The School of Greatness - 1061 Rich Roll: Use Your Flaws for Good, Gain Confidence & Achieve Your Goals
Episode Date: January 20, 2021“You feel most alive when you have the courage to step outside of your comfort zone.”Today's guest is Rich Roll. At age 40, after years of struggling with drugs, alcohol, and unhealthy living, he ...dedicated his diet to plants and his body to purposeful action. Today, he is a vegan ultra-endurance athlete and full-time wellness & plant-based nutrition advocate, husband, father of 4 and inspiration to people worldwide as a transformative example of courageous and healthy living. Lewis and Rich sit down for a wide-ranging conversation about setting goals, healthy relationships, and so much more!For more go to: www.lewishowes.com/1061Read Rich’s new book: https://www.richroll.com/vc/ Check out his website: https://www.richroll.com/ Check out Greatness Coaching: www.lewishowes.com/mycoachThe Wim Hof Experience: Mindset Training, Power Breathing, and Brotherhood: https://link.chtbl.com/910-podA Scientific Guide to Living Longer, Feeling Happier & Eating Healthier with Dr. Rhonda Patrick: https://link.chtbl.com/967-podThe Science of Sleep for Ultimate Success with Shawn Stevenson: https://link.chtbl.com/896-pod
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This is episode number 1061 with best-selling author Rich Roll.
It's not about quitting your job. You don't even have to take a risk.
Like if you have this dream that you've been harboring for a decade, but you haven't done anything about it,
what's the least risky thing that you could do to actually breathe a little bit of life into it?
Welcome to the School of Greatness.
My name is Lewis Howes, a former pro athlete turned lifestyle entrepreneur.
And each week we bring you an inspiring person or message to help you discover how to unlock your inner greatness.
Thanks for spending some time with me today.
Now let the class begin.
Aristotle said, we are what we repeatedly do excellence then is not an act but a habit
and andrew carnegie said if you want to be happy set a goal that commands your thoughts
liberates your energy and inspires your hopes i'm excited because my guest today is my good friend
rich roll who i've known for many years.
And at age 40, after years of struggling with drugs, alcohol, and unhealthy living,
Rich dedicated his diet to plants and his body to purposeful action.
Today, he is a vegan ultra-endurance athlete and a full-time wellness and plant-based nutrition advocate.
Husband, father of four, and an inspiration
to people worldwide as a transformational example of courage and healthy living.
He's got some amazing programs, books, and everything else over at his site.
But in this episode, we discuss how to set goals and consistently live them out, the
truth about Rich's personal growth journey, how to use an
addictive personality for positive rewards, what it takes to have a healthy relationship,
how to be more mindful about the information we take in, the four things we can do to gain more
confidence today, and so much more. And if you are looking to get clear on your goals and you
want to accomplish them this year, then make sure to also check out our new program, the Greatness Coaching Mastermind Experience.
It's your high performance system for 2021 and beyond.
It includes coaching, accountability, community, and my new Greatness Playbook, where you get to reflect, plan, and create goals around your dreams and passions for life. If you're interested, make sure to go to lewishouse.com slash mycoach to learn more and apply today.
And while you're listening to this episode, if something sparks your interest, if it inspires
you in any way, then make sure to share it with someone you think in your life should
hear this and would be inspired by this as well.
lewishouse.com slash 1061. You can send out that
link, or you can copy and paste the link wherever you're listening to this. And if this is your
first time here, or you haven't yet subscribed yet, make sure to go to Apple podcast and click
on that subscribe button right now, as well as leave us a rating and review. Because every time
we get someone new to subscribe or leave a review, it helps us spread the message of greatness to more people.
So by doing that, you'll be helping more people today to improve their life.
Okay, in just a moment, the one and only Rich Roll.
Welcome back to one of the School of Greatness podcasts.
I got my man Rich Roll in the house.
Good to see you, brother.
Good to see you. Thanks for having me. It's been a while. Wall in the house. Good to see you, brother. Good to see you.
