Oh, man. Love you, man. Thank right, to be continued. Oh, man.
Love you, man.
Really?
Thank you.
Yeah, we're done for today.
I love you, dude.
I love you, man.
No, I was like, really?
You're going to have me back?
Plants.
And go see Osher's live new NTNNNN or whatever it is.
That's it.
You got it right.
I don't even know what it's named.
It's like, not the new-
Nighttime News Network National Nightly News.
There you go.
Yeah.
It's not a fake news show.
It's a fake news show.
Because the news is a product, all right?
A product like anything else.
And depending on how exactly the fact is told to you,
you can either think, wow, those people really need our help
and we should look after them
because as a country we look after each other and we think everyone deserves a fair go. Or if you read it in another wow, those people really need our help and we should look after them because as a country,
we look after each other and we think everyone deserves a fair go.
Or if you read it in another outlet, you go, fuck off, we're full.
This fair go is only for white people.
But that's what happens here in our country.
And I think the way that particularly,
I think the way the news media in our country has been behaving
and really needs to be held to account.
And you're the man to do it.
Dude, I, you know, putting my entire network career at risk every night, I promise you.
All right. Cheers. Love you, man.
That's it for today.
Thank you for listening.
I truly hope you enjoyed the conversation.
To learn more about today's guest, including links and resources related to everything discussed today, visit the episode page at richroll.com, where you can find the entire podcast archive, as well as podcast merch, my books, Finding Ultra, Voicing Change
in the Plant Power Way, as well as the Plant Power Meal Planner at meals.richroll.com.
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See you back here soon.
Peace.
Plants.
Namaste. Thank you.