The Rich Roll Podcast - Psychiatrist Phil Stutz Knows What’s Wrong With You & Has The Tools To Fix It

Episode Date: June 3, 2024

Phil Stutz is a renowned psychiatrist, author, and the protagonist in the Netflix documentary “Stutz”. This conversation explores the intersection of spirituality and Phil’s iconoclastic perspec...tive on personal growth, which emphasizes actionable tools over traditional talk therapy. We discuss Phil’s backstory, his therapeutic philosophy, the drivers of happiness, the importance of embracing reality and uncertainty, the role of faith, finding purpose through service and action, and many other topics. Along the way, Phil expertly psychoanalyzes me. Phil is a treasure. And this conversation is a gift. Enjoy! Show notes + MORE Watch on YouTube Newsletter Sign-Up Today’s Sponsors: Momentous: Save up to 36% OFF your first subscription order of Protein or Creatine + 20% OFF my favorite products 👉 livemomentous.com/richroll Bon Charge: Use code RICHROLL to save 15% OFF 👉 boncharge.com Waking Up: Get a FREE month, plus $30 OFF   👉wakingup.com/RICHROLL Brain.fm: Get 30 days FREE of science-backed sound 👉brain.fm/richroll This episode is brought to you by BetterHelp: Get 10% off your first month by visiting 👉BetterHelp.com/RICHROLL SriMu: Get 22% OFF artisanally crafted plant-rich cheeses w/ code RRP 👉SriMu.com Check out all of the amazing discounts from our Sponsors 👉richroll.com/sponsors Find out more about Voicing Change Media at voicingchange.media and follow us @voicingchange

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Here's the situation as I see it. No one is satisfied in our culture. The institutions, they're all cracking. The only thing is the whole culture is designed so you don't realize that. Today I'm joined by Phil Stutz, a psychiatrist whose unorthodox approach to personal transformation and self-betterment has earned him renown as one of the most beloved and sought-after shrinks in Hollywood, whose client list is a virtual who's who of celebrated creatives, CEOs, and high performers across a myriad of disciplines. a myriad of disciplines. If you saw the Netflix documentary Stutz, then you already know that what makes Phil different is extreme directness, a willingness to confront conventional ideals around happiness, a focus on disciplined action to dismantle negative thought patterns and drive immediate change, in other words, pragmatism, and the importance of connection with higher forces, spirituality, all underscored by a refusal to let his personal battle with
Starting point is 00:01:12 Parkinson's impede his need to help others. This is a conversation about all of that. It's about self-love, emotional independence, balancing individualism and collective responsibility. It's also about finding higher meaning in navigating life's challenges and why spiritual growth and interconnectedness are fundamental aspects of personal development, all of which are themes more thoroughly explored in Phil's latest book, Lessons for Living. in Phil's latest book, Lessons for Living. Phil is a national treasure, gifted, as you will soon discover, with an uncanny X-ray-like ability
Starting point is 00:01:50 to see people as they truly are. And this conversation is simply one I will never forget. I always get nervous before these things, and you were sharing how you get nervous as a public speaker. And for some reason, I'm like acutely more nervous than normal. I don't know what that is or why. I think it speaks to some perfectionism control issues that I have. Because I intentionally, I didn't wanna be over prepared
Starting point is 00:02:27 because I wanted to just sit with you and allow it to be whatever it wants to be, which is a bit of a tight rope walk. It's a deeper surrender and letting go. But I felt like that would make for a more organic and authentic and kind of hopefully emotionally resonant experience. Yeah. Well, here's the situation as I see it.
Starting point is 00:02:53 The old models of therapy and a lot of the old models about human nature are wrong. They're particularly wrong now. nature are wrong. They're particularly wrong now. And the reason is no one is satisfied in our culture. No one. So you have a lot of people, almost everybody, feeling they didn't get paid, so to speak. And the dissatisfaction is only going to grow. And the reason is human beings only can feel satisfaction if they're co-creating with the higher forces. It's not like a philosophy or something I figured out. It's just what I've observed. And that's the secret. That's, you know, the secret.
Starting point is 00:03:41 This is the real secret. You'll never be satisfied if you're doing something in a completely isolated manner. Well, I think there's a lot packed into that. I think there's a sort of twofold thing operating. One of which is the fact that we've seen the kind of denigration of faith organizations in America. Yes.
Starting point is 00:04:02 And with that comes a lack of spiritual conviction and some kind of tether to something bigger than ourselves and then layered on top of that is this ethos of America, which is based on rugged individualism. We're all out for ourselves, what can I get? How can I gird my loins with as much material goods for the sake of power and material accumulation.
Starting point is 00:04:26 And that comes at the cost of collective responsibility or fidelity to something that is larger than ourselves. So I think those two things in concert are sort of at the rot of this lack of connection that we have to something greater than ourselves. And when you look at the mental health crisis that's metastasizing right now with the epidemic of loneliness and the increased rates of self-harm and depression and the like, it's no mystery when you kind of unpack what's at the foundation of our current cultural moment. Yeah. The only thing is the whole culture is designed
Starting point is 00:05:08 so you don't realize that. And I'm as materialistic as the next person, but, well, here's what happened was when I was a kid psychiatrist and I was being trained, you'd see the other guys and what they would do and how they'd handle their patients and um basically what i saw was no change but what pissed me off even more was people would come in and we'd go through the psychoanalytic thing this was the cause blah blah and then we'd let them
Starting point is 00:05:41 leave with nothing holding their dicks. And at that age, I was even more rebellious than I am now. And it offended me. I was doing everything else, getting high, whatever, but that was too much for me. And that really set me off in a path because I was very disillusioned as I sense you must've been at times.
Starting point is 00:06:06 Yeah, I've been in a variety of therapeutic modalities for, I don't know, 30 years at this point. Where are you from? And I grew up in Washington, DC. I've lived in Los Angeles for a long time though. And I have a story of addiction and recovery and have been in recovery for a long time. Was in therapy prior to recovery and have been in recovery for a long time, was in therapy prior to recovery
Starting point is 00:06:26 and have been in therapy ever since. You know, 12-step AA is like my main thing, but I also am involved in men's groups and in therapy myself. But I've had that experience of being with a therapist or a psychiatrist where the practitioner is a neutral observer and you're just there spinning your yarn for just months on end and never seeming to get
Starting point is 00:06:50 kind of any guidance or counsel or relief, you realize this early and often and have a very different approach to the people that you work with. Yeah, I mean, part of the ethos of what I do is you never let the person leave without something. It could be a tool. It could be just a sense of hope.
Starting point is 00:07:08 It could be relating differently to the world. But something that they can actually do. And I'm a little shaky today. I'll show you this. We're going to get a drawing. Am I going to be allowed to keep the drawing? We'll see. We'll see how you do.
Starting point is 00:07:23 I don't think there's gonna be a drawing because my fucking... That's all right. We got all the time in the world. Okay. But we got a pyramid here with two lines through the middle. Yeah, so this is the right pathway
Starting point is 00:07:41 to look at the world as far as I'm concerned. And it has to do with faith. The bottom of this thing is called faith. Now, people don't understand what faith is. People want to have faith because it's proven to them, which is impossible. The idea is you have to choose to have faith for no reason, without proof, without anything. If you do that, then you can act, which is the second level of the thing. And then once you can act, then you become confident.
