The Rich Roll Podcast - The Man Who (Literally) Owns Nothing: Radical Minimalist Robin Greenfield On Barefoot Walking 1,600 Miles, Living In Harmony With Earth, & Finding Freedom Through Simplicity
Episode Date: March 13, 2025Robin Greenfield is a transcendental environmental activist who has taken the concept of simplicity to its existential extreme. This conversation explores how Robin's radical approach to consumption c...hallenges our assumptions about possession, examining his 1,600-mile journey down the Pacific coast, his current experiment living in Griffith Park with absolutely nothing, the nature of contentment, our interdependence with Earth, and the liberation found in surrendering attachment. At one point, he fashions a toothbrush from a California bay branch right before our eyes. Robin is minimalism personified. This conversation will recalibrate your material perspective. Enjoy! Show notes + MORE Watch on YouTube Newsletter Sign-Up Today’s Sponsors: 1. On: High-performance shoes & apparel crafted for comfort and style 👉on.com/richroll 2. Momentous: 20% OFF all of my favorite products 👉livemomentous.com/richroll 3. BetterHelp: Get 10% OFF the first month👉BetterHelp.com/richroll. 4. LMNT: Get a FREE LMNT sample pack for just $5 shipping 👉 drinkLMNT.com/RICHROLL. 5. IQBAR: Get 20% OFF all IQBAR products plus FREE shipping. Just text RICHROLL to sixty-four thousand. Message and data rates may apply. 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
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey everybody, over here. I need your full attention because today's episode is brought to you by On.
Now listen, confession here. I'm somebody who has spent many decades obsessed with hard metrics,
actually measuring the value of my life against the number of seconds I could shave off my splits,
or the distances I could run, and even the number of people my words and my voice could reach.
But age and wisdom hard earned have actually taught me a lesson. And that lesson is that
the hardness required to do hard things is only going to get you so far. The best of what movement
and even life has on offer is so much more about soft winds because the victories that stick with you, I can tell
you never have anything to do with a stopwatch.
So what is this idea of soft winds?
Well, it might be that perfect trail moment where maybe you're moving slow but you're
in the zone where time dissolves and you're purely present and so connected with nature
that you're overwhelmed with gratitude. Or it could be
that soul-filling feeling that you get when you share a deep conversation with a running buddy,
or perhaps it's just the way you feel restored after that group jog following a stressful day
at work. This, SoftWinds, is what ON is all about and why partnering with them feels like
partnering with myself.
Because not only is On best in class when it comes to premium sportswear with gear that's
battle tested by world-class athletes, they're also innovating what it means to be active
and more importantly, why we move in the first place, which is what I care about and talk
about all the time here on the podcast.
Find out what all the fuss is about by maybe starting with their new Cloud Surfer 2, which is what I care about and talk about all the time here on the podcast. Find out what all the fuss is about by maybe starting with their new Cloud Surfer 2, which
is this beautiful effortless shoe that embodies the soft winds philosophy by reconnecting
you with this very Y.
So whether you're finding joy in your pace or rediscovering your love for running, if
it fills your cup, that is a soft win we're celebrating.
To explore your own soft wins and check out the new Cloud Surfer 2, head to on.com slash
richroll.
We're brought to you today by Momentous.
As someone who's been plant-based for years, I've seen my share of protein powders that
claim to be clean but are loaded with all
kinds of additives and fillers and being conscientious about what I put into my body, as I'm sure you are.
Well, this can be a challenge when it comes to the wild, unregulated world of supplements,
which is why I turned to Momentous to meet my supplement needs, including their 100%
plant-based protein, because it actually delivers on its promise. First, each serving delivers 20 grams of
protein from a precise 70-30 blend of pea and rice protein, creating a complete
amino acid profile with amazing taste and mixability. Second, Momentis is all
about quality. Unlike other plant-based proteins, their formula is third-party tested for heavy metals.
No fillers, no additives.
What you see in the label is exactly what you get.
Third, their reputation speaks for itself.
Momentous is trusted by over 90% of NFL teams,
Tour de France champions, and Olympians.
For years, Momentous' plant-based protein
has been my go-to post-workout.
It's great in a smoothie, but I also kind of love it
in just water, and sometimes I even stir it into my oatmeal.
And I bring single-serving travel packs everywhere I go.
So get into it, people, by visiting livemomentus.com
slash richroll for 20% off all orders
and up to 36% off new customer subscriptions.
Here in the United States,
we have 5% of the world's population,
but we consume 25% of the world's resources.
That by definition is extreme.
The world can't handle the way that we exist.
The reason that I am so extreme is that I am a product
of an extreme society.
Robin Greenfield, he is minimalism
and extremist personified.
This sort of Thoreau-esque character for the digital age who's questioning the mores of modernity,
pushing the outer boundaries of essentialism and non-ownership
through what is sort of this evolving and very public form
of performance art awakening,
in which he continues to shed himself of modern artifice
and the creature comforts of convenience
in order to experience
what he would describe as a deeper connection with himself, with others, with life and the
planet.
My belief is that a quality existence takes a substantial amount of time.
For me, that could mean growing my own food, foraging, harvesting rainwater, really putting
deep practice into my relationships.
Everything that brings the deepest value into my life
takes real time.
Robin is a guy who's gone a year without showering,
another year without buying any food,
consuming only what he could grow or forage.
He's dumpster dive and done stints in New York City
and Los Angeles where he consumed like an average citizen
with his only rule being that he would literally wear
on his body all the trash his consumption produced.
But none of this compares to Robin's latest adventure.
After pushing a cart with his last 44 possessions
down the Pacific coast,
Robin recently completed this walk in Los Angeles
where he relinquished every last item he owned.
No ID, no bank account, no phone, no laptop.
He even stripped himself of every single item of clothing
to take up residence in Griffith Park.
Why would anybody do this?
What is he trying to experience?
And what is he trying to communicate to all of us?
If I was just to summarize my life in one way,
that could be it.
Live simply so that others may simply live.
Brother Robin.
Hey.
So nice to finally meet you.
I've been looking forward to this for a very long time.
You've been on a hell of a journey.
There's tons to unpack.
Yes, and I do not know what we're gonna talk about.
I'm interested to see what Rich Roll was gonna ask me.
Well, the first thing I wanna say is
in kind of reflecting upon your life
and these choices that you've made,
there are a lot of parallels, I think,
between your journey and that of many
ultra endurance athletes that I know
who kind of create their own bespoke, audacious challenges
that are designed, of course, to push themselves,
but also to provoke interests,
like wider interest in the mainstream,
often around an idea that they're trying to advocate.
And like them, you're somebody who creates challenges
for yourself.
There may be a little bit less athletic perhaps,
but no less daunting, more daunting, I would say,
more existential, more thorough-esque in certain respects.
These extreme experiments that show us what's possible
and what being human is really about.
I like the sounds of that.
You like that?
Is that a fair assessment?
I mean, how do you think about these, you know,
quote unquote endurance challenges, you know,
of your own design?
I completely agree.
They are much less challenging physically
than, you know, endurance athletes,
but they do require a lot of the same mental capacity
and skillset that you would need in order to,
run ultra marathons or things like that.
And in the past, when I first started as a adventurer,
I was more geared towards that.
And then I would say over the years became much more
a explorer of my mind than the physical realm.
But that's the evolution, right?
Yeah.
Transcending, you know, kind of one challenge
and what is the next rung on the ladder
towards my kind of transformation.
And, you know, this, it's really a transcendental journey,
I think that you're on.
Yeah.
How do you describe who you are and what you do
to people that you meet who aren't familiar with you?
So that is the hardest.
I'm able to answer almost all questions,
but that's one of the ones
that I always have the hardest time
putting into a concise response
because I do, I am in a realm of exploring a lot of different areas.
But to put it simply, my objective is to try to exist on this earth in a way that doesn't
destroy this only home that we have and actually contributes to the regeneration of this world
and the reconnection of our humanity and of having deeply meaningful relationships with
the plants and animals that we share this home with.
And so it's a really, really simple concept to simply exist in a way that doesn't destroy
the earth that we have, that doesn't contribute to such inequity and injustice and exploitation and extraction.
And at the very least to live neutrally, you know, to do no unnecessary harm, but at the
very best to have a life be a truly positive contribution and to ascend delusionalism,
not be taking, doing good here,
but the truth is behind the scenes
in order to do good here,
we're actually taking part in exploitation
and destruction here.
And so to look at the full picture of our existence
and in the complex times that we live in,
dissect them to a level that very few people want to,
because it's very uncomfortable
to realize the truth behind their lives.
And then live that to the deepest levels that I can,
and then do that as a public experiment
so that others can be on this journey with me
and then explore their own minds
and their own relationships.
Yeah, it's not exactly an elevator pitch.
No, it's not.
It's a mouthful.
Yes.
You know?
Yes.
I don't know how you distill that down
into anything more concise than what you just shared.
I would like to get my life down to a singular mission.
That's been something I've been wanting to do
for a long time, just to have a lot of, just an utter singular mission. That's been something I've been wanting to do for a long time, just to have a lot of
just an utter singular mission.
And a lot of the people that have inspired me, a lot of my influences, they have that.
They have sort of a singular mission, except that really when you actually read their full
biographies and you actually look at the complexity of their lives, there is no singular mission
because we're taught, you know, these are people that are trying to make meaningful contributions in society and our lives are
complex.
So yeah, I am working on, you know, at the heart of my existence is simplicity.
Like that's from the core beginning.
It's living simplicity, living simply.
Gandhi is one of my biggest inspirations.
And he says, live simply so that others may simply live.
You know, if I was to try to boil my life down
into one singular mission,
it would just be whatever Gandhi's quotes are.
Those are the ones where I'm like, yeah,
that's what I'd like to do if I just boiled it down
to one simple mission.
Live simply so that others can simply live.
But isn't that like one spoke on the wheel of ahimsa,
like living simply is an aspect of doing no harm, right?
There's a broader kind of sensibility here
that's rooted in strains of philosophical thought
and various spiritual traditions as well.
Like, is there one overarching philosophy
that you draw upon or kind of tradition
that is most influential in how you think about these things
and make decisions and pursue your actions and advocacy?
Yeah, the answer to that is a very simple and clear no.
I do not draw from any one particular area.
I get my inspiration from a wide range of human beings that are just out there doing
their thing, shining their light.
And I actually from the beginning was very intentional about not gravitating towards
any one particular thought pattern or practice because I wanted to formulate my own mind. And it's so easy to gravitate into one label or one religion or one whatever, and then
not really form your own opinion.
So my, who would have been my early heroes, like you mentioned Thoreau, for example, I
was very intentional to not read any Thoreau for a long time.
And then to be honest, the first couple of times I read it,
I didn't understand it because of his writing
from a hundred years ago, I just don't always get it.
But so yeah, I look at what I'm trying to,
the philosophy that I'm practicing and working towards,
a lot of it is pretty universal in
the sense that the sky is above us, the earth is below us, that we are here on this planet
with the plants and animals, that us as a humanity, we are actually global neighbors
and brothers and sisters.
We're actually far more connected than we are separate when you look at all of this.
So I really try to follow the absolute basics
of what you could kind of consider universal truths.
Of course, when you dissect anything,
we don't know what truth is,
but in the construct in which we live, universal truths.
And when you look at these universal truths,
of course you see they exist in so many areas.
And I would say some Buddhist teachings definitely
in the last years have become, well, right now,
one of the very few things that I have with me
is a song book by Thich Nhat Hanh.
And I look through here and I think, yeah,
this is very, very much in alignment
with my basic beliefs and thoughts.
Yeah, there's sort of a deconstruction here
because obviously we're all a product of our influences
and experiences and they tend to kind of drive
what we think and how we act.
But for you to say,
I don't wanna be unduly influenced by all of that
and want to kind of explore like my mind
from a sort of first principles perspective,
is to say, is a vote against separation
and a vote for oneness.
Like if you're saying like connection is what it's all about
and there is no separation and it's all one
to then say, well, you know, my thoughts
and my actions are in alignment with this tradition
is to then create, you know, guardrails that separate
more than they unite.
And then the key is that of course we have traditions
and philosophies that at their core
believe that we're all connected
and do not buy
into the polarization and the separation.
And so teachers, for example, like Thich Nhat Hanh
that I learned from, he is a Buddhist monk,
but he doesn't have a religion.
A lot of Buddhism, as you know, is not a religion.
It's just a very basic way of approaching the world.
And so any of the philosophies that I gravitate towards
are the ones that say, this is a way, not the way,
and that it's not dogmatic and labels.
So, you know, a lot of indigenous wisdom
or a lot of indigenous creation stories or philosophies,
I also gravitate towards because like right now,
one of the, well, one of the few books that I had
This year while I still own some things is the Thanksgiving address by the Haudenosaunee
And it just gives thanks to 17 key elements of life, you know people the creator of Earth
Earth mother earth plants animals birds trees, etc
And it doesn't say anything about anything being bad
or good, right or wrong.
It just says, we're thankful for our presence
and for all of the interconnectedness of life.
And so I certainly gravitate towards certain practices.
However, being in the time that we live in, in the 2000s
and growing up in this country, what we call the United States of
America, the reality is that I grew up in a very fragmented society. I had no traditions, I had no
lineage that I was connected to. I was a part of a society that taught me radical individualism
rather than community, taught me that I was separate from everything, not connected to.
taught me that I was separate from everything, not connected to. And so that's a huge part of the journey is breaking free from that, that you could call
it radical individualism and coming into this, these concepts such as oneness that you mentioned
that some people hear that and they're just like, you know, woo woo.
But I truly believe that we can work on our minds and work in our relationships in a way
where we actually do enter into a state of oneness
or a relative state of oneness.
And I'm excited to see what we talk about today
because that's kind of my, one of my big focuses right now.
Yeah, I wanna get into your origin story
and kind of what made you who you are today.