Thanks for having me.
It's been a while.
Once again.
I know.
It's been a while since I've seen you.
Probably a year and a half, maybe?
Probably something like that.
Yeah, it has been a while.
It's been a while.
I don't feel like I've seen really anyone in the last year.
This is my social outlet, either hosting podcasts or being... This is the first time I've been a guest in person on a podcast in a long time.
I mean, I'm doing my show like yourself.
A lot of it is on Zoom, but I have been able to do some in person.
And that's really like the only social connection that I get outside of my family.
You know, interacting with the cashier at the grocery store.
It's crazy.
I feel like the world needs more human connection to make us happier.
I just feel like it's a challenge if we can't cultivate that more. So hopefully we can figure
something out whether we're in this pandemic longer or we're not. Hopefully we can figure
out a way to be connected more than just over the computer.
Well, human connection is fundamental to being happy.
And I think in general, pre-pandemic,
we're suffering an epidemic of lack of connection.
And now we're in a moment where we're told
that human connection is unhealthy and frightening.
So it's only exacerbating a precondition
that was already bad.
And as dangerous and as deadly and toxic as the coronavirus is,
I think underappreciated is the toll that all of this isolation
is taking on millions of human beings all across the world.
Yeah, and I feel for parents with younger kids.
I mean, you've got kids in their teens.
But I feel for parents with kids under 12,
like in elementary school, middle school.
Those are very developmental years of connection
and human interaction with peers
that I feel like that's got to be very challenging for parents.
I mean, for all parents, but for parents of that age,
as kids, it's got to be tough.
Yeah, I mean, certainly developmentally,
it's so important as a young child.
And like you said, I have two teenage daughters
and I have two older boys in their 20s.
And, you know, the teenage girls, it's been really difficult.
The older one is very social,
and being unable to connect with her friends
and be integrated with her social circle
has been very deleterious to her health.
Now, luckily, there are technological tools.
They're in touch with each other all day long.
We've got to use what we can, I suppose. So
thank God there are things like Zoom and FaceTime and Skype and the telephone to keep us connected.
Can you imagine enduring this, you know, without those tools and how much more difficult that
might have been? Do you think it'd be scarier or more fear without technology or less fearful?
If we were just reading newspapers and seeing what was on TV but didn't have access to the other technology we have?
I mean, that's a great question.
Certainly, social media foments people's fears and I think has ratcheted up just how emotionally triggered we all are,
irrespective of whatever tribe we subscribe to.
We can go down the whole rabbit hole on social media's
impact on the current cultural and political divide,
but it's deeply concerning to me to kind of canvas
how we're navigating really important issues.
And the inability for us to communicate effectively and in a healthy way,
I think, is very damaging to the fabric of our United States.
And it's going to be interesting how this plays out in the future.
But I'm concerned about it.
Yeah.
I'm curious.
A lot of people know your story about how you became overweight.
You couldn't walk up the stairs without having to catch your breath.
You were eating junk food all the time.
And you made a decision to change your life and really go down this path of veganism, eating more mindfully, training like a machine for ultra marathons, things
like that.
We've interviewed a lot of the same people or people in the same space.
I'm curious, what do you think is the reason why most people give up on their goals or
will never achieve their goals?
Because you were at a point where things got bad
and you made a decision to shift and create goals and then stuck to them over decades.
Why do you think most people create a goal and then they can't achieve them?
I think the answer to that is complicated. I can say just based on my own experience that
achieving a goal is a lot easier when you're in a lot of pain. And the pain that you're in
exceeds the fear of the unknown. You know what I mean? You're in so much pain that you're willing
to almost do anything to get out of it and that's where you were
at that's when you know you're in a great place to change so I always say to
people that are going through a hard time like try to view it as an
opportunity like what is the lesson that you're here to look that you're meant to
be learning right now and try to leverage the potential energy that's
packed into that pain to transform yourself.
Ironically, change is always available to all of us in every moment, right?