Starting point is 00:08:15 See, people think that they can't act until they become confident. And it's not true at all. It's part X, just wanting to paralyze them so faith at the foundation of the pyramid yeah action in the middle yeah confidence at the top yeah and your confidence isn't about any one result that's a disaster to look at it like that the confidence comes because you know you're gonna repeat the pattern over and over and over again. And you have to choose to have faith.
Starting point is 00:08:50 And some of the tools are just to help you in that direction. And the tools all being action oriented because action is the engine of whatever sort of emotional result you're aiming towards, as opposed to upside down, which is the way that most people Yeah, I can't believe you said that. Yeah. Yes, that's that's right upside down would be well would be an upside down pyramid and
Starting point is 00:09:15 Technically at the bottom of it Oh, I never thought about this before um at the bottom would be the ego. Oh, and nothing is true unless you can prove it to me. Now, that's the opposite of faith, which is I believe something. Now, it's not a stupid faith like, you know, following a cult leader or something. But the downward thing says, prove it to me.
Starting point is 00:09:44 But the downward thing says, prove it to me. And technically it should be, I accept nothing until it's proven. And then if I succeed, I think I'm smarter than God. Yeah. So which means you get nothing. Right. At the end of that equation, there's still no room for faith. There's still no room specifically. Yeah, and in a culture in which, you know,
Starting point is 00:10:09 faith has been relegated to, you know, the purview of the, you know, sort of outliers, or is not really part of how we consider our world, because we over index and over prioritize rationality and intellectualization of everything, we see less and less people who have the openness to kind of entertain anything that is beyond our capacity to understand.
Starting point is 00:10:41 And so I would imagine in your practice over many years, you've had occasion to sit with people who need help, who want help and are willing to do all the things, except when it comes to the higher power part or the faith part or the God part, right? Like that's where, and you see this all the time in AA or 12 step. Like I just, look, I need to get sober. Like the higher power thing, you can forget about that because people, a lot of people have trauma over the way they were raised and whatever experiences they had
Starting point is 00:11:13 in whatever faith organization that ultimately turned them off to it, which makes that an even harder sort of thing to bridge with people. So how do you work with people who are so resistant to that idea? Well, I would say a couple of different ways. One is just how determined I am.
Starting point is 00:11:35 And in a sense, they say, now I'm famous, so it helps even more. Big time. Thank you. But it was always the same. I would look at the guy and I would say, I wouldn't say I'm going to cure you. I wouldn't say that. But I would say I'm a stubborn fuck, which I am.
Starting point is 00:11:57 And I'm going to stay in this process with you as long as you're willing to stay in it. And don't believe a word I say. I don't care if you believe it. Do what I tell you and then judge it for yourself. And if you're not getting a result that makes you feel like there's some progress, fire me. In fact, I insist that you fire me. And it's much more persuasive.
Starting point is 00:12:17 You got to mean it, obviously. But I'll tell you about yourself. Can I do that? Yeah. Okay. This is what I'm here for. It's so weird, you know, because of the electronic world. And I don't know, you probably have, what, a million people listening?
Starting point is 00:12:32 I don't know. It's just you and me. Right, right, right. I feel that. I'm all ears, Phil. You're so articulate and so smart and so committed to whatever it is that you're, where you're going. But there's a line you haven't been able to cross.
Starting point is 00:12:54 I guess that's the best way to say it. Yeah, that's very perceptive. And now you sound like my wife. This is what my wife is always telling me because I can get trapped. The ego will trap me in my skill as somebody who has some verbal acuity, but it becomes a barrier to growth and expansion.
Starting point is 00:13:14 And as much as I have evolved and embraced spirituality and mystic concepts into my life, I have not done so to the extent that I think I need or I owe to myself to continue that growth. And I would fully admit to that. So this is an ongoing conversation. My wife is a much more deeply committed spiritually than I am.
Starting point is 00:13:44 And it can be a sense of tension because she can see exactly what you just pointed out. Yeah, I wonder if we shouldn't talk a little bit more about it. A lot of information, I think of it as two centers of wisdom or just of the truth. One's here and that's obviously intellectual
Starting point is 00:14:06 and requires proof and has logic and and one's here now this one right i'm pointing right to the heart yeah yeah this one ultimately it's very hard for us to understand it doesn't lend itself to specific conclusions in other words what you really want to do is you want to enter the unconscious on a deeper level but you can't do that and know what the fuck is going on at the same time it's impossible in fact the fact that you think you know what's going on itself becomes an obstacle yeah yeah yeah. And we have this thing, the three unavoidables. And it's unavoidable if you want to grow for any human being to accept reality. And reality says there's going to be pain, there's going to be uncertainty,
Starting point is 00:14:59 and there's going to be the demand for you to work consistently for the rest of your life. I don't give a shit if you own a whole country makes no difference and semi-related to that is death and the people that have a fear of death um it's good to look around i say to them look around every human being you see around you and they're your brothers because we're all gonna die together in this sense I'm talking about. I mean, we were chatting before the podcast and you were kind of jokingly sharing how,
Starting point is 00:15:36 because of the documentary, you're in the public sphere in a certain way and have a level of notoriety that is a new experience for you in the last couple of years. And I was sharing with you how I've sort of reached a level where I get recognized occasionally, but I feel better equipped to handle it than I would have a handful of years ago because of a bunch of the work that I've done, because I'm not disillusioned by this snapshot idea
Starting point is 00:16:06 that arriving at a certain place is gonna absolve me of all of my pain. And no matter how far you get, there's still gonna be pain, there's still gonna be uncertainty, and there will still be the necessity for constant work. But despite that, I still, like most people, am convinced that if I just get to that next level
Starting point is 00:16:28 or get that thing, that I'm gonna be just fine and all my problems are gonna go away. And part of your practice and working with a lot of high profile people is disabusing them of that notion. And those three principles are sort of the medicine and the self, right? Like, it doesn't matter how rich you are,
Starting point is 00:16:45 how powerful, how famous, there will still be pain, there will still be uncertainty, and there will still be the necessity for constant work. That's correct. Is that what you were getting at? Fuck you. Yeah, like the idea of the pyramid being upside down. No, it's brilliant.
Starting point is 00:17:01 Yes, it's exactly right. So a lot of this stuff in our culture is to, people are selling stuff all the time, and what they're selling you is, follow me or buy this product or whatever it is. You're exonerated from, you get a pass. Yeah, you get to opt out. Yeah, you get a pass.