But for people that are watching or listening
who aren't familiar, like maybe this would be a good moment
to just kind of talk about what you just did
and what you're now doing, you know, to kind of anchor this.
Sure.
So basically you just walked the Pacific coast 1,600 miles,
which culminated in you being in the Los Angeles area
where you have now basically set up a residence
in Griffith Park and given away like every, you know,
not that you really owned anything,
but like whatever you did own, you have now, you know,
liberated yourself from, and you know,
not that this is a Buddhist practice per se,
but you are living in this state of independence,
dependence and interdependence where you have no money,
you have no bank account, you have no belongings,
and you are kind of subsisting on the generosity of others
in alignment with, you know,
kind of the tunes of nature at the moment.
Is that, did I capture that?
Can you just follow up whenever anybody asks
what I'm doing, can I just refer them to you?
Yeah, so, and this is just kind of the latest
in many chapters of many adventures that you've gone on
that we'll talk about,
but this is kind of where you're at right now.
So what was the decision to embark upon this track?
What was that track all about?
What were you trying to do and accomplish and experience?
And why are you doing what you're doing right now?
Sure, sure, sure, sure.
Okay, I'll try to wrap that up into a few minutes or so.
So I don't- We have all day dude.
Okay, all right.
So as far as where we're at right now,
so I have for at least eight years wanted
to become the human who owns nothing, to literally have not a single possession to my name.
And I mean absolutely nothing.
That's been a long-term aspiration, which I'm sure a lot of people would have a hard
time wrapping their head around because that's the last thing in the world they want because their needs for safety, stability, security,
belonging, acknowledgement, all of those things,
they would see them being crumbled,
just crushed in being able to get there.
For me, I saw this concept of owning absolutely nothing
as a form of ultimate liberation and as an opportunity
for me to practice so deeply what it is
that I want from my life.
And so I had actually always thought that I would do that.
Recently, I gave up on that.
I thought it wasn't gonna happen, which we might come back
to but 13 months ago, I was actually sitting in Vipassana
which is a meditation.
I'm sure you know about Vipassana, right?
So I was sitting, it was day six and it just sprang to me,
I'm gonna walk from Canada to Los Angeles
or Canada to Mexico.
I wasn't exactly sure where.
And that I had just wrapped,
although I've been living simply for a long time,
in some ways I had reentered the rat race
with running a nonprofit,
bringing in resources to manage a team
and be able to share fruit trees and seeds with people.
I just found that I was actually back in the rat race,
even though it was for a different cause,
it wasn't for self-enrichment,
it was for community enrichment.
Here I was struggling with just living the life of integrity
because of all of the chores and bills that existed within the realm of the nonprofit.
And so I was sitting in Vipassana and it was day six and it just came to me like, I'm going
to go for a walk.
I'm going to finally go for a long walk.
I've wanted to go for a long walk for a very long time.
And so I knew I was going to be on the West Coast.
So that's where the Pacific Coast Highway came from.
And then what I decided is I was going to simplify my life down to everything that I
owned, being able to carry with me on this walk.
The walk was the vessel that would allow me to simplify my life because if I couldn't
carry it, I couldn't own it.
So it was a very simple vessel that
forced me to resimplify like I had been before. And then the objective was that as I walked
from Canada to Los Angeles, I would have an opportunity to shed the past and walk into
the future. I gave myself a very practical, literal vessel in order to do a lot of this figurative work.
And so I decided that that was the way in which I would get into the present moment.
I would slow down and simplify.
Walking does that.
There's no way around it.
You have to get more slowed down.
You only can go three miles an hour.
And I made the commitment that by the time I arrived in Los Angeles, I would
have finished everything on my plate or canceled it.
So for the last year, it's just been canceled, canceled, delete, delete, delete, just trying
to get my life into a place where I can actually embrace the present moment rather than being
overwhelmed and over committed.
So I gave myself, it was the six months or so.
And I also made the commitment that by the time I arrived in Los Angeles, I would have
emptied my mind of all secrets of anything I was guarding or hiding.
And that I would arrive in LA with a completely open mind, with complete transparency and
have literally not a single secret.
And so I did that on the walk. And then that all prepared me for arriving in LA
one week ago, eight days ago,
and then being able to give away everything I own,
sitting naked in Griffith Park for a little while
with just a palm frond covering my front.
And all of that was needed because I wasn't ready for that.
The whole last 14 year journey helped me
to be ready for that.
I never could have done that,
but this walk helped a lot with just the day to day,
slow movement, shedding, releasing,
and then arriving and being there.
And so that's where I am now.
I now have not a single possession to my name.
I don't own anything.
And so of course, some people are gonna say,
well, what about the clothes that you're wearing?
So shall I tell you the six items that I'm?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Okay, so currently I have six items,
all of which I'm borrowing.
The top and bottom that I'm wearing
are from a guy named Ant, who came out to the gathering.
The blanket that I have is from a guy named Andrew
who lent me this blanket.
I have a sleeping bag which is tucked up in the hills
in Griffith Park, not too far from the Greek theater.
And that was from a guy named Keith who lent it to me.
This hat is from a guy named Greens
who lent this to me about three days ago.
And then yesterday, so I had five items that I was borrowing.
And then yesterday I was at a Tiknot Han Sangha,
community at Compassionate Heart.
And I took this little book of songs,
songs for connection with the earth.
So now I have six items that I'm borrowing
and I'm eight days in and I'm no shoes,
no socks, no water bottle.
And of course no computer, I had gotten rid of that.
And so I'm just practicing really,
my whole journey has been a practice of simple living.
And this is the deepest that I've gone in simple living.
It's pretty deep,
but it's also the culmination of many stages.
Like it's not an overnight thing.
Like every kind of challenge that you've signed yourself up
for is a progression, right?
Of stripping yourself down more and more and more and more.
And like, this is kind of like the end point of that.
Like after you've given it all up.
So it wasn't like an overnight thing.
This is something you've been pursuing for many years.
And yet I would imagine, you know,
that final destination where you're, you know,
sitting naked with a leaf.
You know, it's like, what is this really happening?
And you have like a rule around borrowing also, right?
Like, you know, borrowing means that you've set a deadline
on how long you're going to kind of, you know,
enjoy this thing that's been shared with you
and you give it back.
You have 10 days.
So you have two more days where you get to wear this
and then you're gonna be naked again
unless aunt comes back with something else or whoever.
Yeah, I will be naked again tomorrow night in Griffith Park.
And that's tricky because the Rangers are now,
they know I'm there and they're watching me.
So I was gonna ask like, how's it going with like,
the sort of regulatory bodies and the police
and all these people that are probably not smiling
too kindly on your experiment.
This has been a beautiful experiment
as far as me getting to practice.
One of my big practices, compassionate communication
or nonviolent communication.
And I love to get to interact with the law force
because that's one of the most challenging times to practice compassionate communication. And I love to get to interact with the law force because that's one of the most challenging times
to practice compassionate communication.
But as some people may have figured out by now,
but they might not have thought about this.
If I own nothing, that means I have no form
of identification.
Yeah, you don't have a driver's license.
You don't have anything, right?
2016, I got rid of my driver's license
and my birth certificate gone, like, you know, actual gone.
And then in 2022-
It doesn't exist like in the cloud somewhere.
Oh, so I have a social security number that still exists,
but there's no card, there's no physical ID that exists.
So I'm still in the system.
I can't remove myself from it.
And I don't know if I even necessarily would, but there's still work to do. And then in 2022, I got, I actually
lost my passport and that was like, all right, okay, this could be the moment where I get
rid of my ID. So then the last ID I had was my birth certificate. I got back to Asheville,
North Carolina, where I was living at the time and I composted it. So at that point I had no ID and it's been two and a
half years and there's no copies out there. I still, yes, am in the system, but I have
no form of ID and that was the step that allowed me to get here today because that was my biggest
holdout because once you have no ID, I did quite a bit of research.
It's very hard to get a form of ID
when you have no ID and no copy.
And so the reason that I brought that up
is now when I interact with law enforcement,
which has happened now three times since the walk began,
when a police officer comes to you and you say, I have no form of
ID, the most likely scenario is they're going to be concerned.
Like either you're hiding from the law, you're, you know, trying to not be known who you are.
And so this is just another one of the elements of the experiment of, you know, being a human
in the truest sense, having shed even the structure,
the concept of needing an ID and being able to say,
well, why do I need an ID?
I'm a human being, just look, here I am.
And so the last thing I'll say on that,
as far as answering the question fully is,
now that I'm in Griffith Park
and I'm existing there with nothing,
I am technically sleeping there illegally.
I'm not allowed to be there and everything's been flowing.
The Rangers have been around a little bit,
but yesterday was the beginning of the Rangers
showing me
that they know that I'm there
and that they don't want me there.
Yeah, there's also a high alert because of the fires
and suspicion around arson.
And so kind of malingerers in parks like that
are not gonna be received with immediate kindness.
Yes, it's very understandable.
And of course I don't own a lighter or matches.
I'm not cooking in the park.
Like you see what I own, I have nothing for doing that.
So I'm there in a way that I have full confidence
is not doing any harm.
And actually, since I've been there,
I've cleaned up over a thousand pieces of garbage. So that's one of my services to the community is
that as long as I'm there, this place is going to be more enjoyable and it's going to be cleaner
for people. However, I totally acknowledge that, you know, it's a public space and there's no,
I don't want to be existing in a way that
takes away from anybody else's connection to this public space, takes away from the
community.
And at the same time, I am testing this concept of earth code, which is to say that for me,
as long as the way that I'm living is in alignment with the earth and does no harm to humanity
and to the plants
and animals, then that's what I'm going to follow before I follow any government code.
And that is a, you know, that's a difficult place to navigate. And I've had a lot of people
who, of all the projects that I've done, if you would call this a project, I've received
the most judgment and anger. And it also does play a role that I arrived in Los Angeles
at a very, very unique time.
And coming into, you know, when this happened,
it was like, do I still go?
It was definitely a very difficult decision as to,
you know, how to navigate this.
I would think that leap to like let go of your passport
or any identification at all.
Like that's, I hadn't even thought about that.
Like that's heavy.
I find myself like trying to, okay,
what would I do in your shoes
if I'm inhabiting your kind of like ethos?
And I find myself like making bargains or playing games.
Like, well, I'm, you know, I am this activist
and I have a message and you're a public persona.
You've done three Ted talks, like you're all over the media.
You've had, you know, all kinds of articles written
about what you're doing.
And that's part of your mission, like getting this word out
and, you know, sharing your story with other people
and hopefully inspiring them to go on their own journey
of reframing their relationship with the people and hopefully inspiring them to go on their own journey of reframing their relationship
with the planet and others and, you know,
the plant and animal kingdoms, et cetera.
And an aspect of that would be the ability
to travel to foreign lands to carry that message, right?
Like I could justify like, well,
I should hold onto my passport because this is, you know,
integral to like my mission.
And so to say, no, I'm even gonna let go of that.
Like that's how hardcore you are.
I mean, you make the minimalist sound like absolute hedonists.
You know?
Yes, it is, extreme is a word that's often used
to describe me and I am extreme.
There's no question about that whatsoever.
Now, a little bit of a, you know, preface to that is that here in the United States,
we have 5% of the world's population, but we consume 25% of the world's resources.
That by definition is extreme.
The world can't handle the way that we exist.
And so the reason that I am so extreme is that I am a product of an extreme society.
And to do anything other than go to the extreme would not allow me to even simply exist in a harmonious way.
I have to go to this extreme just to even try to get to a place of a truly harmonious way of being. And then also my objective is to simply exist in a way that results in the questioning of
the status quo and the societal norms that are unquestioned and even believed to be unquestionable.
Like, you know, the concept of non of the concept of ownership, which is at the heart
of what I'm focused on right now.
You know, there's cultures that don't even have a word
for ownership.
There's not even a concept of owning,
but in our, I don't even know if I would call it a culture.
We're so fragmented, but in our society,
it's like unquestionable ownership.
We can own the land.
We can own the possessions. we can own the possessions,
we can own the money.
A lot of people accept that we can even own people.
And so to go to this level of non-ownership,
it is extreme, but it is only extreme
because I would say we've become so disconnected.
And I'm so enthralled by testing the levels of society
that are very challenging to test.
And I have, you know, I just,
I'm doing it because I love it.
I wanna be doing it.
Yeah, I mean, you're poking the bear.
It's sort of like you're taking a stab
at what we consider inalienable truths.
Everything in life is about perspective, right?
And it's so true.
And when you talk about normalcy,
like things that we don't question
and we just accept as fact, there are plenty out there
that we just sort of blindly kind of assume
and use as a basis upon which
to build the foundation of our lives.
And ownership is certainly one of those,
like what is ownership?
Like we assume it's a real thing.
It's not a real thing.
It's not real.
It is a story.
It is a social construct, a social contract, right?
That we simply do not challenge,
but doesn't actually exist.
And for you to kind of challenge that
is deeply confronting and is going to inevitably
put you on like a crash course,
crash collision course with like authority
and like all kinds of institutional structures, right?
And that's what you're signing up for.
So should the law enforcement in Griffith Park
decide that you need to be locked up for a night or two,
like you, I'm sure you're aware that that may well be
in your near future, right?
It's a great-
And you're okay with that, like in the same way
that like Gandhi is like, okay, just nonviolent communication
but also nonviolence in general, like acceptance.
And for you as this activist,
it's all part of the story that you're telling.
Yes, and I actually, so I've never been to jail,
even though there's plenty of people
who would rather me not be able to share my message
because it stands against a lot
of what corporations would like
and what our government would like.
I have been pretty effective at poking the bear
with a smile on my face where they haven't, you know,
so there's a lot of people online.
Then they just think you're insane, right?
There's a lot of people who think I've gone mad.
So I've done it. But then you're like, look? There's a lot of people who think I've gotten mad. Yeah. So I've done it.
But then you're like, look, I did Ted Talks.
That helps.
I mean, you have a gaggle of people around you, right?