We don't have to be in pain in order to change.
It's just that it's difficult.
It's a lot harder to do it that way.
In terms of people setting goals and being unable to achieve them, I think that's a function
of a couple things.
I mean, first of all,
have you set the right goal for yourself? Like if that goal isn't getting you excited, then perhaps it's not as aligned with your innate values as you might have suspected that it was.
So I think a lot of people set goals without having done enough interior work to really understand themselves to appreciate what might be the
right goal for them to set.
So I think that's one thing.
So if it's not the right goal, it's probably going to be impossible to achieve it because
your life is not designed to achieve that.
That's not what you're meant for.
It's not what you're meant for.
And perhaps it's just not, you know, there's something inside of you that maybe you're not even aware of that is misaligned with that. Like if somebody
comes to me and says, I want to do an Ironman or I want to run a marathon, like we were talking
before the podcast, you want to run a marathon. Usually my first question to people like that is
why? Like, what is it that you're trying to learn? How is that process going to lead to your growth?
If they can answer that question and there's clarity around why this is important and what this will ultimately do in terms of moving their life path forward, then that's great.
But if they're like, it sounds cool or I just woke up one day and decided, then is that really a goal that's going to have staying power?
Because that morning is going to arrive when it's cold and rainy out.
You're not going to want to go.
And the calendar says you've got to do this today,
and you're not going to want to do it.
And that's where the rubber meets the road
in terms of whether you're actually going to follow through
on this commitment that you made to yourself
or you're going to flake and look for the escape hatch. Yeah, i'll just sleep in this morning i'll do it tomorrow i'll do it later
whatever it may be okay so that's the first thing you said the first part why people don't achieve
goals was there another part another reason um they don't have the right goal in mind
aligned with their values yeah i think that I think that achieving goals is hard.
Just in general. The truth is a lot of people don't appreciate the fact that
doing anything exceptional requires a lot of work, right? And it requires that anonymous
work that you do when no one's looking
that doesn't you know trend on Instagram or Twitter and and you know when the
going gets tough and you're conflicted over what it is that you're gonna do on
that day it's easy to cave in and so there's a level of like conviction and
commitment to self that's required that I think you develop
over time with some level of resilience and you know the persistence that comes with that but
if you don't appreciate that doing something hard is going to test you and is going to compel you
to get out of your comfort zone then you're going to struggle. Yeah. I really believe that people who are living a good life
have the biggest challenge because things are already going good enough. Like everything's
okay. It's good. You're not required to make enough effort to get to the next level. Right.
And it's almost like we need something horrible to be happening or something really struggling.
We might be doing well in our finances, but 300 pounds overweight and sick and feeling
bad in order for us to finally say, wait a minute, I need to change this one thing.
I talk about this a lot on the show that I feel like I wish we could learn a way to improve
our life when things are okay or when things are a little less than okay.
But most of the time, it takes something drastic, a near near death experience for ourself, an injury, a sickness,
someone dying close to us, a bankruptcy, a divorce,
a heartache and a breakup.
Why do you think it's so hard for us to change
and improve our life when things are good
or a little less than good?
Well, I think that we delude ourselves into thinking when things are
good, we delude ourselves into thinking they're always going to be good. And we also delude
ourselves into believing that our lives are static in that regard. And the truth is, is that everything
is always in flux. That flux may be imperceptible in the moment, but in truth, and I say this all
the time, every thought that you entertain,
every word that comes out of your mouth,
every interaction that you have with another human being,
every reaction that you have to whatever stimulus
is coming your way, is either moving you forward
in your life towards your aspirations
or some level of self-actualization,
or you're regressing back to some former,
less evolved version of yourself. And the more you can kind of be present with that and appreciate
that truth, then you realize that as good as your life may be, there's always growth to be had. And
all of us, no matter who you are, have blind spots. You may think you're doing great in all
these areas,
but you need people in your life
who are giving you feedback saying,
I know you think that you're rocking it out over here,
but you're kind of off base on this other thing.