Starting point is 00:17:23 And that's one of the worst things that's going on. And I would say post-World War II, it's really gotten out of hand. And something that also, for me, has to do with the economics of it. Like, if I make less this year, it has no consequence to me. But what the people, you know, at our level, financially don't understand, well, you understand it, obviously, is that the guy who is worse,
Starting point is 00:17:54 maybe he makes $69,000 a year, he works his ass off and is a good person. He walks around in terror that his kid is going to get sick. Fucking terror. Which brings us to, because I'm like half in one world and half in the other world, I can see it from both points of view. I don't know the exact numbers, but it's easily, I would say 30, 40% of the population. And that's just an example of other things that are happening, which means the institutions that we've always relied on
Starting point is 00:18:32 and that we felt, well, there's safety here, there's somebody on my team over here, they're all cracking and they're all corrupt and people don't trust them anymore. So the last bastion of denial to me is broken. Right, because that's always been an illusion or a delusion. Yes. But now it's just more evident how delusionary it is
Starting point is 00:18:56 that there's some kind of safety or capacity for us to exert control over things we have no control over. Yeah, that's correct. And the other side of that i call it institutional corruption is not the middle level people because most of them are good people and they do their job but the i know a lot of people on the higher level and they are they actually think they're exempt from all of this and because of that they can't penetrate deeply enough into the other person's experience and if you can't penetrate into the other person's experience and i mean from here that you feel it
Starting point is 00:19:34 if you can't do that you're out of touch with reality which brings us to another point, which is the role of groups. And you're a 12 step, so you understand this. Only a group, even if it's two people that you're working with, can allow you to have the relationship with these higher forces. They're not meant to be experienced in a singularity. You can try it, maybe it works a little bit. So that's the world as I see it.
Starting point is 00:20:10 It's funny, the pandemic was, when was that? 20? A couple years ago, yeah. Four years ago. But I was retiring just about at that point. And the closer I got to that, the more obvious it was to me that a lot of the ideas, psychological theories,
Starting point is 00:20:33 were actually in some sense harmful because everybody got caught up in this wave. And for a shrink, the wave will express itself through you know shrinks are not going to make a lot of money but what they want is recognition and and to be part of a hierarchical system so we call that universe one universe one everything is denominated by numbers that's the world of numbers that's the world of science obviously mathematics and so if if the metric is is numbers everything gets down to money because money becomes the only way people can see value. All human beings want value. They want meaning.
Starting point is 00:21:27 But in that kind of a culture, universe one, everything is materialistic and everything is comparative or competitive because we're not given anything. So you have to reach above that. That's very interesting with you because you're about as close to the line as possible without crossing it.
Starting point is 00:21:48 Meaning, what does that mean? It means you understand that a lot of the information you get that you need to change has to come from here. It's not an intellectual process, but there's something that's holding you back. It almost feels like you're guilty about something. Are you much more successful than you expected to be? Oh, my God. Yes? Now we're getting to the good stuff.
Starting point is 00:22:24 Yeah, I never thought that I would be successful. So I'm living way beyond anything I dreamed or imagined for myself. So perhaps there's a sense of guilt. I mean, my part X is looming large in the back of my mind, waiting for somebody to break down the door and pull me away from the microphone. And I have a tremendous amount of awareness and gratitude over the position that I'm in, but there's certainly an inner dialogue of unworthiness.
Starting point is 00:23:00 And it's that alcoholic thing where on the one hand, I think I'm really good at this. Maybe I'm better than anyone else at this one thing that I do. And I'm an absolute piece of shit who's undeserving of anything that I've received. And it's only a matter of time before the house of cards is gonna just cave in on itself.
Starting point is 00:23:20 And I can entertain those two notions simultaneously. I don't know why you invited me here. I need you. I'm looking for a spiritual breakthrough, Phil. I have a very good relationship with faith and spirituality, but I know that there's a lot more growth available to me. And I do feel like I dance around the periphery of that. And yet my intellect and my ego and my reverence for rationality, I think holds me back. Like I'm a product of higher education
Starting point is 00:23:57 and I was indoctrinated in a certain way in which to- Were your parents teachers or something? No, but they, my dad's a lawyer. I grew up in Washington, DC, and education was a very fundamental priority in our household. And it was a very achievement-oriented household. And I've had ups and downs in my trials and tribulations,
Starting point is 00:24:18 but ultimately it's a game that I was able to be successful at. And I think I have an ego attachment to that and some pride, but that becomes like we were talking about earlier, like a barrier to, I think more exponential growth. It's not, I'm not averse to it. I'm open to it, but there's something that maybe is a little too scary.
Starting point is 00:24:41 Did your parents care about your grades or anything like that? Oh, big time. Yeah. Yeah, there was a lot of projection and like emotional transference in that. Like, you know, my value, I mean, my parents just wanted good things for me
Starting point is 00:24:58 and it's not that they were wrongheaded in that. It's just when that is the messaging where achievement is a proxy for love, it's not a mistake that then you become an achievement-seeking, ambitious person as a result in an unhealthy way. I mean, one of my tasks, as far as I'm concerned, is to teach people to find value in themselves
Starting point is 00:25:27 without totally buying the lie. And again, the lie is you can be exaggerated from these things. I'm also a big freak on failure. Failure is a growth opportunity to learn. Yeah. Because failure is the teacher. Success perpetuates the delusion.
Starting point is 00:25:49 Yeah, that's correct. You have this situation where no one's satisfied. Everybody wants more. I was talking to somebody about this yesterday, about doctors and lawyers. Again, this is something most most people unless you're a doctor you you wouldn't actually think about this but let's say a doctor kills himself he has 12 years of training and it used to be like in new york city you even got md plates yeah yeah uh-huh um so it was a status thing and the the uh salaries were relatively
Starting point is 00:26:29 commensurate one with the other and then things started to shift and now this is not true of every doctor but now you have a lot of them that say, well, I make $250 or $350. And my friend over here that's a show business lawyer makes $1.7 million or $11 million, whatever it is. And there's a gap. Now, that's the same problem. I'm getting screwed. And I'm dissatisfied with life that the doctors would have. And it's actually affected the practice of medicine it would be hard for a lay person to understand this but i know what's in these guys minds
Starting point is 00:27:10 not all of them because there are a lot of great people in medicine but i would say about half of them they use a metric of money to drive them through their days and they can't ever catch up so if you watch them in a hospital they're moving very fast and instead of writing down their diagnoses well they have to put into a computer now they would say well it's just efficient and it is more efficient but it's also less human and my whole trip is not be a nice person, be more. That's not my thing. Cause it won't work. My thing is you got a power and a potential.
Starting point is 00:27:53 If you want to exercise it and find out what it is, and that's where you find out what it is. You have to be willing to go into the unknown. There's no, this. This becomes useless. And you have a question about if you did give yourself over to it, what would happen? And it may be more what would happen to your fear of what would happen to other people. I don't even know so much if the fear is what would happen to you. But if I was treating you, and don't get any ideas, I would try,
Starting point is 00:28:28 see there's this thing called the world of small things, and if you want to change somebody in this area where they have to let go, it's better for them to practice in the smallest thing, the smallest little piece of it. Right. And then hopefully you can expand it more. Close your eyes for a second. Just imagine that all the success and everything
Starting point is 00:28:53 was taken away from you suddenly, unexpectedly. Forget about why or how it was taken away, but now you're naked. And tell me what you see. or how it was taken away, but now you're naked. And tell me what you see. Is there something about you that becomes more apparent? Can you tell me? Yeah, it's a couple things. I mean, one, it's certainly scary
Starting point is 00:29:23 because I do have an attachment to what I do. And so it feels very much like a threat to take that away. Who am I, if not for the things that I do? How will I be perceived? Like an unhealthy relationship with like extrinsic opinion, like who am I without this thing? unhealthy relationship with like extrinsic opinion, like who am I without this thing? A sense of uselessness or inconsequence, if I don't have this, but also at the same time, relief.