Who are kind of running interference for you,
like these sort of acolytes and the people
that are following you that are kind of showing up
in Griffith Park, like Ant and the like.
Yeah.
I mean, none of them are there enough to,
if the Rangers come that they're gonna be able
to do anything, you know, if the Rangers come that's,
and they wanna take me away, they can, they will.
I don't have anybody supporting me in that regard really.
And one of the reasons why is because,
well, I just wanna first acknowledge one thing.
The activism that I'm doing is in a very,
it's in a realm where I've been very safe up to this point.
And I've certainly taken a lot of risks.
There's no question about that.
And I've certainly given up a lot of comforts.
But the reality is I live a very comfortable life,
even with the fact that I own nothing and have no money.
And there's certain areas in which I'm,
I think right now is an area of civil disobedience.
There's a good chance I will be in jail in the years ahead
because I'm just so deeply wanting to test the things
that are likely to bring me there.
And I have to say that if I was to spend some time
in jail right now, I mean, it's absolutely
perfect for a place to practice.
All your needs are met.
Yeah, to practice non-ownership.
I'll have a bed, I'll have food.
I will be able to practice just simple existence.
So I will deeply embrace those days as part of the practice.
And who knows?
Yeah, maybe we can look back at this conversation and be like, yep, that's when he started to
go to jail after that.
But we'll see. There could be years before that.
I'm not sure exactly how things will go.
Yeah.
This episode is sponsored by BetterHelp.
You know, one of the things that I've learned
over the years about therapy is that
it's not all about crisis management
or just about facing and working through your shortcomings.
It is that, of course, it's helped me through
all of my darkest, lowest, and most desperate moments.
But therapy actually really shines
when you use it proactively as an essential tool
to more positively navigate work, relationships, parenting, or yourself to really
grow and help you build a better, more authentic life that is healthy, purposeful, and sustainable.
In other words, therapy not as a red flag, but as a green flag, not just as triage to manage negative
things, but as more of a life optimizer. And BetterHelp removes all the resistance and the excuses by simplifying the process
and giving you access to choose from its platform of over 30,000 credential therapists.
They've helped more than 5 million people worldwide, and you can easily switch therapists
until you find the right fit.
Discover your relationship green flags with BetterHelp.
Visit betterhelp.com slash ritual today to get 10% off your first month.
That's betterhelp, H-E-L-P dot com slash rich roll.
We're brought to you today by Element.
Whether you're training for a spring race
or maybe just navigating a busy day,
proper hydration makes all the difference.
And that's where Element comes in, a zero
sugar electrolyte drink mix without the junk food in typical sports drinks. We all need
electrolytes to perform at our best, but most of the options out there are loaded with sugar
and artificial ingredients and artificial coloring, all kinds of stuff that you don't
really want. And what I appreciate about Element is their carefully formulated mix
provides exactly what your body needs
and nothing it doesn't.
Become an essential part of my daily routine,
whether I'm training, recording podcasts, writing,
or just trying to stay sharp through a busy schedule.
And I'm not alone,
Olympians and professional sports teams rely on it too.
The best part, you can get a free Element sample pack
with any purchase at drinkelement.com slash rich roll,
whether you're training or just staying active,
element has you covered.
That's drinklmnt.com slash rich roll.
No computer, you haven't had a cell phone
for a very long time.
Almost 10 years now.
10 years.
Yeah.
But you have a digital online presence.
So I assume there's somebody kind of around you
who's capturing these moments that you're sharing
on Instagram and on YouTube and the like.
When you were on your walk, you had your laptop though.
Yes, yeah.
So I've been so,
I wouldn't go as far as to use the word addicted
to the digital devices and the internet,
but they have certainly, you know,
I've just had a really unhealthy balance
for a lot of my life.
Those devices, they're designed for that.
Social media is designed to tap into your mind
in a way that gets you off balance
and you spend as many minutes as possible.
And I have been suffering a substantial amount in my life
as far as the amount of time I've spent looking at screens.
It would be so embarrassing if I had a ticker over my head
that said the number of hours I've spent looking at screens.
It's in the thousands and thousands of hours.
And so part of this practice has been an opportunity
to break free from that.
I have no computer, I have no device.
I can't reach anybody unless they come to the park.
And that sometimes that's things that I've scheduled
or people arriving.
Right now, what my team is,
is there's two people that are supporting things
here in Los Angeles.
One, her name is Melissa.
She's been following me for some years.
And then the other one, his name is Daniel.
And he just responded to a posting on Craigslist.
Daniel's doing video, Melissa's on her computer,
helping to schedule the events in Griffith Park
and media, like, you know, me being here,
she helped with that.
And how that works is obviously I have no money, events in Griffith Park and media, like, you know, me being here, she helped with that.
And how that works is obviously I have no money, but there's a supporter, his name's
David and he wants to help me spread my message.
So he said that he could pay those people directly.
And so in that way, money is fully decentralized from my life, but we're able, I'm still able
to use it as a tool in order to help me spread my message. And that's what my whole life is.
I mean, I don't have particular rules.
There's nothing black and white.
I have to figure out how do I do all of this in a way
where I right now can break free from the crutch
of the computer and the damage it does to my mind,
but still use it.
And part of it was, can I,
one of my aspirations right now is can I,
eventually I'm gonna log off for the rest of my life.
It's just a matter of when,
maybe in the next couple of years, maybe longer.
And the objective is, can I exist as a human
in the present moment that doesn't own a device
and doesn't touch a device,
yet reach more people than ever before
from this place of integrity.
And I believe it's possible.
I believe that it would be very hard,
but I think I can do it.
And that's this experiment,
this three month experiment of non-ownership
is the beginning of testing those waters.
And well, here we are.
This is the biggest podcast I've ever done.
Let's see what happens.
There's always another level, right?
Like from one perspective,
like you still own an Instagram account.
You own a YouTube channel.
You know, like, I don't know if those are,
I mean, that's a broader definition of ownership,
but in the digital realm,
you know, there is a tether, right?
I'm glad you brought that up.
And what is that tether doing to you?
Because at the highest level,
you're on this path to attempt to transcend your ego.
And these things, you know, are a lure on the ego, right?
Especially as a public person,
how many people watch my video, like, public person, how many people watch my video,
like how many people watch my Ted,
there is an ego component to that
that is like inescapable as part of the human condition.
And can you be an effective advocate, an example,
an activist without that?
And then you're really in the hands of others
in this interdependent way,
reliant upon them to carry this message on your behalf
without that intermediary kind of like pseudo ownership
of digital spaces.
Yes, I'm really glad that you brought that up.
And that's one of the reasons I was most excited
to have this conversation with you
is because we have a long enough period of time
to be able to dive
Into some of these realms that in short form content
You just can't do you just can't dive into all of this all of this is a gray area
You know and I want people to know that like I don't have a right or wrong or a good or bad
I'm just trying to navigate to be the most effectively of service, to use my resources, to use my skills,
to minimize my hypocrisy,
but acknowledge my hypocrisies where they exist.
And certainly, so, you know, I said, I don't own anything,
but my social media channels are a form of ownership.
Now, they're a form because actually the reality is
I don't own them, the social media platforms own them and they can take them away from me at any second or
decide they don't want me there at any second.
But it is still an attachment, a form of ownership.
My website, the domains, that's another form of ownership.
Now I work with a nonprofit, the nonprofit owns them.
So again, technically I don't own it, but it's an attachment.
I'm certainly the one directing it.
It's certainly a form of ownership and I'm able to direct some funds
I don't own the funds but I have that ability to direct things and move it around
So ownership, of course as we discussed it's a concept and so there is no
There is no like what is it? What isn't it?
The whole purpose is to discuss what it is.
As far as the ego aspect, you know,
you hit the nail on the head there is that,
I shed the attachment to money largely.
When I was 25, I set the goal of being a millionaire
by the time I was 30.
I shed that now I literally own $0, not a penny.
But I have a Facebook page with a million followers
that says right there, one million,
for everybody to see with the blue check mark.
And today in this society,
that's in some senses more valuable.
And if you're looking for a way to pump up your ego,
that's almost more meaningful than being a millionaire today.
And so the last journey,
the last decade has been a very difficult journey
in ascending the ego, molding the ego.
And when I first got started, I was, you know,
I would say, I don't like to make labels,
so I'm just not going to actually.
But what I would say is I was heavily ego driven
and that the only reason I've gotten to where I'm today
or a big part of the reason I've gotten here
to where I am today is because of how big my ego was
and still is to motivate me.
That's the reason I did 80 hour weeks on the computer
because my ego is pumping me along.
And so it's a big part of the journey.
It's less about the technicalities
of what ownership is or isn't
and much more about where you feel the tug of attachment.
Like what would it feel like for you to hit delete
on your Facebook page or just remove yourself from it?
Like that's like triggering, right?
Like, cause you know, if you have that many followers
that you're in a privileged position
where you're probably not gonna starve.
Cause there's so many people out there
who wanna support you, right?
And all you would have to do is have somebody, you know,
post on one of those channels like,
hey, this is where Robin is,
he's a little hungry
or he's cold and like somebody's probably gonna show up.
So are you really in a place of surrender
if you're still relying on that?
Like there's always another level.
Yes, there's so many more levels.
I'm not gonna say I'm at the beginning,
but I'm still, there's a lot.
You're further along the way than,
probably at least anyone else in North America,
voluntarily, I would say.
There is a long history and tradition of this.
Yeah.
There are Hindu and Buddhist monks who wander the earth
and rely on the grace of strangers.
This has been going on for a very long time.
But what's different about what you're doing
and the way you're doing it is that you've shaped it
in this kind of welcoming kind of populist costume
where you're sharing everything publicly
on multiple channels in a very inviting way
that makes people intrigued, interested, encouraged,
inspired all these different emotions, which is cool
because that's the groundswell of a movement.
And I know that's the motivation behind you.
But the ambition piece I think is really interesting.
Like where does our ego serve us
and where does it derail us?
Like your earlier challenges,
you've ridden your bike across America three times,
you flew to Rio and gate with no money
and somehow made it to Columbia 7,000 miles away.
There's a documentary about that.
You've been on all these stages.
You did this experiment in New York City and Los Angeles,
where you basically ate like a normal,
you know, average American consumer
and then wore all your trash in this giant costume.
Like these are, you know, audacious, but ambitious projects.
And their impact can't be completely decoupled
from the ambition that inspired them.
And perhaps there's a part of ego that's saying,
look at me and look at these amazing things that I'm doing,
but that's what got you to that place.
And now you're in this different chapter
where you're trying to shed yourself of all of that.
But this is like the hero's journey, right?
Like this is the path of transcendence
of like constantly stripping away
and getting at what is actually real and true.
Yeah, real and true.
And that's a very diff...
Of all the times to live in,
to be pursuing real and true,
I do really believe that this is one
of the most difficult times ever.
We live in a world that is just so based on fallacies
and delusion and where it requires
so much more shedding in some senses than it ever did in the past.
I'm really glad that we're talking about this and I want to share a little bit about my
journey of letting go of some of the ego.
I first started to acknowledge my ego in probably around 2013.
I realized it, I started questioning it.
Fortunately, there's teachers out there
who brought these concepts up and I heard them
and it was doing the work.
And some of the releasing that I've done,
this just this last year, I deleted my Twitter account,
which was my first letting go
of one of those public platforms.
It was verified, it was a very useful tool.
And I was like, all right,
it was the least important of the four.
So I deleted that.
And the one that I first connected
with you on many years ago.
And when I deleted Twitter,
I deleted a lot of opportunity
because there were people who followed me on there
that didn't follow me anywhere else.
A lot of journalists follow me on Twitter
and not elsewhere. And a lot of journalists follow me on Twitter and not elsewhere.
And a lot of journalists go to there first to see somebody.
And so it was certainly a challenging thing to do.
That was smooth.
Like I forgot that it even existed.
I deleted LinkedIn about four years ago.
That was a bit of a release for sure.
But the biggest one for me
is I deleted my personal Facebook profile
about one year ago and I cried multiple times over a period of three days. Just when I did
that, I had originally I had 5,000 friends on there. That's very ego based. Some years
ago I got it down to like 800 where I actually knew every person that I was on there was
actually a person I wanted to have a connection with.
So imagine 800 people,
many of them I didn't have their personal contact for.
That was our only way we were connected.
And it was a lot of journalists over the years.
A lot of people I met from my world travels in Africa
and South America and Asia,
like people I would never see again.
This was our only real way of connecting.
And I knew that when I deleted that,
I was ending hundreds of relationships
because most people need some level of convenience
for the relationship to continue.
They're not gonna write me a letter.
And so-
There's nowhere to send it to.
There is nowhere to send a letter to right now, no.
But so deleting my personal Facebook
was a huge letting go
and it's been tender.
Like I said, I cried a few times with that.
I didn't expect that.
I didn't expect to cry when I let go
of my personal Facebook profile,
but I realized that I was letting go
of a very big part of me.
I got that profile when I was 18 or 19 years old.
My entire adult life, I've used that as a form of connection.
And, you know, that was a substantial step in that realm.
And then the last thing I'll add to this is that
it was about maybe five years ago
that one day I thought to myself, I realized, whoa, when I'm making decisions,
I'm no longer asking how will this benefit me?
I'm actually only thinking about how this will benefit
others, which meant two things.
Either I had diluted myself so well,
and I was running egomania so well that I had put it
in the background or that I had actually
ascended the ego enough to the point where I was no longer primarily acting based upon my own
desires and actually was interacting based on my desires for what I say, which is the earth,
my community. So that was a big, like that was a moment of realization.
And then it's hard to talk about this because a lot of people are going to be judgmental.
If you say, Oh, my ego is reduced.
They'll be like, Oh, that means the ego is actually bigger.