I think we all need a council of elders
or a board of advisors who are willing to be honest with us
to say, look, you're not seeing this over here. You need to redirect.
And then you're able to make those adjustments without having to reap the consequences of some
crisis because you're kind of, you know, jagging, jigging and jagging, you know, along the way
and course correcting as you go, as opposed to hitting a wall and then going, holy shit,
I thought I was good.
Only now do I realize that I've been doing all these things all along that led to this
point.
We're our own worst enemies when it comes to objectively assessing where we're at.
Ourselves.
Yeah.
Of course.
We should be asking our friends and family and peers all the time,
hey, what do you think I can improve?
What am I doing really well that I could do better at?
What are the things I'm not doing well that I should be doing better at?
But a lot of us don't want to ask those questions.
We don't want the truth.
Who is it?
Richard Feynman, I think it was. It's something like our job is to be something like,
I'm going to completely butcher this,
but it's something like our job is to be honest
with ourselves, but we're the ones that are
most easily deluded by ourselves, you know what I mean?
Like, that's why you need those outside sources
to provide you with that feedback.
And that's why when you look at somebody
we've both interviewed that we're friends with,
Jesse Itzler, that's why I have so much respect
for somebody like that whose life was going really well
and he's like, it's too good, you know,
like I need to bring David Goggins into my life
to mix things up or I need to go, you know,
to this monastery and sit with these monks for a while
because he realized that his life was just cruising along
and that unless he created interruptions for himself, that
he would just live that way in ease and comfort for as long as the universe would allow him
to.
Very few people do that.
Right.
I mean, it takes an extraordinary person to do that.
When you're making all the money in the world, when everything you touch turns to gold, when
you've got the family, the kids, the relationship, it's like, I've got good friends.
It's hard to say, I'm going to push
myself harder. I'm going to step up and try to transform myself even more. Because some people
might say, why work that hard to do that for yourself? Just enjoy your life, relax. You don't
need to do all these crazy things to transform. The truth is, and anybody who's done hard things in their life knows this, that you feel most alive when you have the courage to step outside of your comfort zone and test yourself and put yourself in an uncomfortable situation where you're going to have to rise to the occasion.
Those heightened moments are when you feel most fulfilled, most purposeful, and most
kind of connected to yourself.
And I think Jesse understood that as somebody who had done ultra marathons before.
He knew how he felt when he was endeavoring to do something that perhaps he thought not
possible. And I think, you know, when you live this, our culture is set up
with this programming that we're all meant to aspire to that level of ease and comfort and
luxury. But what's missing is the fact that what actually provides the sense of satisfaction and fulfillment is getting outside
of that and testing yourself. And I think for a lot of people, they don't understand that until
they, you know, get a taste of what, you know, Jesse experienced, which is, look, I got all this
stuff, but I'm not content or as fulfilled as I would like to be, and I need to step outside of that in order
to reconnect with that thing that fundamentally is part of being a human. Yeah, and I think you
could have all of the outer fulfillment in the world, but you're still lying to yourself until
you create inner fulfillment. And that usually comes through mastery of some type of practice
or overcoming something challenging on a consistent basis where you say,
okay, I'm building confidence because I did something that's hard. It was hard for me to
learn, hard for me to overcome. I think the more things we learn how to overcome on a consistent
basis, the happier we become. Yeah, to be sure. I mean, and it,
you know, to kind of underscore your point, it's not about external validation. It's about your
relationship to yourself. Yes.
You know, and you know when your head hits the pillow at night and when you wake up in the it's not about external validation. It's about your relationship to yourself. Yes.
And you know when your head hits the pillow at night
and when you wake up in the morning
what that relationship looks like.
And if that's missing something,
then perhaps that's a little nudge or a call to action
that you need to change things up a little bit.
So when did this moment, was this about 20 years ago
when you started to transform your food,
your nutrition, training?
14 years ago. 14 years ago. you started to transform your food, your nutrition, training. 14 years ago.