Starting point is 00:29:59 I don't have to hold up something. Yeah. But I know what you're getting at, which is you are worthy just for who you are and your worthiness or your deservedness to be loved or to love yourself has nothing to do with what you do. Ultimately it has nothing to do with it, yeah. Can you think of a time in your life
Starting point is 00:30:22 where the dynamic was shifted a little bit? Because this is like a master up there. I don't know what the word for it is. It's like a cosmic boss. And I don't sense that you're scared of him, but I sense you're looking to serve him, but you're looking at him for the wrong person. Or it's not the wrong person.
Starting point is 00:30:45 Or it's not really a person. Well, I have an answer to that. I don't know if that answer is a story or it's truth, but I've lived a couple different lives. But as a young person, I was definitely a very insecure, lonely, sensitive kid who struggled to make friends and really couldn't figure out how to plug into the world like that thing that you hear in aa like everyone had a roadmap for life and i felt like i was lacking and i found sport through swimming as a young person that gave me an outlet in something
Starting point is 00:31:23 that i had some facility for and i got got good at that. And I got self confidence from that. And that spilled into the classroom because I wasn't a very good student and became a very competent young person and got into all the fancy colleges and competed in swimming at a high level. Then alcoholism destroyed all of that and took everything away from me and took me to some pretty dark places where my only companion was like shame, guilt, embarrassment. And I got sober and rebuilt my life, but tried to plug back into the machine. But that was always a square peg trying to jam into a round hole until I had an existential crisis over what I was doing with my life that also coincided with a health scare. And then I basically proceeded to reinvent my life again.
Starting point is 00:32:13 And I found this thing that has given me meaning, but ultimately a sense of purpose and fulfillment because I get to give it back. Like what we're doing here, we get to share. Yeah, we get to share it. And I've written books, et cetera, and other things. But like this thing that we're doing, it's nourishing to me, but it's also an act of service that is helpful to other people. And that's given me a sense of purpose and direction that's very meaningful to me that has a spiritual component to it. Because on some level it's intangible
Starting point is 00:32:48 and it's also not something I planned. It was something that resulted from my own spiritual inquiry. It's an outgrowth of that. So it feels very healthy in that regard. But then as it becomes more successful, the ego enters the picture. And I start thinking about, well, what's the other podcaster doing
Starting point is 00:33:06 and how come mine isn't like this? And what if we do this and we can grow and be bigger? So all of that, we live in a capitalist society and this is a business. So part of that is just being an entrepreneur and being smart in terms of how we're directing this business. But fundamentally at its core, this is a spiritual enterprise.
Starting point is 00:33:26 And I try to hold onto that and not let those other things, the trappings interfere with the essence of what this is. Okay. And maybe that's honest. And maybe you can point out to me where I'm missing the bigger picture or where I'm caught up in my own story. I don't like to do that, I'll be honest. I like to see where you are now,
Starting point is 00:33:52 see the gut level instinct that you have to where you need to go and then teach you to identify where the obstacle is. And then teach you what to do in the smallest terms possible. Because you're fighting something. But before we get into that, here's the dilemma of the human race. There's no going backwards with this. Everybody wants to be an individual.
Starting point is 00:34:21 And they want to be recognized as an individual. And they want to have some props and a lot of times it's money but not not always and that's necessary so that's a singular individual set of goals they will never satisfy you unless you have the opposite awareness and the opposite goal which is is to enhance the group or the collective so so and see everybody thinks it has to be one or the other it can't be one or the other it has to be both and there's only one way you can take the individual and and the collective and not have them clash with each other and that way i studied rule of steiner do you know anything about it yeah okay so he's the waldorf guy yeah yeah so he said there's only
Starting point is 00:35:13 one way you can make a freely willed decision which and that's the individual self free will and at the same time fit into the group, which is the opposite of that. And he says that solution is sacrifice. But it has to be a choice. You have to choose to sacrifice. It's simply choosing to have faith. If you choose to have sacrifice, but you don't have to choose it, but in a freely willed sense, you choose it it then you've both so because
Starting point is 00:35:46 you've chosen it then that means there's an individuality to it i i decide to do this but at the same time because you're choosing to sacrifice you're automatically giving something to the group and this is um it's a it's, but it's really, the whole thing that I've developed is so that you can be in the middle and straddle those two opposites. Yeah, those opposites can live in concert with each other. Like, I feel like I've found a way to do that with this thing, but I think to your point
Starting point is 00:36:24 of finding meaning and finding purpose, like your whole thing is like, if someone comes to you and they're like, I got my bills paid, but like, I don't feel like I have a purpose or I'm unfulfilled in my career, or I don't know what I'm doing. The answer to that question isn't a philosophical one as much as it is an action oriented one. And the only way to figure out that for yourself is to make decisions, to take actions and to move forward. And to the extent that you can, we all have something to give and something to offer.
Starting point is 00:36:57 We all have our own unique experiences. And when you can tether what you've learned along your path, your life path to something that is helpful to somebody else. I mean, you characterize it as sacrifice, but it's really just service, right? Can you find a channel or a vehicle to give back in some way? That's the path to fulfillment, and that is an action-oriented path. And if you can, you know, I have the incredible rare situation or gift where I can marry that with a business enterprise. So, which is like an incredible,
Starting point is 00:37:33 it's just, I can't believe I get to do this thing that I love that actually has a service piece to it, but actually can support my family. It's just a remarkable set of circumstances that I wish everybody could have. But I think in some way, everybody can find a way to tether those two things in a way that gives them a sense of meaning
Starting point is 00:37:52 and that satisfaction that comes with whatever small sacrifice it is. But that's anathema to the incentives of our culture, which is all about me, me, me, right? And in truth, all these things that we're lacking and that we're seeking are on the other end of sacrifice and service, which those are kind of edicts that are at odds
Starting point is 00:38:12 with the incentivization structure of like modern culture. Yeah, and you know who the devil is? Who's that? The devil is the one that says, give me $22 and you won't be subject to this whole thing. The opt out, my program. Here are the 10 things you can do and you won't have to worry about all this stuff
Starting point is 00:38:35 that everybody else who's in human form has to deal with. You know what I was thinking when I was driving up here? I was thinking this is gonna be a thing about, I thought it was gonna have a veneer of depth and, what was the term, and meaning, but it really, it was just a, what do you call it, a sheep's, what is that? A wolf in sheep's clothing? Yeah, a wolf. I was going to try to get you?
Starting point is 00:39:05 What do you mean? Yeah, I'm going to sell you this thing, and it's going to exonerate you from these unpleasant things. And in the exoneration of it, you'll actually think that you're creating real meaning. So the question is, how does... And you're not. You're,
Starting point is 00:39:27 you know, it's like eating plastic food. And here's my metric for this. Human beings are at their best in a crisis. And the worse the crisis is, the more important it is. I almost,
Starting point is 00:39:43 when I, I don't really work anymore anymore but when i used to work i would like skip i was the opposite of all these strings i would say what caused this and i would say fuck everything except the worst crisis you ever went through in your life and what you find yourself able to do in that crisis is a mark or a leading edge towards if you want to say human potential that that's when you really find out what humans are capable of but the other thing that you know you may find this dogmatic but i still don't think anybody can do this successfully without some higher force even if they don't know exactly what it is.