But I can just tell you that especially over the last one year of just as I've been shedding and letting go of so much,
I can just tell you that most days I never remember that anybody cares one bit about
anything that I have to say, that I have a profile with a blue check mark and that anybody would even,
Mark and that anybody would even, yeah,
most days I forget that anybody even knows that I exist. And so I can tell you that like the ego is dissolved a lot
and my objective is not to dissolve the ego fully.
My objective is to dissolve all aspects of the ego
that are only self-serving and to keep the aspects of the ego that helped
me to be of service and helped me to accomplish this mission.
And when I look at some of the leaders that I've learned from, you know, like Mahatma
Gandhi, he was majorly ego driven at the start.
It took decades of dissolving his ego to the place where he had almost none.
Decades of work.
And this practice right now of owning nothing,
while walking down the highway from Canada to Los Angeles,
pushing a baby stroller that I bought for $20 with all of my stuff on it,
with shoes that are falling apart,
you know, the number of people that thought, that assumed I was a tweaker,
or a bum, or homeless, like number of people that thought that assumed I was a tweaker or a bum or homeless,
like all these judgments and labels and now owning absolutely nothing. This has been such an incredible
opportunity to dissolve the ego because as I'm sitting here, I was telling Scott, I was like, man,
more than ever in my entire life, I genuinely just feel like a bum. And I'm like, more than ever, I'm like,
wait, people actually want to hear what I have to say
and people would actually want me in a room
to share this message.
So I still have a lot of work to do with ego,
but I can just share from what, deeply,
from what I'm feeling, what's bubbling inside of me
and what my daily operation in heart and mind is,
is that it has dissolved by,
over the last 14 years of practice,
it has dissolved to maybe 20% of what it was before.
Five years ago, I felt like maybe it was at 50%
and now it may be 20%.
And, you know, maybe it shoots back up later, possibly.
But at this point,
at this point, I would say most days
I am not operating from a place of ego for the most part.
That's amazing.
I would imagine for myself,
trying to imagine myself in your shoes,
we're gonna get to your shoes in a second.
Your shoes that are worn out.
I would vacillate between thinking
I'm just an absolute bum, like a unhoused bum,
living off grace of strangers
and just how lame that is, right?
And on the other hand, like, look at how bad-ass I am.
Like I'm doing this thing no one's ever done.
And like, you know, like I'm like just so much more hardcore
than everyone else.
Like as a recovering alcoholic,
I'm able to kind of maintain those polarities
at the same time, feeling like I'm better than everyone else
and the worst piece of shit at the exact same time.
Maybe you could call me a recovering attention.
Both are indulgences of the ego.
They're both very ego driven,
just at different ends of that spectrum.
Yes, and I was gonna say,
you could maybe call me a recovering attention-holic.
I've wanted attention for a long time.
And you're good at getting it.
And you come from this like marketing background
and you know how to like gain attention.
And there's a dopamine hit with that
that goes right to the ego.
Yes, dopamine hit.
Now here's the element that I can just share.
And again, it's slightly vulnerable to share this
because I know people were talking about ego.
This is a place where you get a lot of judgment.
But what I can tell you is I'm feeling no dopamine hits
lately from this stuff.
And so one of the current practices that I have
of taking three months of non-ownership
and not being online is I'm not asking
how many views I'm getting.
I don't know.
And you're not scrolling.
No, I'm not looking.
Reading comments and things like that.
No, I did slip up once. Yeah, I'm not looking. Reading comments and things like that. No, I did slip up once.
Yeah, I'm not reading comments.
I don't really know what's going on too much.
I don't have the internet.
I'm not going to the library.
Besides this non-ownership,
I'm actually taking three months of being off screens.
And so I did slip up and one of my teammates, Daniel,
he looked at one of the videos and he said something like, whoa.
And I was like, what?
And so he told me like about one of the views, one of the videos getting a lot of views.
And then I ended up having about a five to seven minute conversation about which videos
are getting views or not and how many views we're getting.
And so I slipped up a little bit.
My intention was for the entire three months
to have no idea whether anybody's paying attention or not.
But what I'll say is that I used to experience
that dopamine hit and it's almost a form of manicness,
I would say, like a mania that I used to experience
where when I would have, you know, like a mania that I used to experience where,
when I would have, you know, sometimes multiple hundred media outlets
would be doing a story over a period of few days
as they were syndicated out through things like AFP
or these different media services.
And I would see, you know, overnight, you know,
10,000 people, 10,000 new followers.
You, I, you know, 10,000 people, 10,000 new followers.
You, I would experience this,
it felt like a mania, like this strong,
I would imagine people who experienced bipolar,
like manic, this was the manic.
I never get the low, but I would get that manicness
and it would almost be like this
element of jitteriness a little bit and like a heart racing.
But to me, when I say manic, it's just, I think that's exactly what that mania feels
like and I just don't get that anymore.
I'm just not focused on that and why?
It's because of the practice. So I have just, you know, over the last few years,
I've started to take a lot of silence.
I've done a lot of detoxes from social media,
like week long here, two weeks long there, month long there.
I think I've done a month, maybe not quite a month. And all of these practices work.
And the last thing I'll add in this moment is that
I have decided as of recently that my focus is going to be
not on outcome.
We're talking about attachment.
My biggest attachment has been to outcome.
That outcome could be how many more followers I gained this year,
or how many people I reached,
or did I get onto larger media outlets,
or those would have been some of my main outcomes,
or what quotes the media said,
like what great things did they say that lift me up.
And I decided within the last year
that I was no longer going to be attached to outcome.
I was just going to do the work.
And I have gotten to that place where that's what I'm doing.
And the reason that I can now tell people
about how sometimes I poop my pants, you know?
I pooped my pants many a times in my adulthood.
We all probably have, most of us aren't going to say that.
And I can now say that because if everybody decides they don't like me, fine.
I'm just going to focus on truth and integrity, not the outcome.
And one of the reasons I can do that is because I believe if I do that, I'll actually be the
most productive I've ever been.
So I'm acknowledging that,
but the more that I just say,
I'm not gonna focus on outcome,
I'm gonna focus on just living the message,
the more all of that starts to fade and to fall away.
And every day presents its challenges
around like how do you align your actions
with your integrity and kind of these vows
that you've made about these principled ways
of living your life.
Yeah. Unforeseen curve balls
getting thrown in your direction.
Yes, every day is a challenge.
I have so many friends who are on the same path with me
of living a life that's in alignment with the earth
and focusing on equity and justice
and, you know, compassion and love.
And it's so hard because the whole society is set up
to as soon as we get there to drag us back in, you know
just paying rent and having enough for food.
It's very hard in the society we live in.
It's very fragmented and it's designed to keep us
from getting that place of true freedom
and being truly of service.
And so the way I look at it is that this path
goes against the grain of society.
Every single day is going against the grain of society,
which means if you don't keep moving forward,
you're gonna go backwards in the society.
And within a short time, all of the gains can be unraveled.
And so it's a constant challenge.
However, that being said, my belief is that when you shed enough of it, the grain ceases
to exist.
It's still there, but the grain is removed from the mind and you have created enough
of a new flow of life
that it's just no longer an issue.
Like that grain for the most part is just non-existent.
I'm just able to flow in my existence now
more than I was before.
And there's no sucking me back into it.
What is the biggest epiphany that you've had
or maybe surprising discovery,
like a discovery that you didn't predict?
To give an example of something that I come back to
is that a quality existence takes time.
We live in a time where the belief is,
is that the more convenience we have,
we'll have a higher quality of existence.
The more that we can outsource everything, the higher quality of existence that we'll
have.
My belief is that a quality of existence takes a substantial amount of time.
For me, that could mean growing my own food, foraging, building my own items, making my
own clothes, harvesting rainwater, really putting deep practice into my relationships.
Everything that brings the deepest value into my life
takes real time.
And it's a, you know, for a lot of people,
that would be an incredible revelation
when we think that having everything we want delivered
right to our doorstep is gonna create the quality existence.
I think that creates a hollowness inside of ourselves.
And that's what creates depression and anxiety.
And that actually taking a substantial amount of time
to meet our basic needs for food, for water,
for dealing with our own waste,
that's what creates a truly quality existence.
It's a radical notion.
In this society.
Yeah, it's radical.
I mean, first of all, you know,
this idea that while everybody's life is premised
upon owning more,
the idea of even pursuing what it might be like
if your life was premised on not just owning less,
but owning nothing, you know, confrontational confronting.
And that all of the conveniences that we presume
and assume are gonna make our lives better and easier
are actually obstacles to the meaning and the purpose
and the richness that we so deeply desire
underneath all of it.
I think that's pretty clear.
I think millions of people can feel that inside
of themselves that sure, when all of this was sold to us,
it sure seemed like it was gonna result in happiness.
And in certain ways, we have absolutely benefited.
There's no question about that.
I'm not a polarized black and white person.
I can see the incredible benefits of being able to share this message right here,
right now using this technology, for example.
But the reality I think is very clear that once you have, you know, Annie Leonard of the stories
of stuff was one of my early inspirations.
She said something like, okay, you might need say seven t-shirts, but once you get that eight
t-shirt, is it going to bring real value to your life?
Once you move up to a hundred t-shirts, are you happy?
Are you any happier?
The reality is that that fuller closet for most people today is resulting in a spiritual
crisis, a lack of connection to anything deep and real.
And for me, that's the earth, that's our fellow humanity,
and that's the plants and animals
that we share this home with.
And then when you go even further, it's the bacteria,
the yeast that we share this with, the fungus, just the air.
And the reason why that is,
is because the more we have everything we need
in this consumer material realm,
the less we have to tune in to the vibrancy of life.
The things that have given us life are all on the side. They cease to exist when we exist inside
these homes where they're climate controlled. We just have to push a button. We have everything
we need inside of it. We have everything we want delivered to it. We have endless content on the screens.
It sure seemed good, but I think that we are,
I know millions and millions of people are seeing
that actually it's not because it's destroying our souls.
And those of us that realize that the only way
we can have that convenience and comfort
is on the burden to others.
That's the other, you know, for me, big realization that I had dating back in the beginning of
my journey is that I realized in this society, whenever there's a convenience, someone else
is paying for it.
In order to have our comfort, others are paying for it, whether it's the earth, whether it's
other people or whether it's plants and animals.
And so just some simple examples of that, you know, when we have these clothes where
we can just buy them for, you know, a pair of jeans for 50 bucks or a hundred bucks.
The reality is that there's people working in really poor conditions
most likely. There might be child labor or slavery. There might be a lot of our clothes
are actually made in prisons by people who are in prison. When you actually look back
at every single, almost every single one of our consumer goods and our material objects
that come through convenience, the only reason
we can have that convenience is because of the burden we are placing on others.
And another way that I look at it is, you know, the concept that energy cannot be created
nor destroyed, neither can be these conveniences, these consumer conveniences.
Every time there's a consumer convenience or comfort,
it means someone else is paying for it.
And so when we realize that and we really tap into it,
that's when we start to experience an existential crisis,
a deep suffering, because now we know
that just for us to exist, someone
else is suffering and that we don't believe in existing in a way that's
causing such destruction and exploitation. But everything we're doing,
the food that we're eating, the car that we're driving, the gas we're pumping into
the car, the stuff we're buying, the trash we're creating, the money we're spending,
the credit card we're swiping, the investments that we have, the money in our bank account, it's all causing destruction.
And when we tap into that, that is deep suffering.
And so I think at a very, very deep, deep level, we're suffering because we, even if
we don't know that yet, a lot of us can feel that we've tapped into that.
And so that's where Gandhi said,
live simply so that others can simply live.
He said that at a time before this form of exploitation,
but that's what he was saying.
And that's why I would be able to say
if I was just to summarize my life in one way,
that could be it,
live simply so that others may simply live.
Because when we live simply to that level of embodiment,
it means we have removed ourselves from the hundreds
or thousands of ways in which we are tied
to the exploitation.
And as we remove each of those, we replace it
with a way in which we're actually connected to something.
Unless something is created in a truly regenerative way,
it is by definition, exploitive, either of other humans,
of natural resources, the planet, of animals, whatever, right?
And that's the really good news.
And so this is so deeply disturbing
because I think we're fundamentally compassionate
and nobody wants to kind of create harm on purpose.
So we compartmentalize this and we deny it
and we push it down in order to live our lives.
But there is that like undercurrent
where we know that this is the case
but we can't quite confront it.
And the solution is too extreme.
Like to do what you're doing,
to actually live in integrity is an impossibility.
To sign up for that is to sign up for a life
of suffering and martyrdom.
And who wants to do that, right?
But what you're here to say is you're actually experiencing
a richer life of deeper connection and happiness
as a result of this radical act.
Yes, I suffer, all humans suffer.
My belief is that suffering is part of existence.
It just is, we all suffer, there's no way around it.
There is no, in my belief, any sort of a utopian existence
for humanity, there never has been
and there never will be most likely.
Suffering is a part of the human existence.
The question is, what do we suffer over?
Do we suffer over a $10,000 watch
or do we suffer over making sure
that our neighbor has enough to eat?
Do we suffer over getting the raise or do we suffer over becoming masters of our neighbor has enough to eat. Do we suffer over getting the raise
or do we suffer over becoming masters of our own mind?
Whatever we're doing, we're gonna be suffering.
And so I suffer, but the reality is that
I'm sure that a lot of people can obviously see
I'm experiencing quite a level of contentness and happiness
in a moment when a lot of people would assume
that I would be suffering greatly,
like owning absolutely nothing and sleeping outside.
A lot of people would think that I would be suffering, but the reality is that I'm suffering
the least over the last eight days that I ever have in my adult life.
I'm experiencing right now the highest level of contentedness that I ever have, the most
connection, the most oneness, the most dissolving of the
concept of self, all of which is what I was hoping.
I thought owning nothing would do something and the fruits are being harvested in the
sense that I'm experiencing the least anxiety that I ever have and the most just existence,
just being here in the actual present
moment.
But I want to go back one bit and then there's one thing that I want to say just in case
anybody possibly didn't get this.