14 years ago.
How does someone, because a lot of people go through these,
you know, especially this year, losing a job, a breakup,
a relationship, a health scare, whatever it may be,
losing a friend or a parent is happening a lot right now,
unfortunately, for people.
And then people decide to take action and say,
okay, I'm going to change my life and I'm going to take action. I'm going to commit to this and have these new goals. I'm
going to go after it. I'm going to let go of sugar and be vegan, whatever it is. How does someone
sustain it for 14 years and beyond? Because sometimes they'll do that for two years and then
fall back into the old patterns. How do we stay consistent in growing the way you did? Because
you used to drink a lot of alcohol?
Yeah, I used to eat horrible not trained all these things and you've been consistent
14 years. Yeah, I think that I think the key is
that as
important as it is to set big goals that scare you and hold this lofty aspiration for a
Better version of who you are. Those are like North Stars
to help guide your direction. But once you kind of set those, at least what I've done is I just
lodged them in the back of my mind. And then it's really just about what's happening in the moment.
Again, it goes back to the present. When I got sober, the idea that I was
never going to drink alcohol again, are you kidding me? Like, I have to go to a bachelor party in six
months, and then I've got this thing in Vegas, and then I have to go to, you know, it's like,
how am I going to get through those things without drinking, right? It's completely overwhelming.
And I think when people set a goal, they start future tripping on that kind of stuff. And then it seems overwhelming. And ultimately, that leads to abandoning it.
today I just have to not drink. That's all I have to worry about. Or today I just need to, you know, make sure that I don't, you know, end up face planting in Haagen-Dazs before I go to bed.
Like that's the only thing that that's your job. Like in terms of moving. Yeah. It's like,
what are you doing right now? What's the next right choice that you're making?
And when you break it down into its smallest components, then it becomes digestible.
So it's about putting distance between yourself and whatever that imagined future might be because it hasn't happened yet and shouldn't take up any mental energy.
And just focusing on what you're doing right now.
We were talking about back to the marathon before the podcast.
We were talking about how you want to do this marathon.
And it's how overwhelming because it's longer than you've ever run before.
And I'm like, just worry.
You can do it.
It's just about preparation.
One day at a time.
One day at a time.
Today I'm running eight miles.
That's all I've got to worry about.
You know what I mean?
And I think when you begin to master these small tasks and you're just eating away very, very gradually at these goals,
and you're just eating away very, very gradually at these goals,
over time they become less intimidating and much more doable. And I think along the way, as you master these tasks, they become rote.
So then they don't expend a lot of mental energy.
You're like, oh, this is just what I do.
So your actions start to align with a value system.
And I think when your actions align with your values, then it's less about achieving a goal
and more about just acclimating your lifestyle around these various actions and principles.
They just become who you are. And the goal is achieved not because you're working hard towards
it, but because it just becomes
the person that you are. It's part of your identity. Yeah. Like this, I am this thing.
I am a sober individual. I am a vegan. I'm somebody who runs. I'm somebody who doesn't
eat animal products. I'm somebody who doesn't drink. Yeah. There's no exceptions. You just
are that. Right. And I think a lot of people don't decide to create new identities.
Is it important that we should be thinking of a new identity all the time or just getting
clear on the values we want to live by and then become that identity?
Yeah, the latter.
I mean, I don't think about like, oh, these are my, you know, these, I don't think about,
I'm trying to become this other person.
I just spend time thinking about what's important
to me and how can I align my actions with that set of principles, right? That's all that it requires.
And I think in furtherance of that point, people tend to wildly overestimate what they can achieve
in a year and wildly underestimate what they can achieve in a
decade. You know, I'm much older than you. I'm 54. I've been, you know, trying to iterate on myself
for many, many years. And, you know, if you Google me, there's a narrative that makes it look like
I snapped my fingers and all these things happened overnight. But in truth, like,
you know, my personal growth trajectory started when I was 31
and I found myself in a treatment center as a hopeless alcoholic. And then it was another 10
years before I figured out I had all these blind spots around other habits that were leading me
astray and had to address those. And it's just been one step at a time of moving forward. I mean, I remember as I was driving over here,
I have this vivid memory of coming to your apartment
the first time I met you,
and I was going to be on your podcast,
and you were going to be on mine.