Starting point is 00:40:26 My wife calls that your divine moments. Like don't rob people of their divine moments. When I look back over my life, those deep crises that I had to weather have been not just the greatest teachers, but really the launch pads for like all the growth and all the experiences that I've had as a result. It's like, I wouldn't wish it on anyone,
Starting point is 00:40:52 but I also wouldn't trade it for anything else. And we have this instinct as empathetic, compassionate humans, when we have a loved one or someone we care about is going through something difficult to rush in and help them solve the problem. Whereas the gift might be to step aside and be an observer and say, I love you and I trust you to find your way through this
Starting point is 00:41:16 because that experience can be the crucible for something beautiful and magnificent, but you have to allow that person to go through it, which can be painful when, because no one wants to see someone they care about having a difficult time. I'm just semi crying because one of my nurses has a grandson who's 19, black, highly talented as a painter.
Starting point is 00:41:54 Like, I think, really talented. And he's raised by his grandmother, basically. And he's starting to fall backwards. Let me put it this way. this kid was 18 years old they were one of these clubs or something and and guns were drawn and everybody ran away except this kid because his friend was shot that's the kind of person he is but he's starting to fall apart now i'm going to see if i can see to him today. Because of the experience of that trauma or other things? I think the trauma just clarified what was going on. His thing is, I'm not good enough.
Starting point is 00:42:35 Like, you know, we all have that. But he has no fucking help, which brings up a whole other thing. And you're right. You know, the saddest thing is, you know, you personally can't really save the person from that. Anyway, he made an attempt, a couple of attempts. And I know the talent because people are walking into my house all the time. And it's like the talent is like a trick someone's playing on him because he knows he has the talent too. But something, you know, it's funny.
Starting point is 00:43:10 On a different level, it's what you're going through. It's another version of it. The person has the talent, but something's stopping them. You're a little bit professorial, and you enjoy it, and you're good at it. You understand what I mean by that? I think so. Keep going. I rest my case. See, your thing is not selfishness.
Starting point is 00:43:39 It's the opposite of selfishness. See the good fortune where you have a job that also gives out to the world? Well, let me ask you something different. What is your wife's biggest complaint about you? What would you say? That I over-intellectualize and that I over-prioritize rationality and that I over prioritize rationality and that I'm missing the gift of deepening my relationship with the beyond and that that becomes a barrier to deeper intimacy with her. And that because she's so more invested in that or perhaps mature in that regard,
Starting point is 00:44:27 that it prevents me from seeing her or the desire to see her as she truly is. So that creates a disconnect in our relationship. Like we could have a deeper, more intimate bond if I would like relinquish my fear or the walls that I throw up around that terrain. You just have to face the fact though that your fears are gonna manifest as power. I mean, people must've told you this before.
Starting point is 00:45:02 You just have a natural aura of power. And it got a little bit, I must have told you this before. You just have a natural aura of power. And it got a little bit, you abandon yourself. That's the best way to say it. Like I leveraged it to get to a point and then I abandoned it because everything sort of worked out. Yeah. Yeah. That's right. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:45:21 And that can be bad luck. See, the whole idea of what I try to train people is one of those unavoidables, endless work. And you have to, not only do you have to accept that, you have to act on it. And not only do you have to act on it, you have to ask yourself, how would I act on it today? Because whatever it is, I'm gonna have to, that's why it doesn't matter whether it's success, failure, I have to stay on that level. That's called poverty.
Starting point is 00:45:54 If you and I were working on something in the spiritual world, and we worked hard, we have a good working relationship, all that stuff, so we were satisfied and then we went to sleep. When we woke up, we'd have nothing. That's called poverty. And then you gotta build it up again and again and again. Yeah, that's a practice that requires diligence.
Starting point is 00:46:18 I think like in an AA context, an analogous or a way to kind of understand what you're saying, and correct me if I'm wrong, is this idea that you come in in so much pain and so broken and so raw that you have no other recourse other than to surrender, to ask for help, to receive help, and to develop a relationship with something bigger than yourself. You have a receptivity, but then you build that foundation of sobriety and you repair your life, and then suddenly everything's fine, and it becomes very difficult to maintain
Starting point is 00:47:01 that relationship with spirituality. Like that surrender turns into a reclaiming of yourself well, and suddenly you think you're in control. And this is like a dilemma that I would admit to being part of. Like, it's not that I don't understand the importance of these things,
Starting point is 00:47:24 but it becomes harder to stay emotionally connected with that level of openness that I had when I was in a state of desperation. I'll tell you right now, the key to this whole thing is your wife, because she's a tremendous asset. She would agree with you, yeah. She is, she is.
Starting point is 00:47:49 Yeah, we were talking about it the other day, as a matter of fact. Now, that's not good enough, but it's good for you to know. Yeah, it doesn't mean that I've translated it into any action. So what do I do, Phil? What is the tool?
Starting point is 00:48:06 What is the action step that I can take? Good question. There's a thing called a reverse indicator, which is an unpleasant feeling that says you're making progress. And the two classic reverse indicators are guilt and shame. So one of the things you're going to have to do is it's like i i need to be in the reverse indicator space which is the the unpleasant space so we'll try now close your eyes for a second imagine that your wife is saying just what you mentioned before
Starting point is 00:48:46 talking about you now let her insight penetrate you like it's a force not an idea like right in the solar plexus of your heart
Starting point is 00:49:01 good that's good, What just happened? I think there's a knowingness that what she's sharing, like the mirror that she's holding up to me is correct, but it's a reflection that I'm actively trying to avoid. And yet I know that that is the path that I need to take in order to continue to grow and expand. But it's so easy to stay in this place because everything is working really well. And so I don't feel the incentive or the,
Starting point is 00:49:49 there's a lack of will to like entertain the difficulty of grappling with that, but also the understanding that I need to do that. So there's that tension which creates dissonance and discomfort. But what I really mourn or what I really feel is the level of intimacy that i could experience with my wife that i'm lacking right now because i'm avoidant okay in a case like this which is not that what's unusual about you is the intensity of your will and the intensity of your intellect. And also you're pretty intuitive.
Starting point is 00:50:31 Maybe you don't have confidence in it, but that's pretty strong as well. It's almost like you've checked all the boxes, you're wildly successful, but in this particular area, you're holding your dick and it was, you don't feel it, you feel impotence in this. Now the way to correct that is, deal with it is every time you feel either that you don't want to be bothered with this, you don't think you can do it anyway,
Starting point is 00:51:14 or sometimes maybe you have an issue with your wife, you want to look for those moments. And every time you find one of those moments, you have to dissolve your ego, even if it's just for a second. One way I do this is I tell people, it's called flying under the banner of ignorance. And, you know, it's like a joke because of these movies and everything.
Starting point is 00:51:38 But I mean it. You know, when I say, do what I tell you, I don't care what you believe, it doesn't make any difference. We're opening up a different way of experiencing the world than of experiencing you. And the difference is, it's a power that can't be defined in words.