Now in order for us to have convenience or comfort doesn't necessarily does not inherently
mean a burden is being placed on others.
It's only the systems in which we've created
to create that convenience and comfort.
We can have convenient and comfortable lives
that do not cause a burden.
And human beings have done that before.
And there's some human beings who still do that today.
And there will be more human beings
who do that in the future.
We can have a lot of comfort.
I have so much comforts that are not causing destruction.
So a new way exists, other ways exist,
and there's thousands of ways to tap into an existence
where we meet our basic needs for convenience and comfort,
and it's not at the expense of others.
And I just really wanna say that so people know
we can be comfortable without exploiting others.
There's so many ways in which we can do it.
This episode is brought to you by IQ Bar,
our exclusive snack sponsor.
IQ Bar is the better for you plant protein based snacks
made with brain boosting
nutrients to refuel, nourish and satisfy hunger without the sugar crash. Finding portable
nutrition that aligns with my plant based lifestyle has always been challenging. But when IQ Bar
sent me their ultimate sampler pack, their chocolate sea salt flavor immediately stood out. Super
good. Just the right balance, satisfying without being overly sweet.
They're completely free from gluten, dairy, soy, GMOs,
and artificial sweeteners.
Just clean, straightforward nutrition.
And unlike so many bars out there,
these don't send your blood sugar on a roller coaster.
There are just tons of bars out there.
Believe me, I've tried them all,
but IQ Bar stands above with over 25,000 five-star reviews and counting, which is cool because
it means more people than ever are starting their days on the right foot with IQ Bar's
brain and body boosting bars, hydration mixes, and mushroom coffees.
Right now IQ Bar is offering our special podcast listeners 20% off all IQ Bar products.
Plus you can get free shipping.
To get your 20% off, text Rich Roll to 64,000.
That's Rich Roll to 64,000.
Message and data rates may apply.
See terms for details.
You mentioned that you made some of your clothes.
I want to get back to your long walk.
Yeah.
We have these shoes in front of us right now,
which you came in with.
These are the like mock, like the handcrafted moccasins
that you walk down the coast in.
I mean, it's, you know, watching these videos
of you like walking in these things, it's like unbelievable.
So explain to me like what these are
and like how you did this.
You could see the treads on the bottom have been worn off.
I mean, this is like, how much of the walk was barefoot?
How much of it was in these shoes?
How did you come up with this?
Like, did you make these?
Half and half, yeah.
So I set out on the walk on July 28th, 2024.
Walk me through it.
Yes.
Holding one of them.
Great.
Actually, this is my, I like this one more.
You said you washed them, right?
They don't smell bad.
No, here you hold that one.
Okay.
So-
This one's fraying at the front here.
So I set out on the walk on July 28th, 2024.
So a little over six months ago.
And I had designed these shoes back in December of 2023.
And when I designed these shoes,
I was not going for a long walk.
These shoes were never designed to walk 1600 miles
from Canada to Los Angeles.
They were just sort of putter around your garden
and like hang out at home.
They were to keep me warm.
That's the hence the wool.
I was staying in a cabin in Northern Wisconsin
with a wood stove and I wanted to be able to walk outside
and still be warm enough while it's below freezing.
And so that was the primary thing.
And they were in no way, shape or form
to walk hundreds or thousands of miles.
Like, it just, they weren't that.
When I decided to walk from Canada to Los Angeles,
I certainly would have loved to have some different shoes.
These were the shoes that I had.
And I didn't have, I had a lot going on.
I didn't have, I didn't prep.
I didn't prep for the walk, really at all. I never walked
even 15 miles a day prior. I had done as little preparation as possible before talking about
starting to walk. What are the shoes? So they are wool felted booties. So they're like a
wool booty basically. And someone who follows me online,
I put the call out saying I was looking for some support with making some of my clothing
items. I was switching to 100% homemade, natural fiber and naturally dyed clothing, clothing
that was as closely connected to the earth as possible. And I accomplished that before the walk. And so she knitted the, or actually I believe she crocheted
or let's just say knitted.
I don't know that, I think crocheted is what she did.
The-
The upper.
The booty, yeah, the upper.
And then she sent them to me.
It was made from a local wool.
And then now you might notice that these do not represent my actual foot size.
I am size 11.
Yeah, they look like, those are like size 15 or something.
Yeah, they're huge on me.
I look like a clown.
And that one's closer to the right size.
They're different sizes.
Like hold that up.
You know.
Yeah, it's a little smaller.
Yeah.
And so she, you know, she had never made a pair of shoes before.
She wasn't an expert.
And then what I did is I felted them over a wood stove.
You know, you got to, you do it in hot water.
And then I dyed it with black walnut.
That's what the color of the wool is.
And that's black walnut from the tree
in front of my mom's house.
I was staying up in Northern Wisconsin. And then what I had to start with was just a very thin deer leather
from a deer that was hunted in Wisconsin and that was tanned with bark. So it was a really
very natural process. When I started this walk with that, and so the leather was sewed on with deer sinew.
So it was a straight up as close to the earth shoe
as it gets.
It was walnuts, deer and sheep, and that's it.
And the stitching.
The stitching was deer sinew.
So that was basically the sinew comes off
of the muscle of the deer.
Most people would waste it, but it's a very useful-
It's not a vegan shoe.
Very not a vegan shoe.
It's almost a hundred percent not.
Except the concept of doing no harm,
there was, you know, that's another realm,
but it's a shoe that does a lot less harm
than a lot of shoes that are industrial,
whether they're vegan or not.
So in some senses, the concept of veganism
of doing minimal harm actually is embraced in these.
Yeah, you need a more expansive kind of view of that,
like the toxins and the runoff from the factories
that poison the waterways and all these things
that occur with the manufacturing
of synthetic consumer goods.
Yes, which is where, that's where, as you probably see,
I don't really get into labels
because it's hard to really see the truth
when we're in labels.
But, so when I started this, I made it,
I was actually hoping to walk the whole journey barefoot.
That was my aspiration, whole journey barefoot. That was my aspiration,
1600 miles barefoot. And I made it the first day three miles. I just did a little soft
start. The next day I made it like seven miles barefoot, both days. And then the next day,
I think I made it about 15 miles barefoot. So I did the first about 30 miles barefoot.
I was in Bellingham. So about 30 miles from the border in Canada where
I started at the Peace Arch National Monument. And that's when I put the shoes on. I realized
I could not do it barefoot with the weight on my legs and my feet from the backpack.
And so within 10 miles, the soles had worn out on the bottom of these, the thin leather.
And so the first couple of days,
I ended up finding some secondhand industrial leather
and gluing it on with super glue
that I got at a hardware store.
And I already had really crumbled in my attempt to do it
with like the level that I was trying
of fully, you know, connected to earth stuff.
I was using super glue and factory farmed leather, although it was scraps, but still.
And so ultimately to wrap that up, what I found is I needed to use a much thicker leather. I was
hoping to get buffalo leather. That's some of the thickest that was from regenerative agriculture,
but never was able to get it.
So what I ended up using was mostly scraps
of industrial leather.
And so it wasn't the level of materials connected
to the earth or that I knew the true source behind them
as I hoped.
And I ended up doing 1000 miles on these shoes,
and I did 600 miles barefoot,
and I was in pain for a good amount of the trip,
I would imagine.
Did you get blisters in these things or no?
Well, the good news is that I never experienced
a single blister, no injuries whatsoever.
And I realized that blisters come from a of course a rubbing and
these didn't have any any rubbing so no blisters and then also no no calluses
either I I don't I haven't like researched this but you have souls and
you have calluses those are not inherently the same thing.
I think a lot of people see them as synonymous
where you build up your calluses in order to have tough feet.
Maybe you know this, maybe you have some insight on this,
but what I've come to see is that calluses develop
in a place where you have a consistent constant rubbing.
Souls are not built by rubbing.
And so you don't have those calluses on say the bottom,
it's usually on edges where you have a constant rubbing.
And so I don't have any callus whatsoever
from 1600 miles of barefoot and walking.
I just have thick soles.
Do you want to show that?
Yeah, let me see.
So they're a little LA dirty right now.
Dirty mugs up there.
Yeah, look at that.
No, it's, yeah, like the sole,
you develop a toughness in your sole or a thickness,
but the callus is that like really rigid, you know,
kind of feels like more dried up part of skin
where the rubbing is.
And it is usually like, yeah, on an edge.
And my take is that calluses are dead skin,
souls are alive.
What do you think about that?
I don't know.
I'm not qualified to answer that.
Cause you can just like-
Probably right.
Yeah, you can get a razor blade
and you kind of slice them off.
So that's my thought.
So now the issue that I did have,
you might be able to still see,
there's a, does it look kind of like a little bit
of a half moon right there?
Like a ridge.
So what happened was you think,
you would think that walking barefoot,
you build up your souls,
but on concrete for hundreds of miles,
I would see my souls wearing away.
You're wearing the skin off.
Of course, like look what's happening to this.
So that's happening to the feet as well.
So the bottom of your feet are getting raw.
So they would get really raw right on these edges
to the point where it was painful.
And so what I had to do was sort of,
I would get to that point where they never bled,
but you could see the pinkness
and I would have to then put on the shoes. But then the more I
wore the shoes, the more I had to re-sole them because these soles wear out. And I put
new soles, the inner sole, I put about eight new ones of those in maybe. The outer sole,
I only replaced twice. But it was like, okay, either I wear out my sole or I wear out this
sole and doing this journey barefoot and with these shoes was a lot of work. You're talking but it was like, okay, either I wear out my soul or I wear out this soul.
And doing this journey barefoot and with these shoes
was a lot of work.
You're talking about not convenient.
These are the least convenient shoes
that I know of in existence.
It's not like a high recommend.
I do not recommend this.
This is what you did.
The idea, the ambition behind it, super glue aside,
is that everything that you were wearing is biodegradable.
And as it wears out along the run,
you could discard it and it would go back to the earth.
And there's no issue with that.
That was a really sweet experience for me,
that every time a soul ran out,
I could just bury it in the soil.
I would find some deep leaves or some loamy soil,
and I would just bury those souls.
And that was a beautiful experience for me to think like,
most people doing the PCT or the AT,
when they're done with their shoes,
they gotta go in the dumpster.
When I was done with those souls,
I could bury them right there along the road
or right along the trail.
And that's got a very practical sense.
I'm literally not putting stuff into the landfill,
but what I've experienced of wearing, it's different now.
Now that I'm doing this experiment of non-ownership,
here I am in these industrial clothes.
Right, you're wearing sweatpants that look like they came
from Ross Dress for Less or something.
Yeah, totally.
But that's an actual, like I don't make many sacrifices.
That's an actual sacrifice of this is going back to that.
But the thing that I wanna share on that is that,
wow, every time that I was able to bury the souls
and return them to the earth,
the connection that I felt with the earth in that moment,
knowing that I was creating soil
rather than filling up the landfill and that the, knowing that I was creating soil rather than filling
up the landfill and that the way that I had designed my life was one that was actually,
here I was taking part in the end of cycle.
You have this concept of cradle to cradle.
These souls are not cradle to cradle because I got these from a industrial source, but
it was closer to at
the very end, I was seeing that these are returning to the earth.
And I would love to share another little insight on that if you're open to hearing it.
So one of my aspirations is to spend long periods of time away from human beings, any
human interaction.
And the walk did not accomplish that.
I was on the Pacific Coast Highway.
There was very few moments of not seeing people
for very long.
But two days before this walk began,
I came out of the Olympic National Park
and I had just spent one week there,
seven nights there, fully alone.
I found a little lake on the map
and there was no trail in or no trail out.
It was by one of the hot springs.
I can't think of the name of the hot springs
up there in Olympic National Park,
but I found this little lake on the map
and I had to climb a thousand feet up
and a thousand feet down to get there in these shoes.
And I spent a week there. As soon as I got there,
I knew there was no human beings coming down there.
Like it took real work to get up and down.
And I spent a week just sitting by that lake, um,
just being, I had six and a half pounds of wild rice, uh,
less than a pound of pound of dried venison, a small amount of
dried maitake mushrooms and sea salt that I had, oh actually a friend had harvested that.
So all of my food came from the earth and then I was eating the berries and the greens and also
a few fish there as well. So in that way I was really a part of the earth. What was going in and out of me was the earth.
But the part that was kind of astounding for me was
now 100% of my clothes were natural fibers.
So I was sitting next to the lake,
working on the soles of my shoes
or sewing patches onto my clothes.
And every piece that came off my clothes,
I could simply return it to the earth,
just as a bird would lose a feather or a deer would lose its hair. and every piece that came off my clothes, I could simply return it to the earth.
Just as a bird would lose a feather or a deer would lose its hair, I could return any of
this earth and it could become a part of the bird's nest and not feel any guilt over that
whatsoever.
Every single element that I shed was actually returning to the earth. And wow, that was astounding as to the dissolving of separateness that existed.
Where after about five days, I started, actually it was less than five days,
it was more about three, that I actually started to feel that I belonged there.
That I was another animal. I was a human animal.
And I can say that I would not have felt that if I was another animal. I was a human animal and I can say that I would
not have felt that if I was in synthetic clothes. The natural fibers with the
natural dye, that ability to actually watch myself shedding and returning to
the earth was definitely a profound moment of reconnection. And this I say
very lightly, I've only And this I say very lightly,
I've only said this to a few people,
but I'm gonna share this because I'm practicing
just full transparency and truth,
but it's a very tender thing to say,
but I almost felt like I was becoming indigenous
to that land.
I'm not indigenous.
I'm a white person that has roots from, you know, some colonizers and settlers.
I'm very much not indigenous, but with hours a day of just harvesting berries hand to mouth
and just existing in the most utter simple way, what I mean by that is that I felt so
deeply that I actually belonged there, that
I was actually a part of the land, that I was not separate. And I just imagined myself
and it was almost like a bit of an out of bodiness of just imagining myself there in
this existence. And it was such a beautiful feeling.