It's like, what, five years ago, maybe?
You had like, no, it had to be like seven years ago.
Seven years ago when we first launched.
Because we started right around the same time.
Yeah, you started a few months before me.
Seven years ago, yeah.
And you had, like, no furniture in your apartment.
Nothing.
And you had this mic, and I was like, you need a better mic.
And, like, we both were trying to figure out this podcast thing.
Yeah, how do we get people to figure out what the download button is?
Right.
Yeah.
And if I was to tell you then, you were going to have these millions of people that care deeply about what you do
and that you were going to be in this beautiful studio doing this thing.
Like, you would have been like, there's no way.
And how did you achieve that?
Just like, just another episode.
Like, one more guest.
Like, who am I interviewing today?
You know, you just stay in the process.
Divorce your emotional attachment to outcomes and future destinations and just concentrate on doing the best job with what you've got right in front of you and fall in love with the process.
And that process being an expression of that value system and what you care about, that's where you're in a position to actually succeed.
Then you wake up 10 years later and you're like,
holy, I'm in this fancy studio.
How did that happen?
Right.
And the outcomes don't matter as much anymore.
You have the goal, but you're enjoying the process so much.
It's not about that.
The little wins are so exciting.
You just love your life.
And when you love your life and you're happier and you're more appreciative and grateful,
you're going to start attracting more of those good things in your life right right
the opportunities you know come to you yeah you start chasing you you don't chase them exactly
because suddenly you're carrying a residence that's attractive and people want to be around
that and so you're acting more like a tractor beam rather than running around,
expending your energy, trying to get people interested in what you're doing,
because you're focused on doing something exceptional that's an authentic expression
of who you are. And ultimately that becomes attractive to the world around you.
Yeah. You mentioned in the last time we had you on that one of the biggest challenges you have
is you have too many opportunities now and you're recovering people pleaser and you say yes to a lot of things that then pull you away from your current projects and mission that you have.
How have you been in the last year and a half since then?
I mean, I still struggle with that.
You know, I'm still a hopeless people pleaser.
Do you like me, Lewis?
Yeah, yeah. Was
this okay? Yeah. Right. You know, it's funny when the, when the pandemic started, I thought,
I'm also like naturally introverted. So I thought this'll be awesome. Like I can just like, I have
an excuse to like, not, you know, follow through on any of these, all these commitments that I made
to other people to get involved in their stuff
because I can't travel and I can't do it.
So now I can just do my thing, you know,
and I don't have to, you know, say yes to anything.
I can say no to a bunch of stuff.
Over time, I figured out that I was much more
of a social creature than I suspected
because like everybody,
I need that human connection as well.
I would say that I've gotten a lot better,
but out of necessity, just because,
you know, when you're focused on your thing,
there just isn't as much room as you would like
to get involved in other people's stuff.
Yeah.
But it's still difficult for me, like I, you know,
somebody will call me and be like, I'm doing this thing,
and my instinct is always like, yeah, let me help you,
I wanna do this, I to do that and it becomes
hard so you have to be it's back to your values like what is what's your core what is your core
i hate the word mission but like you know what is it that you're actually doing um what's a
distraction and what's a value add and you know sometimes it's easy to distinguish those things
and but sometimes it's not.
Would you say you have a very addictive personality?
Yeah, I'm like recovering.
I spent 100 days in a treatment center for addiction.
So, yes, I'm a highly, highly addictive personality.
How does someone use their addictive personality in their favor for good because you've changed it to be
more in your favor for good but still have you know this I know it's not
consuming you but it's like this people-pleasing mentality same as me
which is kind of addictive thing yeah they want to break how do people break
that for all the bad things in their life and use it for all good things?