Starting point is 00:51:58 It comes back to the same thing, that you should trust your instincts. You trust them tremendously except for this one area and but anyway i want to make sure you get this your job is you know you're like those guys at the beach with those uh vacuum cleaners to try to pick up quarters that's what you're doing that's your job now only you're not trying to pick up quarters. That's what you're doing. That's your job now. Only you're not trying to pick up quarters. You're trying to identify those situations in which your intellect tries to take over.
Starting point is 00:52:38 And it must happen with your wife, I would assume. Yeah, it certainly happens with my wife and and the intellect can be a barrier and a effective tool in my avoidant strategy because my part x you know my wife is saying come closer right and my part x is telling me, if you show her who you really are, she's gonna divorce you. Like she's gonna, because you're fundamentally unlovable.
Starting point is 00:53:15 That if she knew the real you, and so you can all erect a strategy to move close enough towards her, but just shy of any danger zone. Yeah. Yeah. And I would imagine that's a common, this is a common thing. No, you're the only person I've ever met.
Starting point is 00:53:48 Well, you've done a lot of shit on me today. Yeah, I know. I know you don't like it when people dump shit on you. Stop dumping shit on me. This is the life you signed up for. But let me go over this again for you. In order for you to actually do this, to really to really do because i don't give a fuck about anything else either we either you do it and do it means whatever the barrier is you break it and on the other side of that barrier you're going to find uncertainty you're definitely going to find
Starting point is 00:54:18 guilt you'll find some confusion and most of all you're gonna find the i don't know a bit of it i call it i told you this is like flying under the banner of ignorance so every time anything first of all anytime she says anything to you about yourself. But second of all, when it comes up inside you spontaneously, either way, you have to, it's like Clark Kent, you know,
Starting point is 00:54:55 changing a, very close, fungals. And you can't, you can't fake this. That's why the world of small things is so important. You have to look for a small event where you can capitulate to her. Not abstractly, not saying I agree.
Starting point is 00:55:17 Forget about that. You have to actually do something. Now, there's two kinds of action. There's outer action, and there may be nothing to do. But there's also an inner action, which is a tool. So every time, and when I say every time, I mean every time this comes up in you, you have to change the dynamic with her.
Starting point is 00:55:46 And most people think, well, it's not going to work because it's too passive, whatever that is. It's not big enough. And the trick in this kind of thing is, you know what you can even do? When she's telling you this stuff about yourself, try to literally physically feel yourself shrink in the most physical way possible.
Starting point is 00:56:11 Because what you want to do is, you know, one tool is act of love. Do you know that? Uh-huh. So, just for the audience, act of love means you imagine the universe as made out of love. And it's very important to think of love
Starting point is 00:56:28 as a substance because if it's a thought, you can argue about it. But as a substance, you can't. It's just out there. It's some kind of a substance
Starting point is 00:56:43 coding everything. Anyway anyway the first step is you take all this love and you bring it right in here as if you could concentrate all the love in the universe again you think love is a substance you bring it in here so it's almost like the whole universe of love is living right here for a second. That's called concentration. The next step, you take the love you've concentrated and you send it to her. And you don't hold anything back. You give everything away to her. And then the most important part of the tool is it's almost,
Starting point is 00:57:28 you're not just sending it to someone at a distance. You want to enter the other person and become one with them. But anyway, the point of it is you're trying to create a sense of wholeness by giving love away, even if you don't agree with the person. It has nothing to do with any kind of theory. Active love is a constant giving, and it can't be blocked. This product tries to block it because it's not up here. It's almost like a reflex. Right.
Starting point is 00:57:59 I mean, it's a form of loving kindness. Yeah, yeah. But you're an athlete, you know? Is it like, is it different to be trying to say, well, this is what I'm going to do today, versus actually doing it? Yeah. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:58:13 The action part. Yeah, it's an action universe. I say that if a guy comes up with a philosophy in the modern world, not in the ancient world, and it doesn't end in action. It's no philosophy at all. The highest thing that defines the intrinsic qualities of being alive is instinct. I once had this vision for a second of the whole genesis of the universe, and at the end of it you keep stripping your layers off, stripping your layers off. Finally at the end of it there's no physical bodies, there's literally no individuality.
Starting point is 00:58:59 All there is is a voice with no, it's not coming from anywhere it's like the universe was born for no apparent reason the form in which it was born was a voice and you can that's in the bible it's like why did god say let there be light why would he have to say anything? He was God, you know? This voice or like pure consciousness is spiritual energy. The reductive nature of like trying to explain everything in terms of like dopamine and protocols for behavior, which are helpful and very action oriented, but miss the bigger picture, which is like the divinity of everything. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, the bigger picture is you don't know shit within that.
Starting point is 00:59:50 That's it. That's it. So we took a little break. You got a more comfortable chair. We had a whole podcast in the interim about divinity and meaning and all kinds of stuff. Also, you know, a personal session for this podcast where I felt like you could see me and see things about me that only somebody who knows me deeply
Starting point is 01:00:31 and for a long period of time would have been able to see. Like that acuity, like that insight that you have, is that a gift that you've always had? Did that just develop through spending time with so many people? No, I actually had it at birth. Your whole life? Yeah, I've had it in my whole life.
Starting point is 01:00:51 It's like an extra sensory capability that you have. Yeah. And there is a divinity in that because it's non-material, it's an intangible thing. Yeah, that's right. Yeah, I'll draw you a picture of that. You want a picture? Yeah, I do.
Starting point is 01:01:09 Always say yes. I want as many pictures as you can draw. Well, these aren't very intelligible. Okay. Yeah, it's a paradox. See, I think this might help you actually, because it's a pictorial representation of what has to happen in any relationship, not just a spouse or a romantic one. So let's say this is you, and we'll put Julie over there.
Starting point is 01:01:42 and we'll put Julie over there. See, the most important thing in the next, I would say, 50 years is going to be human beings understanding the effect that they have on each other. And what I say is, it's like anything else in nature. It really is not A over here and it's not B over there.
Starting point is 01:02:03 The reality is it's somewhere in the middle. And even that middle point is moving back and forth. That's what it really means is it's a dynamic universe. Anyway, now, should I just shoot this over there? Yeah, let me see that. Let's see. Okay. So the first picture is me and Julie stick figures, arrow pointing from me to her
Starting point is 01:02:27 and an arrow pointing from her to me in kind of a circular fashion. And then you drew another couple stick figures with arrows pointing upwards out of both of our heads towards what looks like a cloud or a circle. Yeah, and that's called the higher bond. The higher bond is real, even though you can't see it. It's not just a concept. And in a relationship, what you need is not, I'm going to go for my thing and you go for your thing. that we each of us does we dissolve into the bottom line reality of our identity is um this higher bond up here and the higher bond is real is and this will help you with her so your job is not
Starting point is 01:03:18 to agree with her or disagree with her at any given point in the discussion. Your job is to say, there's this thing up here, and my job is not directly related to my wife, it's related to this bond. It's beyond any one person. So, and it's so funny, you know, the romanticism of the West, especially in the United States, that says, like the whole marriage cult or whatever you want to call it,
Starting point is 01:03:51 that says that the singular person, namely the bride, is nothing. The relationship itself is this thing up here which forms a unity. And you can extrapolate that higher bonding to groups. This is where something's going to happen to you. I don't know what it is yet, but I can feel it. You have a natural authority, and we don't want to get rid of that, but we don't want to misuse it either.