And actually one of my big inspirations,
Robin Wall Kimmerer, who wrote Braiding Sweetgrass,
she's Potawatomi and she says,
we can all become indigenous to the land,
no matter if we're direct descendants
of colonizers and settlers,
we can all become indigenous to a land.
And I really felt that.
And a big part of that was the clothes that I was wearing
and the ability for them to simply shed
and to simply assimilate with the environment.
And so what do you make of that?
Like you mentioned that it was a profound experience
of oneness, like what is the thing that you want to share
that was so moving about that, you know,
for the people that are listening?
Well, so-
To better understand why it was profound for you.
So the first, the reason why I'm timid to say it
is because as a white man,
I would never wanna say something
that would negate
the experience that people who are indigenous
and still exist today have with the land
and the level of, you know, how the colonizer,
the genocide that has happened,
that has taken away their ability to have
that deep connection with the land.
And so, you know, as a white man to say,
to even just acknowledge that and say that I felt
that element of indigenous with the land.
It's a very difficult thing to say, you know,
there's a good chance some people will hear that
and, you know, feel triggered.
Chaff at that.
Yeah.
But I truly believe that all human beings,
if we're ever going to turn things around, But I truly believe that all human beings,
if we're ever going to turn things around, we need to deepen our connection to the point
where we feel at home on this earth,
which is that is another way of saying
being indigenous to the land,
that we actually feel at home here,
that we belong here, that we're part of this place,
that we're not separate, that the deer are our relatives,
that the birds are our relatives,
that when we're there, we're not saying,
my job is to leave no trace.
No, my job is to exist as part of this.
And that includes eating the berries.
And that includes, that may include trampling some plants
because if we are never trampling any plants,
it means we're sitting in our air conditioned homes
and the plants are being decimated behind closed doors.
So for me, I guess as far as the messages
is that I really do think that dissolving the illusion
of separateness and feeling that connectedness, if we don't do that,
I don't believe that we'll ever have a shot
at having a sustainable future, at true regeneration.
At the heart of it is we need to reconnect
to a couple of key things.
One, the earth, two, our fellow humanity,
three, the plants and animals we share this earth with,
and four, ourselves.
And we need to feel at home and a part of all of that,
not separate from that.
And last little note on that is that's at the heart
of indigenous teachings.
Like when I read indigenous teachings,
that's what it's all about.
That we're a part of it all and we give gratitude
for it all and we see our interconnectedness with it all.
And it's definitely what I wanna tap into.
And it's definitely what I'm tapping into some
in Griffith Park right now, you know,
just it's not the deep wilderness,
but having nothing means I spend a lot more time
looking up at the sky and listening to the birds,
being with the deer and the coyotes and yeah,
so just more of that. And when we're doing that, it means we're not consuming, you with the deer and the coyotes. And yeah, so just more of that.
And when we're doing that, it means we're not consuming,
as we're just viewing.
And the occasional brush with law enforcement.
Yes, the more that you fully embrace this,
the more likely you may have a few of those.
How did you become this person?
I imagine people might be thinking,
like you must have grown up in a commune
with a cult leader and the like,
but this is not your backstory at all.
Yes, no, I grew up really, really, really wanting
to be normal.
That's what I wanted more than anything.
And now part of the reason why,
there's a few key pillars here.
So my mom and dad, now they are hippies actually.
And now if you ask them, I don't know if either of them
would call themselves hippies,
but my mom was a Hare Krishna.
Still today we call herself a Hare Krishna.
Although there's no other Hare Krishnas
in Ashland, Wisconsin, population 8,260
in Northern Wisconsin.
That's about 80 to 90%, probably 80% Catholic or Christian.
So she doesn't wear the Hare Krishna clothes,
but she is an Eastern spiritually minded type of person.
I grew up, you know, I remember the World Wildlife Federation,
WWF, Panda Bear, like stickers on my notebook,
my mom contributed to them
and she loved the earth. We would go to Earth Day. She conserved water and electricity. My dad
actually would spend a lot of his time talking about his inventions of water purifying devices
and pedal powered cars and alternative energy. And he never did any of those.
He never actually invented those,
but that's a lot of what he considered himself to be,
an inventor of renewable energy devices
and water purification devices, et cetera.
My dad took me out.
So my mom and dad were never together.
They had two kids, me and my brother Levi,
and we're like 15 months apart.
And my dad and mom were probably not together
for more than two years, maybe.
They were never married.
So my last name is Greenfield from my mom.
So, okay, I feel like that's a bit of a sidetrack,
but it is connected in that there were two elements.
One, I had a deep connection to the earth.
Both of my parents loved the earth.
Both of my parents believed in not harming others.
And, you know, my dad was vegetarian for like 20 years
and my mom, actually I grew up semi-vegetarian.
We ate chicken and fish, but not red meat.
So there was a lot of that.
We ate a lot of tofu as well.
And so there was a lot of that. We ate a lot of tofu as well. And so there was a lot of elements of that.
And at the same time, my mom was hiding who she was
because we lived in this sort of dominator society.
We were Jews as well.
There was only three Jewish families in the town
and it was almost all Catholic or Christian.
So I had no dad around really.
I was Jewish in a Christian society.
We were poor.
My mom made about
15 to 18 thousand dollars a year working as an aid, a school aid on the playground originally
for four kids. There were four kids from three dads. So my brother Joe is four years older.
He was actually born in Oakland. My mom and dad met in Eugene, Oregon,
add all these things together.
And what I wanted was just to be normal.
I didn't want any of that.
I went over to my friend's house.
My best friend's dad was an anesthesiologist.
My other best friend's dad was a lawyer.
Another friend's dad was a doctor.
Another was a real estate agent.
I happened to have some of the wealthiest friends in town
because of some of the afterschool programs that I got into.
And so I would go over to their house
and their cereal was stored
in plastic Tupperware containers.
And at my house, it was in glass jars.
So I saw glass jars as poor
and plastic containers as wealthy.
And so basically I got super drawn into the consumer world. I wanted a nice house and
a fancy car and a nuclear family. I just wanted to be normal. I wanted to be loved, to belong,
to be acknowledged. And so that was my upbringing was a juxtaposition of those two things, a great love for the earth
and all the plants, or more animals.
I wasn't connected to the plants then,
but I loved frogs and turtles and fishing.
And also wanting to have, wanting to fit in,
wanting to belong.
And I saw belonging and fitting in
as material wealth
and financial wealth.
That's where, so that was where from a young age,
I started to pursue the path of materialism.
You were a Boy Scout,
you got your Eagle Scout certification.
So you're self-sustaining in that regard.
Like you're already wired to be able to survive
in the wild on some level, right?
But you go to college and you have your kind of
typical college experience.
You're drinking beer out of beer bongs
and doing what college kids do.
And you set this goal that you wanna be a millionaire by 30.
You create a marketing agency,
like you're kind of like doing the normal thing, right?
So where's the pattern interrupt?
Like you talk about having this moment of awakening,
but I don't know exactly what that was.
Yeah.
So yeah, I went to university for biology
and aquatic science, but really I was there
for binge drinking and sex.
Like that's really what I was doing with my time
because binge drinking was the norm
and having sex was your way of showing
that you were worth something.
Like as a man, the way that I knew best to prove
my self-worth was to have sex with many women and to have sex with women that are considered
beautiful. That was my way of not just belonging, but being extra belonging, like being loved.
And that came through, you know, media, through the mainstream media, the magazines and songs that I was listening to.
And so I was pursuing this objective of both being normal, but being better than normal,
fitting into normalcy, but being really, really good at it.
Like being a millionaire, not just having money, but being a millionaire. So after university, after about a year, I actually ended up moving out to
San Diego, California when I was about 25 years old. And I had been in sales and I ended up,
after about six months, starting a marketing company and we sold advertising. And I had the
goal of being a millionaire by the time I was 30. And life
was going very well. I rented a three bedroom apartment, three blocks from the beach, an
ocean beach. I was making solid money. I, within a couple of years, had 20 independent contractors
at the peak of the company that were selling ads. And I was bringing in over six figures
in at least the last year before I stopped doing that.
So I was on path to be a millionaire.
I was having romantic relationships.
I had many friendships.
I would have made my childhood self very proud
with what I was doing.
And everyone, you know, people back in my hometown,
my small hometown would definitely be looking up to me
as a, you know, living in Southern California
and being financially successful and all these other ways.
And I was happy and I was healthy.
I was still traveling the world.
And so everything was basically going according to plan.
And then something happened
and I realized that I wanted to slash almost felt like had to radically transform my life.
And a lot of people would think that I must have had some sort of major shakeup, like
a near death experience or, you know, a, an, a, an experience of, you know, death in the family
or yeah, just some sort of big shakeup.
But I didn't have anything like that.
All that happened was I started to watch documentaries
and I started to read books.
And I just simply learned that I was living
a great hypocrisy, that almost everything that I was doing
was causing incredible destruction and injustice
and that my life was built into such inequity.
What I looked at it was,
is I was raveled into this web of consumerism
via thousands of strands.
And I was just here in this absolute web of destruction,
but I didn't wanna be, it's like you said earlier, nobody wants that actually.
But now I knew just by watching short films like the story of stuff or documentaries like
food, ink, reading Michael Paul and many, many, many different people out there who
are just sharing the basic truths behind our reality.
I just learned that my entire life was not what I thought it was.
That most of what I was doing was because corporations had very large advertising budgets
and because societal norms were very powerful.
It's not because it's what I was wanting to be doing or so much consciously choosing to
do.
I was just being a product of my surroundings.
You know, for example, I was wearing Old Spice deodorant.
Why?
Because they had really solid commercials
and they convinced me that in order to be a contributing
member of society, I needed their deodorant.
And so I decided that I wasn't going to buy into the delusion.
I wasn't going to buy into the lies, the corruption, and that I was going to shed all of that.
And so it was, it was multi-pronged.
It was truth that I was pursuing.
It was ascending delusion, which are basically this, you know, two ends of the same coin.
It was, uh, yeah, ascending corruption and destruction.
So it was, it was, yeah, ascending corruption and destruction. So it was sustainability, it was human equity and equality,
not wanting to be a part of the great wealth gap.
So it was all of it.
It was human, it was earth, it was animal, it was plant,
it was a desire for sustainability.
At that time, I didn't know the word regeneration.
I don't think that was really
so much of a popular word at that time,
but regeneration, sustainability, equity and truth.
And so it was just, that was what it was.
It was just, I decided very quickly
that I was going to radically transform my life
to be living by that rather than by consumerism,
materialism, financial wealth at the expense
and the burden of others.
If I went through that bibliography though
of books, documentaries, et cetera,
that you were consuming that gave you this moment
of awakening or this period of awakening or unfoldment.
I'm sure there's a lot of people in the world
who have read those books and watched those documentaries.
And perhaps in the wake of that,
live their lives a little bit more mindfully
than they would otherwise.
What is it about you in particular
that led you to have a much more radical reaction.
Is it the way you were wired?
Is the way you were brought up?
Is there something inside of you that's different
that has catalyzed such an extreme kind of response
to what you learned and discovered?
I mean, and I think, you know,
it's not like the next day you moved to Griffith Park
and gave up everything.
Like this has happened in stages.
It began with these bicycle adventures,
portions of which you were without money
and like drinking out of fire hydrants
and a lot of dumpster diving.
And then, like doing the whole dumpster diving thing,
I think you got into like something like 2000 dumpsters
and as a way of showing 50% of our food is waste
and while however many millions of people
are living in food poverty,
all of these things have a message behind them.
You can call them stunts or experiences or adventures,
but they're all kind of very consciously
crafted to feed a certain type of message.
But each one is just a little bit more extreme
than the one that preceded it,
that has kind of led you to this place.
Yeah, you know, that's,
you could just leave that as a mystery.
I don't know.
I don't know,
cause the reality is that I don't even know if we have free will.
I don't know if what we're living is reality or a delusion. I don't know if potentially everything
is predestined. I don't know any of this, so it's a little hard for me to say, but if we operate
within the confines that we, here we are, human beings living in this
reality, I don't know why, you know, because I have so many friends that learn the exact same
things as me and they don't take it as far or even nearly as far. And I think I could say a few
things. One is that I've, I've been wired. I've been in extremes since a young age.
I've always been exploring.
I've always been exploring.
Like when I was in about maybe fifth grade,
me and my friend Hans biked 30 miles to the next town.
And when we got there, we were like, well,
what do we do now?
Like we had to call our mom's collect to get picked up.
We couldn't bike back.
And then when I was 16,
I hopped on a bus from my small town to Florida, 48 hours on Greyhound, going a far way away at a pretty
young age. So I've always been pushing the limits. Just to give another example of the
extreme things I would do and the level I was willing to go to, you know, there was a, in home economics
class there was a chunk of a sponge at the bottom of the drain and I ate it.
You know, someone gave me $5 and I ate it.
I've always been just testing the extreme, doing really out there things.
From fifth grade, I was an entertainer.
I was the class clown in my high school.
That's what I was nominated.
So there's always been a desire to test the limits.
There's always been a desire to go outside of societal norms.
There's always been this ability to put myself out there.
So that all helps compared to someone who's, you know,
timid and struggling to put themselves out there.
I always have.
The other part is that, of course, ego.
I had that large ego, which allowed me to enter
into this realm because it was also,
it was partly ego driven.
So that I would say played a role.
And then I do think at the heart of me is this pursuit
of justice and of truth that has been there also from a very young age.
And I'm not sure where that came from.
So these are, I would say part of the ingredients
that has allowed me to be able to do this
with relative ease.
Like, sure, a lot of this has been hard,
but the reality is, is that the same time,
it's not been that hard.
Like a lot of it has been joyful and flowing.
So those would be some thoughts
as to what makes it possible.
I've always been a fairly driven and out of the box person
and also critical thinking plays a big role.
I've always been a critical thinker.