Well, first, let me say on the subject of addiction, like I'm a recovering alcoholic. I've been in recovery for a very long time.
12 Steps Saved My Life, like the most important thing to me is like staying sober,
helping another alcoholic achieve sobriety that being said I think addiction lives on a
spectrum like I'm perhaps at one more extreme end of that but you know for
every you know junkie that can't pull the needle out of their arm there's
millions of people that can't put the phone down or find themselves repeatedly in
unhealthy relationships or unable to stay out of the casino or whatever it is. Maybe they just
can't stop eating chocolate. I think we all have a variety of addictive tendencies, no matter who
you are, even if you're grounded and healthy. That being said, figuring out how to, first of all,
like figuring out how to quell the negative impacts of that is important. And you know,
I've learned many tools over the years from surrender to service and at the same time,
being gentle with yourself and saying, okay, this is my disposition.
Like, I can't always be fighting it, but how can I channel it into something productive for myself?
So whether, you know, I'm working on a book or I'm building my podcast or whatever other creative pursuit it is,
my podcast or whatever other creative pursuit it is, I've been successful because I know how to focus on something and blot out the world and go all in on it. Perhaps that is at times unhealthy,
but I think it's okay as long as you acknowledge that and understand that that pendulum has to swing back to center, right?
Like, if you look at the buckets of your life, like, what's most important?
Like, I have my recovery, I have my family, I have my career, I have my friends, whatever
those buckets may be in your life.
I think it's okay to be, you know, really focused on one at a time.
The idea that you're gonna give all those buckets
the equal amount of attention on a daily basis
is unrealistic.
It's really hard, yeah.
Which is why I have strong opinions
about this idea of balance.
But you have to make sure that you don't become
so immersed or obsessive or compulsive about this one thing
that you can pull yourself out of it and have the conscious awareness to say okay it's time for me
to now reinvest that energy in one of these other buckets or how can i apportion my energy and my
time so that i'm making sure that the things that are important in my life are being tended to and attended to. Yeah. What's the biggest addiction that's holding you back still? Biggest challenge.
You know, people pleasing is a big one. Perfectionism is a big one. You know, I end up
being a bottleneck in a lot of stuff. This is a conversation we've had a
million times. So I'm back to day one. I still fight this battle. I'm better, though. I am better.
That's good. What do you think it is? Why do you think people live in perfectionism? Why is that
a thing for so many people? It's a control mechanism. And I think it's also about external
validation. Like, this has to be perfect or I won't be loved. Or if this isn't perfect,
then people are going to think differently of me than I want them to think. So I think a lot of it
is based on trying to control external perceptions of you, and that's rooted in self-esteem, right?
Like if your self-esteem is fragile, then you're going to want to make sure
that every step that you make is absolutely perfect
so you're not giving anyone an excuse to not accept you.
Yeah.
How do we overcome that, you think?
Because there's so many people that'll say
that they have this, they don't create.
You know this a lot. I know, there's a lot.
I mean, a lot of people don't put out their dreams.
I asked someone on a, on a training that I did a month ago, I asked my group and I said,
how many of you had a goal or a dream for the last year and you haven't taken action
on it?
A lot of people virtually raised their hand.
I said, how many of you have had that same dream for five years?
A lot of people kept their hand up.
How many of you have had this dream for 10 years and you haven't done it, but it keeps
ruminating in your mind that you want to do it?
And a lot of people still keep their hand up for 10 years plus.
And I go, that's like the need for it to be perfect is what I'm hearing from a lot of
people is what holds them back from putting it out there.
Or the fear of judgment, the fear of failure, the opinions of other people. But why are we so afraid?
Well, I think that's going to vary depending upon the individual. I mean,
what you're alluding to, that sense of perfectionism leads to analysis paralysis,
right? You're just not going to put anything out into the world unless it's perfect.
So, of course, you never end up doing anything, right?
Nothing.
Because you're never going to live up to your own imagined standard that you've set for yourself.