Starting point is 01:04:21 So misusing it means I have all these talents and plus a authoritative presentation and it's as if that's good enough as it's not. So remember the thing I told you about the human dilemma is to have a singular goal, but at the same time contribute to the group and submit to the group? Well, that's true in a large group, but it's also true in a... In a relationship. Yeah, in a relationship. Okay, so how do you actually put that into effect? Okay, so how do you actually put that into effect?
Starting point is 01:05:09 You put it into effect when the flow is interrupted. And the classic interruption is when the guy's wife says, I see you, I know who you really are. And the guy gets defensive. See, you have to see that, whether you agree or disagree with every detail. You have to view your wife and your presence or her presence either way is a structure that transcends either of you. So you have to ask yourself, what would I do that would put me in the upward arrow towards the higher body?
Starting point is 01:05:46 Not what would you over here, you stepped on my foot pal you know that's non-contributor you can see it in geopolitics now but you have something to do how old are you 57 if on the way home I discover what it is I'll call you yeah please do that's's super helpful though and comforting. And also just nice that I feel like I have a tool or a direction for behavior, as opposed to just a broader understanding of the dynamic without an adequate sense of like how to shift it or what to do about it.
Starting point is 01:06:26 Yeah, I can pretty much guarantee you when you understand something really well, she's getting pissed off. I mean, I know it sounds counterintuitive. But there's real beauty in that contrast. Like it is a one plus one equals far more than two, the dynamic. And I want that intimacy. I want that deeper connection. Of course I want that, but I get in my own way as I often do with many things. Yeah. You know. If you're really serious about this though, the key is work.
Starting point is 01:07:02 And some of that is actually is also writing. So I used to think writing was bullshit because there was no action. And then as I started to get older, I saw there are different kinds of ways to look at the same events. So what you have to do now, i'll show you another trick with this what you have to do now is simultaneously experience both ends of that spectrum at the same time now i'll take you through it and you'll understand it better after we go through it okay so uh close your eyes now first i want you to think of yourself as somebody who's really angry. If you can think of a time in your life when that was the case, so much the better.
Starting point is 01:07:53 But the key is the feeling of it. Don't try to figure out what it is. It's a mistake. Just focus on the feeling. So that's whole category one. Now erase that. See, just a blank space. Now create the opposite,
Starting point is 01:08:13 which is you're very loving, giving, almost to a fault. Again, just see what that feels like in your body. Okay, keep your eyes closed. Now go back to category one, which is the anger. Don't worry about what's causing it. Make it intense. Good.
Starting point is 01:08:35 Kill that now. Go back to neutral. Now go to category two, which is the codependent, overly giving, sensitive part. Okay, now I'm going to ask you to do something. And don't do anything now. But when I tell you to do it, I want you to do it immediately. Don't worry about it if you're doing it right. Forget about that.
Starting point is 01:08:59 But do this immediately. Okay? You ready? Hit them both at the same time, don't think. Good, okay, open your eyes. Can you tell me what that felt like? Well, there's an intensity to it. There's also something exhausting about it.
Starting point is 01:09:23 Like it's a massive outpouring of energy in confusing ways that feels very depleting and not productive. Yeah. So it's category three because you usually carry, well, I just call it category one and category two. So one is negative, hostile. Were you in touch with that part of yourself? I'm not like prone to anger.
Starting point is 01:09:54 That's like not really a thing. What do you think of as the opposite of anger? The opposite of anger? Gratitude? I mean, if anger is driven by a sense of righteousness that having been wronged in some level of victimhood that is kind of underscored with fear, gratitude is a sense of the universe being abundant
Starting point is 01:10:21 and that life is made of good things and possibility. Okay, so one way to use this, because everything we're talking about, when you're getting out of sync with her, forget about the content of what she's complaining about, you want to go into this mode. By doing that, you're correcting your psyche in other words because the you can see the human problems especially with you where it's pretty extreme
Starting point is 01:10:54 it's your your natural authority is so strong i don't believe you could turn it off and we don't want to turn it off but what we do want to do see part x is is the avatar of impossibility and flow is when you two when you can connect two opposites at the same time there's a famous quote i think by scott fitzgerald i don't think so he says the evidence that you're dealing with a really great mind is when it can hold two opposites simultaneously in its mind. And the reason for that is it creates flow. So to try to connect everything, you could say flow is both the, let's say, reward for doing this work, but simultaneously, it allows you to give even more to other people. But the main thing with you is what you do every single time. If you just said, there it is again, she's bothering me,
Starting point is 01:12:07 she's trying to force me, and you just said in your mind, yeah, if you said something like, I'm okay with who I am, or you could say, I think you're 100% right. You have to have a consistent, endless commitment to make her, the state of mind that she's in that affects you, to make that your goal. And your goal is to let her win. Yeah, I mean, my goal is to have a deeper, more intimate relationship with her. And so when I feel those emotions, those avoidant emotions cropping up to do the opposite, which is to like move towards her and towards it rather than my impulse, which is to like recoil or retreat. You know, that's a very alcoholic thing. Like I wanna isolate,
Starting point is 01:13:09 like I don't wanna confront tricky emotions. I think we all on some level, you know, have our version of that experience. Like the things that we need to work on that are calling us, that are the portals into, you know, evolution and, you know and greater awareness and self-understanding are the things that we don't wanna look at because they're uncomfortable,
Starting point is 01:13:32 because those are Achilles heels or, yeah, but if you don't confront them or look at them, they only grow stronger and at some point, reveal themselves in your life in ways none of us want, right? So the solution is always to move towards the thing that you know you're avoiding or don't really wanna deal with, yeah.
Starting point is 01:13:55 That's correct, I'll give you another chance. Why is it, like why? There's so many conundrums in the human experience, you know, it's wired a certain way for a reason. And if you're lacking in faith or some kind of connection to the divine, like just look at the mechanisms of being human and the way that it's constructed and wired. It is here for your evolution and your growth. Like I really believe that our purpose here, if you're lacking a purpose, your purpose here is to grow. Yeah, 100%.
Starting point is 01:14:27 And if somebody can't grasp that, they're an idiot. You have to tell them that. But it's like this whole mechanism has been constructed over millions, billions, endless numbers of eons. And if you can't find or see the meaning and at least the information that there might be you're crippled and when you get a lot of people crippled at the same time because
Starting point is 01:14:53 you start here with the promise promise is not fulfilled you you feel um gypped whatever you want to call it if in that whole thing you can't come out and feel at least some intimation of this is the way it really is and it's supposed to be this way so that I can grow as much as possible. If you can't grasp that, it's very difficult. I've been lucky, you know,
Starting point is 01:15:24 just in my practice and the people I'm working with I also think the ones that weren't interested in this or didn't have some instinctual feeling this is the way the game should be played I don't think they come to me
Starting point is 01:15:39 but anyway I want you to call me in a week, you know, just to tell me how this is going. Because the main thing about it is to remember to do it. You can change your relationship with her, and as you do, it will help you cross this barrier. I have no reason to say that, but I just feel it. Yeah, I'm gonna take you up on that.