What are your siblings, your high school buddies,
your college buddies think about what you're doing right now?
So it goes across the realm of opinions.
A lot of my former friends,
I would still consider them friends,
but we haven't talked in 10 years or longer.
And there's certainly a lot of people
who have written me off as just crazy.
I just don't fit into their pattern.
Even if they see the success that I've had,
they're like, it's just so far outside of their realm
of and so far outside of what they want to be reality.
So there's no doubt that there's people that are,
friends from my earlier life that are,
that just think that this is all ridiculous.
But there are, I would say more so people that are inspired
and that have played a role and that enjoy being around me
because when they are around me,
they're learning, they're growing,
they're exploring, they're deepening.
But I will also say I've done a pretty solid job
of compartmentalizing my life in the sense that
I don't bring this into anywhere that doesn't really want it.
So family and friends, I don't ask them to do things really.
I don't judge them from what they're doing or not
because that just resulted in a lot of struggle
and undesirable experiences when I was
in my beginning stages.
And so, you know, my two best friends, Paul and Dane,
you know, we just have kind of a fairly normal time together,
camping and although Dane, you know,
he ended up doing a lot of dumpster diving with me
and moved in this direction some as well.
But, and the last thing I'll say like, you know,
I have a lot of support from my family,
but as an example, my brother Joe, he doesn't get it.
He thinks I should be making money.
I should be capitalizing on this position
that I have to make money to like give to my mom,
for example, and me going to Griffith Park
and owning nothing, like this is another level
where he's just like, dude, this is not.
I mean, there is an argument that comes to mind,
which is because you have this large platform,
you are in a position where you could capitalize on,
on it financially and use that, you know,
like funnel that money into your nonprofit and leverage it,
you know, for the betterment of the planet
that is consistent with,
that's integrous with your message, right?
So that's probably one of the most common things
people say is that I have this platform
and I could monetize it.
And then by monetizing it, I could do more good with it.
And actually my biggest struggle is that I don't have
the funds to accomplish a lot of what I'd like to.
Over the last years, it's been my limiting factor
has actually been funds.
But I truly believe that the most valuable thing
that I have is my integrity.
And when I am operating in the monetary world,
I am not able to live out my integrity to the highest degree.
And so I actually chip away
at the most valuable, meaningful thing that I have.
So that's my objective right now is to really play into that.
That's shedding as much of that, shedding anything that doesn't build my integrity and
that means most attachments to the monetary system for now. And we'll see, like right now, it is a bit of a surrender game in that I might be,
I might render myself a little less effective as I'm moving away from that.
Or maybe just being a human being of a deep level of integrity, people will resonate, they'll see that. And it will result in me being, you know,
more impactful than I ever can, ever could have been
had I decided to monetize.
It's a counterintuitive perspective shift.
Like the idea of doing that in the traditional way
versus like the real power is in your allegiance
to your integrity.
And that's like a nuclear power plant, you know,
that like attracts opportunities
and things that you might not imagine,
but it's all sourced from that.
And so that is the thing you have to protect
above everything else.
Yeah, that's what I feel.
And my hopes is that I play my cards right.
And that I use my life to the best of ability.
I definitely ask myself questions like, am I, you know, is this the right move?
Am I on the right path?
And I have doubts about it and I don't always know.
And to be honest, the last few years, I feel like I've been the least effective that I've ever been.
As I was running the nonprofit and trying to bring in funds to be able to plant more
fruit trees and provide more gardens to people, I actually became the least effective that
I ever had been.
And I think the reason why is because I was being spread thin and I wasn't able to be
living my message. And I think that's
my best gift is just to live my message to the utmost degree. And that includes living in a
deep form of integrity. And so that's what I'm going to do. I'm fully set on that and we'll see
what ends up happening as far as whether my dreams of being a very
impactful and meaningful contributor to society happen or I just dissolve into
everything becomes more technological and I continue to not embrace it and everything becomes
and not embrace it and everything becomes, you know, yeah, more where if you take part of it,
it's harder to live in integrity.
We'll see what happens.
It's possible that I just render myself obsolete
in this lifetime or it's possible that I hold strong
and that I continue to be able to be a pillar
in this journey that so many of us are on.
You know, that's the reason I can keep doing this.
There's literally millions and millions of people
have the same desires for the world.
And so only time will tell whether I play my cards right
to be as effective as I'd like to be in creating change.
Well, part of that integrity is decoupling
from your attachment to those outcomes though, right?
Yeah, I mean, as I was saying that I could totally
hear that.
And so I'm never going to have no attachment
because that would mean that I gained full enlightenment.
I'm never gonna gain full enlightenment.
But it's just a balance.
It's the right level. And, and also you can have grand aspirations
without having attachments to them, I believe.
And the reason I believe that is if you look at people
like the Dalai Lama, for example,
I truly believe that he's in the flow state
of utilizing his life to be most highly effective
of service while still having deep aspirations of using
his place on earth.
And so I see leaders out there who do that where it's obvious they have aspirations,
but they do detach from the attachment to outcome.
And I think that year after year after year of practicing that, you can enter into the flow state
where the attachment disappears, but the drive remains.
And that's not something I can say from experience
or even having talked to someone who said that before,
but I can say that through the observation of,
most of my leaders are in their 70s, 80s or past.
So you can see their life trajectory
and you can see how they change throughout.
And that's the pattern that I see is that
it is possible to dissolve the attachment
while still being driven for the core values
that I'm talking about of equity, of justice, of harmony.
You can be totally utterly dedicated
and use every moment for that
without it being a form of attachment, cravings or aversion.
However, that requires incredible practice and dedication.
Part of your practice of ensuring
that your actions are in alignment with those values
is this formal practice of setting vows
and then renewing them or revising them
like in four year intervals.
Yeah.
How did that start and what are your current vows?
Sure, I'll first, well, as far as how it started was I looked at our leadership and I saw what characteristics
so much of our leadership is lacking that our society really needs. And I saw how you
corrupt a leader. And my objective is to be a leader. I want to be a leader for society.
Not a leader that has power over,
but a leader that has power with.
Now, in an ideal world, maybe there wouldn't be leadership.
Everything would be decentralized.
But under our societal structures, leadership plays a role
and I think we can have benefit from leadership.
So my objective is to be a leader that is more or less
uncorruptible and the vows play a role in that.
So they are simply set as a way to protect myself from the things that
would steer me off track. So the original vows were to earn less
than the federal poverty threshold.
That's a lifetime vow.
When I made that vow, it was $11,000 per year.
Now the federal poverty threshold is $15,000 a year.
So earning less than that per year.
Keeping my net worth at that level or lower,
keeping my material possessions at that level or lower, keeping my material possessions at that level or lower,
along with that means not paying federal income taxes for life.
Why?
Because some statistics say that about 50% of our federal income taxes go to war in the
military industrial complex. But when you add in police brutality, the prison industrial complex,
you add in bailing out the big banks,
you add in big pharma, big ag, fossil fuels.
So I've made a lifetime commitment
to not putting my funds into that,
not paying federal taxes.
Another vow is to financial transparency.
So you get to decide,
you get to know where my money comes from.
Every bit of where my money comes from
is documented on my website.
That's a lifetime commitment.
So you can see, you can see
where I'm potentially being influenced by.
Another one of my early vows was to making every flight that I take public.
So I can't go off to places without people knowing where I'm going and that
I think if all of our leaders did that, wow. And transparency, if all of our
leaders and corporations were financially transparent, a lot of our
issues would just, they'd be gone.
So those have been my vows since 2015.
And then my new vows as of this year,
two years ago, I started to practice non-sexuality.
So I just decided I was gonna take a one year break
from sex and romance.
And that one year turned into two years.
And then as of this year, I added that to my vows.
Another four years of non-sexuality.
And one of the reasons for that is one of the easiest ways
to corrupt a man is sex.
You want sex, you'll do things that are not in your integrity
to have that sex.
And you got a vasectomy at 25.
Yes.
So yeah, this runs deep.
Yeah, I just-
I mean, you've had girlfriends over the years.
Well, up until two years ago,
I was a very sex driven person.
I was very much chipping away at my integrity sometimes.
Like I remember one time a woman asking me, you know, a handful of years ago,
are you having sex with me
because you want to have sex with me
or because you want to be having sex with someone?
And the answer was I wanted to be having sex with someone.
And that was very painful
that I was not living in integrity.
That relationship was not integral in that scenario.
And part of the cathartic aspect of your walk
was purging you of these dissonances
and kind of coming clean,
doing like a personal and moral inventory of yourself
to kind of disclose your secrets
so that you could emerge clean into Griffith Park.
And part of that was this video that you did on that was basically a sexual inventory, right?
Like a sort of, you know, kind of open disclosure
of, you know, your patterns and your behaviors
as a way of like, you know, basically not letting,
you know, your past, whatever haunts you in your past
continue to haunt you by like disclosing it
and being transparent about it.
Yeah, that was the most,
one of the more painful things that I've done.
And it was a challenging thing to do
because there's other human beings involved,
but it's my past and I want to heal.
That's a big part of the truth and transparency.
It's about healing.
And for me, I have minor trauma,
but definitely pain and mourning over my sexual past.
Why?
Because I was born in a society that did not teach me
how to respect women really.
Like I was learning from movies, from shows.
I was watching movies like American Pie
during my teenage years.
And we didn't even know the word.
I asked some of my closest friends,
we never even heard the word consensuality
when we were in college.
Now I'm not blaming anyone,
but the context is that I didn't know
how to navigate sexual relationships at a young age in a way that were fully consensual
and respectful.
And I feel mourning and I feel pain over that.
And I want to be a part of the healing process.
And I feel like being fully transparent and open and discussing the nuances rather than blaming or putting self guilt
or shame upon myself,
acknowledging what my past has been,
the context of my past and discussing that.
And one of the reasons that I think that is valuable
is because I think millions of young men
and boys experienced just what I did. But today, if you discuss that in public,
you risk being canceled.
And that was definitely an opportunity for me to say that
truth and transparency is more important.
And if people decide that they'd rather
that I'm no longer here and that you're going to cancel
me that that's okay because truth and transparency is much more important.
It's a very tender and very vulnerable thing to talk about, especially on a platform like
this that's so large.
Because it's also a topic that, you know, that video was an hour and a half where I
talked about that.
But I'm glad to be able to talk about it a little bit because at the heart of all of
this is healing.
You know, we'll never be connected with one another if we don't heal inside of ourselves.
And so a big part of this practice has been, a big part of this whole practice has been
healing, becoming whole
and complete.
And so the last vow is I vowed to four years of 100% truth or 100% transparency, telling
only the truth and not telling a lie.
And so I got to the place where I don't have anything I'm guarding or hiding anymore.
I released it all and I've committed to four years of that.
And that's really relevant time for that.
When you look at our presidential situation, imagine if the president only told the truth
and didn't tell a lie and practiced full transparency.
That would dissolve so much of the issues of our time.
And so a big part of my vows and the reason that I renew them in alignment with the presidential
cycle every four years is that I'm actually saying here's what our leaders could be doing
with taking, they don't have to take vows, but just embodying these practices
and showing a person who's a public persona
or has a platform taking these vows.
A big part of it is that I want to influence leaders
to also go to that depth.
What has this experience taught you about happiness?
I would say that it's very clear,
and this sounds cliche,
but more material possessions and more money
does not have a direct correlation with happiness as much as people would often think otherwise.
I think happiness comes from connection,
connection with all the things
that I've been mentioning earlier.
I think happiness comes from a purity inside of us.
I think happiness comes from accepting ourselves just the way we are.
Mr. Rogers, Fred Rogers is one of my inspirations as of the last couple of years. And one of the
things that he said the most is I like you just the way you are. And I believe that liking ourselves
just the way we are, that's how we get happiness. That's how we ascend the materialism and the need for large quantities of money. As soon as we just love ourselves,
as soon as we just like ourselves, that's when wholeness and completeness comes. And
when we're whole and complete, we're no longer comparing, we're no longer blaming, judging.
It's no longer based on the right and wrong and the good and bad and the shoulds.
It then comes down to this more of this just inner state of peace.
And I would say happiness and peace are rather synonymous in my mind.
I would also say integrity and happiness are rather synonymous in my mind.
I highly doubt there is a person out there
who is fully embodying integrity
that is not also substantially happier
than the average person out there.
So I think happiness comes through deep practices,
many deep practices, not just one.
And that happiness is something that we will get,
that we will have, that we will have, that we will experience
only if we put in the work.
Now, of course we'll get little happiness here and there
without putting in the work.
Just buying a new pair of shoes
can give you happiness for a little while.
But true happiness comes from a whole lot of work,
a lot of practice, both mental and physical
and in our relationship with the world around us.
That's super interesting,
this idea of integrity being synonymous with happiness.
What is integrity?
It's being integrous with your values, right?
Your behaviors match your values.
They are in integrity.
But I can't help but think that for the most part,
but I can't help but think that for the most part,
we are captured by the trappings and the incentives of modernity.
Like we're on the hedonic treadmill,
we're doing what is in front of us to do,
we're trying to meet our responsibilities
and we're playing a game that we didn't sign up for,
but lack the ability to actually see at a 10,000 foot view
and feel powerless to escape
because everyone we know is participating in this.
And as much as we can lift inspiration from your example
and the extremities to which you will go
to kind of advocate for a different way of living.
It also feels beyond arm's reach, right?
Like, wow, that's really cool.
Okay, now back to my job.
Like, so what is it,
I guess this is a good way to kind of like,
you know, kind of come to a closing with this.
Like, what is it that you want people to learn
or glean from what you're doing
that they can translate into their lives?
Whether that's just a perspective on their life
or through real specific kind of behavior changes
that would allow them to connect with more meaning
and purpose and vitality
and understand their values.
Cause I think we're living so disconnected,
not just from the planet and where all our products
come from, but disconnected from ourselves,
such that ideas like meaning and purpose
and what are our values and what would my vows even look like
if I were to sit down and write them out?
We don't necessarily all have immediate answers
to those questions.
Those are the result of a deep inner journey
and exploration that you've been on.
So how would you kind of articulate what it is
that you want people to hear and see and take and feel
from this profound experience that you're having.
Yeah, more and more I have also realized
that even in answering that question
about happiness just now,
I felt almost a little bit uneasy
because I've realized my job is not to provide answers.
My job is to stimulate thought. My job is to stimulate critical thought
and to help people to ask questions more than it is to provide answers.
So what I would like for people is to ask some basic questions. Is the way that,
I'll say it from first person, is the way that I'm living in alignment with my values.
Is the way that I'm living the way that I really want to be living?
And if the answer is yes, great.
But if the answer is no, then it's, what can I do to bring my life into alignment?
What can I do to make sure that my actions
are in alignment with my beliefs?
And if that's where you are,
then we get to explore solutions.
We get to explore the other ways that are possible.
And that's different for everyone.
It's especially different when you look at,
we have hundreds of diverse cultures around the world.
And within each culture, there's different scenarios and you're going to
have different ways of learning to align and learning to connect. So that's the
number one thing it's just asking ourselves taking the time in this
society that many of us are so busy and so spread thin that we don't even take the time to ask,
are we living the lives that we want?
Now, the area that I have expertise
to be able to contribute towards is that if your answer
is that you want to be living in a way
that is more in harmony with all life
and less destructive to all life, then that's where
I have now 14 years of dedication to learning that and introducing people to other ways
of doing that.
So my website is just an absolute plethora of resources of how to enter into
these realms.
And the first resource that I would share is I documented the first hundred changes
that I made to transform my life.
And that's just at robingreenfield.org slash 100.
And that's like, you can just go there and you can say, you know what? I'm really excited to start growing my own food.
Or I'm really excited to start reducing the amount of waste and using reusable items.
Or I'm really excited to demonetize my life and learn how to meet my needs through community
rather than through money.
Or I'm really excited to create an environmental activism campaign or start a nonprofit.
My website, what my job is to do is to do this extreme stuff, but not to leave people
hanging.
The idea is not that anybody has to do what I do.
If anybody's saying right now, like, well, I can't do what he's doing, so that's that, next podcast.
That's probably a protection mechanism
because a self protection mechanism
of not having to do anything.
The reality is, is that the heart of all of this
is that there's thousands of things that we can do
to align our actions with our values.
And so my recommendation would be,
figure it out what your most passionate and excited about
when it comes to transforming your life.
And then make goals to make a few of those positive changes.
When I decided to transform my life,
I made an objective of making one positive change per week
for two years, because that's a hundred
positive changes. So imagine if you woke up tomorrow and you're doing a hundred things
differently, you might not even recognize yourself. You might have a crisis, but by
making one positive change at a time, you can create the new you if that's what you're
seeking. And so just as far as some simple things that we can do that can make
a big difference in our lives, you know, growing some of our own food, learning to forage and
harvest our own food from the land, looking into our trash cans and seeing all the ways
that we're creating trash and then finding alternatives, reusable alternatives, learning
to fix some of our own items
rather than buying new ones,
learning just that we don't need
nearly as many things as we do.
So downsizing and simplifying,
getting rid of all the extraneous stuff
that's actually taking away value from your life
and shedding it so that you can bring more value
into your life, using your body
as a means of transportation,
walking, running, biking, skateboarding,
whatever it may be, moving your body via human power,
driving the car less, composting,
turning your food scraps and your plants from the yard
into soil and experiencing that life,
volunteering more in the community, you know, getting rid of more bills, you
know, all the bills that you're like, actually, I don't need this bill and
shedding that.
And then if you have access to a lot of resources, distributing those
equitably, you know, looking at what you're putting on your body.
If you're putting lots of toxic things, toxic chemicals on your body, finding natural alternatives, your food, eating
more whole foods, eating a lot more, you know, vibrant fruits and vegetables that are grown
locally. The list goes on and on, but these are some of my top ways in which they're accessible,
they're things we can do, and it creates a feedback cycle.
We start with what we're most excited about and what empowers us and we build one step
at a time.
And I look at it like a foundation.
You're building the brick of a foundation of a more whatever you want to call it, sustainable,
equitable, more connected life.
And each of these bricks that you build
helps you to add another brick.
And then eventually maybe you can start to do things
you never imagined before.
Your website really is a treasure trove.
Like there's a ton of resources there.
It's pretty cool.
Like plenty for people to read and experience
and lots of videos, like, you know,
everything you want to know about your world
is pretty much on that site.
Yeah.
How long are you gonna be in Griffith Park?
I'll be there until April 20th.
Assuming they let you, April 20th, okay.
I'll still be there.
I might not be sleeping there,
but I'll still be hosting all of my gatherings
in the green space just north of the Greek theater.
I'll be gone in two days from now
till March 16th doing five weeks of Vipassana,
which is something that we didn't dive into,
but five weeks of silent meditation
as well as doing part of it as service.
And then I'll be back March 16th until April 20th.
And then most likely I'm gonna do a little California tour
from San Diego up to San Francisco,
continuing owning nothing,
continuing the experiment of non-ownership
and doing a little tour of maybe a couple dozen cities
or something like that.
And how long do you anticipate
this non-owners ownership experiment to go?
Like is this, have you committed to something?
Do you have a sense of how long you're going to do it or are you taking it one day at a
time?
I've committed to three months.
So till April 20th and that is owning nothing.
Now there's a possibility, like for example, a notebook.
It's like, I'd like to write, a pen I can borrow.
If I'm writing on a piece of paper,
I feel like that paper kind of becomes mine.
It's possible that I end up owning some little things
within this three months, but three months of non-ownership.
And then after that, I'm not sure yet.
I might, what I know for sure is that I'm not gonna end up
owning a whole bunch of stuff right off the bat.
When I start to own things again, I'm gonna accumulate
just the things that help me to meet my basic needs
and help me to also be more effective in my work.
I love the idea, part of me contemplates the idea
of making this my life, my life,
that for the rest of my life, I exist.
By owning nothing, it forces me to be in the public service.
I have to be here in the public
because you can't own nothing and live without people.
It requires people.
And so part of me very much is drawn to the idea
of this is me, that for my entire life,
I practice non-ownership
and I exist in society in this way.
It's also possible that I come in and out of ownership
and maybe I do a couple years of it,
but this is the beginning.
This is a three month experiment
and the idea is that it's putting me down the path
and then I'll see where exactly the path goes.
Right, I mean, you can't write another book
unless you have a computer or a notebook
or something to write on,
but perhaps we could broaden the definition
of borrowing for a period of time or what that means.
Like there's a creep, like once you kind of crack that open
and say, okay, I'm like, you know,
open to a little bit of a shift here.
Then it's like, you have to be very intentional
and wary of like, what comes your way.
Yeah. And the rationale,
like the stories that you'll make up to justify,
like owning something that perhaps is in defiance
of that integrity, that will become like the challenge,
right?
Well, it's all about just calling it what it is.
If I'm not gonna be in a non-ownership, I'm not.
And if I am, I am.
And I don't make, if anybody really gets to know me,
that's what they'll see.
I don't try to fit things into a narrative
that aren't what they are.
That wouldn't be integrity.
So that's why I've moved away from labels and instead,
and that's why I rarely ever make short videos
because this stuff is complex.
And that's my job is to exist within the complexity.
On that note, I can write a book without ownership
because I could simply speak the words
and someone else could dictate them.
Now you're going old school, like, you know,
like serious throwback style to, you know,
the great teachers dictating their wisdom
and knowledge to others, to let others transcribe.
Yes, there's plenty of people that would do that.
I have the book that I recently wrote was volunteer edited.
So someone spent a lot of time editing that as a volunteer.
And then also I could do it at the library.
The library is a wonderful public service
and I could volunteer at the library for my contribution
and then I could write the whole book at the library.
And then, as far as my writing of books goes,
I have this book, I've entered into a practice
where this book is available
as an experiment in the gift economy.
And I don't own this book.
Yeah, you don't own it.
It's compostable.
Any money that's made
in the exchange of this book doesn't go to you.
It goes to, you know, your foundation.
Actually, it doesn't.
So it does go to the foundation,
but then that is all directed to black
and indigenous led nonprofits
that are working on food sovereignty.
I got it.
So it comes through us and then is directed.
If we bring in,
you know, right now we've only managed to donate $1,500
to other places.
It's a big experiment in the gift economy.
And the level I've gone with non-ownership with that
is that it is licensed under a creative commons,
universal license,
which means anybody could reprint that and sell it.
I have zero rights.
There's no copyright on this.
Yeah, I've never seen anyone go to that length
where it's like, have at it.
You wanna like copy this and sell it?
Go for it.
I mean, you're spreading my message.
You know, I'm not attached.
All I'm attached to is sharing the message,
not to the ownership of the message.
So if somebody decided they wanna do that, fine,
but also, yeah, nobody's doing that.
I haven't seen anyone else do that, it's wild.
Well, I appreciate not only kind of like what you're doing,
but how you're doing it, the way you show up in the world,
the hopefulness and the optimism and the enthusiasm
with which you broach topics that are typically associated
with doom and gloom and martyrdom
and all the things that we've talked about today,
you're very much about what you're for
without a lot of energy around like what you're against.
And I think that creates like a welcome mat
for people to kind of come to your page or your website
or your books, your videos, and kind of engage you
from a place of curiosity rather than having to kind
of confront their own biases or their defense mechanisms
around ideas that are difficult,
because they're asking us to really confront the reality
of how we live.
And, you know, we're not all super enthusiastic
about doing that.
Yes, and my biggest, my mother biggest practice right now
is compassionate communication or nonviolent communication,
which is created by Marshall Rosenberg.
And it's a way of learning to, yeah, not judge, not shame,
not guilt, not right or wrong, instead just seeing people
for the full human beings they are.
It's a practice of empathy,
and so it's a language of needs and feelings.
So what I do at all times now is whatever someone does,
I always think to myself, what are the needs
that they're trying to meet and what are they feeling?
And that's what I do for myself as well.
What am I feeling and what am I needing?
And so this dissolves judgments and it dissolves this concepts of shame and such.
And so that's probably what I over the last few years have spent more time on than just
about anything is rewriting my language through
the practice of compassionate communication.
And that's definitely what I want people to get when they're with me.
I want people when they're with me to feel empowered and inspired, to be able to question
themselves deeper than they've ever questioned themselves before.
But from a place of excitement and joy, not from a place of
self-hatred or self-loathing or anything like that.
To see that we are all complex, intricate beings, we live in a very difficult time.
The fact that any human being out there is dedicating any of themselves to a positive
contribution in the world, that is something to celebrate in the times that we live in.
So I celebrate every human being who is here,
listening to this, who hasn't turned away
and is taking any opportunity they can to self-observe,
to self-reflect and to try to use their life
as a way to contribute to society in a positive manner. So lots of celebration
of life and lots of gratitude. That's the other big tool is gratitude.
Well I celebrate you. I appreciate how you show up in the world, the message that you're
carrying. It's deeply inspirational, the level of commitment and the integrity with which you're,
a steward of this message.
And it was really cool to talk to you, man.
I'd love to talk to you more.
Like I only scratched the surface on the number of topics
that I think we could explore.
So consider this volume one and ongoing conversation.
I will be here anytime you want.
All right, buddy.
This is a dream come true to be here with you,
getting to share with so many people.
I've wanted to do this for 10 years.
And so it's a really beautiful honor to be here.
When was the last time you got a shower?
It's been about nine days.
There's a shower in the bathroom.
You're welcome to take a shower.
We're gonna load you up with snacks.
So you gave me a hug.
Did I smell?
No, not at all.
I didn't smell anything.
Oh, wait, just gotta show one last thing.
The toothbrush.
This is how I've been-
If you're listening, you just pull like a literal twig
out of his pocket with like leaves on it
and he's putting it in his mouth right now.
It's a California Bay tree.
It's antimicrobial, it is powerful.
And I would love if you would wanna try it.
It grows around and then also my dental floss
is pine needles and it is, look, look at this.
Okay.
Oh, that one was too dry, but it goes right through.
All right, I think that's our signal
that like ended for today.
RobinGreedfield.org.
I'll link up all your Instagram,
whatever, all the stuff then, and pick up his books.
Good times, dude.
All right, thank you, brother.
Peace.
Yeah, peace.
Yeah.
Peace.
Yeah.
Peace.
Yeah.
Peace.
Yeah.
Peace.
Yeah. Peace. That's it for today.
Thank you for listening.
I truly hope you enjoyed the conversation.
To learn more about today's guests, including links and resources related to everything
discussed today, visit the episode page at richroll.com where you can find the entire
podcast archive, my books, Finding Ultra,
Voicing Change, and the Plant Power Way, as well as the Plant Power Meal Planner at meals.richroll.com.
If you'd like to support the podcast, the easiest and most impactful thing you can do is to
subscribe to the show on Apple Podcasts, on Spotify, and on YouTube, and leave a review and or comment.
This show just wouldn't be possible
without the help of our amazing sponsors
who keep this podcast running wild and free.
To check out all their amazing offers,
head to richroll.com slash sponsors.
And sharing the show or your favorite episode
with friends or on social media
is of course awesome and very helpful.
And finally, for podcast updates, special offers on books, the meal planner, and other
subjects, please subscribe to our newsletter, which you can find on the footer of any page
at richroll.com.
Today's show was produced and engineered by Jason Camiello.
The video edition of the podcast was created by Blake Curtis with assistance by our creative director, Dan Drake.
Portraits by Davy Greenberg, graphic and social media assets courtesy of Daniel Solis.
And thank you, Georgia Whaley, for copywriting and website management.
And of course, our theme music was created by Tyler Piot, Trapper Piot, and Harry Mathis.
Appreciate the love, love the support. See you back here soon.
Peace.
Plants.
Namaste.
You