Starting point is 01:16:13 I think we're all on some level caught up in our own looping narratives and stories about who we are and what we're capable of, et cetera. And the only way to gain any kind of objectivity on that is to bring a third party in because you can't solve the problem or transcend that loop and see it clearly with the same brain that is producing it, right?
Starting point is 01:16:39 Like you need an outside observer who can deconstruct it for you. And it requires a certain level of like willingness and openness to engage with that, right? Like the people who don't come to you, who aren't ready to sign up for that kind of thing. But on some level, we can't grow. It is a team sport to your point about the collective.
Starting point is 01:17:03 In the same way we need to give back to the collective and transcend our selfishness and inclination towards individualization and all of that, in order to really become more self-actualized, you have to be willing to raise your hand and open up to somebody else and be honest, which is hard. No one wants to expose their secrets into the light, but like shame can't survive the light, right?
Starting point is 01:17:33 Like you have to, the path forward is always the uncomfortable, difficult path. And so I'm always trying to model the power of vulnerability because it isn't a weakness, it is a superpower. And we're so reluctant to share on that level, but there's so much freedom on the other side of it. And as soon as you get a taste of that freedom, you want more.
Starting point is 01:17:54 And there's always more growth. Like as much as I've done, there's so much more that remains always. Yeah, you're an interesting person to me because let me put it this way you not only have the talents you have the positioning which is i count as an extra added bonus um you have to view this as it's like taking care of a pet you're responsible for this organism. That's what you wanna think about.
Starting point is 01:18:27 The organism being what? Being the higher bond. It's real. Trying to think of an example. Nothing is coming to mind, which makes me even more ashamed of myself. Let's go down a shame spiral together. We'll hold hands and just go down the funnel, Phil.
Starting point is 01:18:52 All right, I'll try that. What's at the bottom of the funnel? Opportunity. Okay, let me just show you this. No, do you want me to join this? Yeah. Okay, please. Okay, always. Okay.
Starting point is 01:19:07 This here, we'll say that it's uncertainty. It's just a horizontal line. So on one side of the line, you have uncertainty. Probably the thing human beings fear the most. Uncertainty is the domain. It's the backdrop, which allows growth and most of all creation. And in this zone of uncertainty, these little things here represent flow.
Starting point is 01:19:40 See if that makes sense. Let me see. So uncertainty is this, like comfort with uncertainty is the pathway to growth and to creative expression, to flow, right? Yeah. This paradox of being certain around uncertainty is so interesting.
Starting point is 01:20:03 I had, do you know Ellen Langer? No. She's a professor of psychology at Harvard. She was like the first female, the first woman to get tenure in the psychology department at Harvard. And she has a whole thing around uncertainty. Like obviously uncertainty is uncomfortable
Starting point is 01:20:24 for the human being, right? Like we create these illusions of certainty to keep uncertainty at bay, but all our certainty is actually just fabricated to make us feel safe in a world that is defined by uncertainty. We don't know anything, right? And so like you, her whole thing is around action and not being caught up in the paralysis of uncertainty. And she talks about like making decisions and your work is very similar. I saw a lot of overlap here in that we have this inclination towards like analysis paralysis and we don't want to make decisions and we're indecisive. And then when we make a decision, we're analyzing whether it was the right one
Starting point is 01:21:07 or the wrong one forever. And her whole thing is like, don't worry if you made the right decision, like make the decision right. Life is about making decisions. It's that thing. It's like take the action, make the decision, move forward, stop ruminating in the past or projecting
Starting point is 01:21:22 how it's gonna impact your future and just continue to make decisions and to the best of your ability, make those decisions right in your attitude around them. Give me that. Which one, the same thing? Yeah, so over here you have clarity. Now the job is to move from this apparent clarity to cross this line into the realm of uncertainty.
Starting point is 01:21:54 And people can't do it. Obviously, it's because of shit. There's a secret to it, though. I alluded to it before. You see, each one of these U's? These U's are called turn arounds. And all it means is I was feeling good, I had bad luck, I lost my nerve, I got sick,
Starting point is 01:22:16 whatever it is, so I gave up. Now if you can work through that so the U would go up here things are fine, down into the trough, you're fucked, and recover from it. In that recovery, you've created value. And the person who creates the most value is the one who can cross that line. And that's an experience of getting fucked and then recovering from it.
Starting point is 01:22:48 You call it- Right. They're all like micro heroes journeys. That's right, that's brilliant. So what you drew was a bunch of yous, each you representing some individual journey through uncertainty to the other side. Yup. That's cool to turn around. some individual journey through uncertainty to the other side. Yep.
Starting point is 01:23:06 That's cool to turn around. And no matter how many of these yous you traverse, there's always gonna be more. Yeah, which is good and bad news. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah. And one, another thing, you have to speak differently.
Starting point is 01:23:22 Tell me more. You're gonna have to speak a little more from the heart. It's very compelling when you do, otherwise you die exactly. Yeah. You know, here's one of the smartest guys I've ever met, but I don't give a shit. And you shouldn't either.
Starting point is 01:23:37 I think in this context, I don't wanna be defensive. Like I hear you, like I'm gonna think about that. I am trying to be present, but I'm also trying to be a proxy for the audience and make sure that the ideas are getting conveyed clearly. And so maybe that takes me out of the moment or like the most authentic version of who I am to make sure that like yeah this is helpful for somebody who's spending time with us yeah which is understandable it's fine all these
Starting point is 01:24:14 things are a matter of degree but but most of this shouldn't occur while you're working with another person it should occur just as you're walking around going shopping whatever um but the the point of it is well you'll find out how much of this you're really willing to do and how much you you want but the way you find out is by is by the how many turnarounds you can and that's the that's the opportunity in bad luck, however you want to say it. Right. But unfortunately, you're going to have to hit that nadir moment on each one of these, right? And that's where all of your instincts are
Starting point is 01:24:53 to like run away or opt out, but you have to stay in it. Yeah, but that's not unfortunate. That's good luck. Right, I mean, the gift is a result of that, but it means that you have to go through all of that discomfort and challenge yeah i'll tell you one nice thing about you you have the gift of being an authority figure being probably
Starting point is 01:25:13 slightly over the line in terms of you know knowing but you're very very human i could almost feel you empathizing with these poor fuck people. So that's a great combination. All right. It's another discussion. Yeah. Is that the most uplifting note that we can like end this thing on, Phil?
Starting point is 01:25:39 I'm very surprised at who you are. I like you very much. Okay, I'm glad to hear that. I'm relieved. Wow, that was a wild ride, man. Thank you. You got laser beams in those eyes. Yeah, I always had that.
Starting point is 01:25:57 Yeah. In normal living, I suck, but in that area, it's some freakish kind of a thing. Well, let's conclude freakish kind of a thing. Well, let's conclude it for today, man. Check out Phil's books. The newest one is Lessons for Living. You can check them out in Stutz,
Starting point is 01:26:17 the documentary on Netflix, which was beautiful. I really was very moved by that. Yeah. Yeah, it came out good. Yeah, it did, it did. And that's it. Until next time. All right, time all right i love you a little session is over today love you too buddy i'm in love with you now for sure thank you peace 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
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