And that fear, I think, is what holds a huge amount of people back.
But it's more complicated than that. At the same time,
I think there are a lot of people who, for whatever psychological, emotional reasons,
are just terrified of stepping out of whatever routine they've created for themselves.
And maybe that's a result of the way that they were parented or some trauma that they experienced.
of the way that they were parented or some trauma that they experienced.
If you're somebody who grew up poor and now you're in a job that pays the bills and you have this dream, but that dream involves taking risk, including financial risk,
then that person's going to have a little bit more trepidation than maybe somebody else.
more trepidation than maybe somebody else. And I think it's that not knowing
that creates an additional paralysis on top of that.
But if we knew what would happen,
it wouldn't be as fun.
You know what I mean?
If we knew what the end result would be.
But everybody has a different relationship with risk.
Yeah.
You know, like you're somebody who has a different relationship with risk. You're somebody who has a healthy relationship with risk.
I think what happens is you take a risk, and if it succeeds, then that reframes your relationship with risk, and you're willing to take another one, and maybe that next step is going to be a little bit broader and a little bit riskier than the one that came before it.
before it. But if you've lived your life in a certain way in accordance with some set of parameters, like this is what I do and I go to school and I get this job and I'm going to get
my pension, and they've never stepped outside of that and challenged themselves in any fundamental
real way, then you telling them you got to try these other things is going to be scary and
intimidating. So what I always say to those people is it's not about quitting your job you don't even
have to take a risk like if you have this dream that you've been harboring for a decade but you
haven't done anything about it what's the least risky thing that you could do to actually breathe
a little bit of life into it like maybe you want to play the clarinet or whatever it is you want
to be a stand-up comedian like write a joke and just that's it that's all you have to do just today write a joke
i'm not asking you to go on stage i'm not asking you to quit your job just do that one thing and
i think when you take it's back to the whole like micro step what are you doing in this moment um
you know concept and i think when think when you take those little steps
that have very little risk, you know, attached to them,
over time you create a little bit of momentum
and a little bit of emotional attachment to that.
And then suddenly the next step is slightly less scary
than the one that came before it.
And so you can kind of iterate on that over time
until suddenly you
wake up and you're like, oh, I got like 15 minutes of jokes here. And then you have to take the big
risk and get up on stage. Or maybe you just call your friend and you tell your friend these jokes.
That's less risky, right? But what is it that you can do that's just enough outside of your
comfort zone, but not so outside of your comfort zone
that it's going to paralyze you.
Yeah.
What do you think are the three things, the three biggest things we could do to increase
our confidence and belief in ourself?
Speaking as somebody who lacked confidence as a young person, I mean, I think the most
powerful thing to two things, I don't know if I can think of three, but two that come to mind are, one, if you accomplish something that's hard, particularly something that maybe you thought you weren't capable of, that's immediately going to boost your esteem.
That's it.
It has nothing to do with external validation.
Again, it's about your relationship with yourself.
The second thing is that self-esteem comes from performing esteemable acts.
Those esteemable acts can be on behalf of yourself, like what I just talked about,
but they also come from performing selfless acts for others.
but they also come from performing selfless acts for others. So being of service to somebody else
is like a superhighway to self-esteem.
So if you're not feeling great about yourself,
you're basically miring in your own self-pity,
and that does no good for anybody.
So the best thing you can do is avail yourself
to help another human being.
And that can be as simple as calling up a friend
who you know is having a hard time
and just listening to them.
You don't have to solve their problem,
but just give them your time.
It's the most valuable thing that you have.
It doesn't have to be going to a soup kitchen
and feeding those less fortunate.
It can be that.
It can be anything.
But what I found and what I've learned
over many years of practicing this
is that you basically get outside of yourself
and you realize that you're living in your head
and you're running, you're looping this story
that you're telling yourself about who you are
and what your limits are.
And the minute that you make yourself available to help somebody else,
it quiets all of that. All of that goes away. And when you make that a practice,
I can almost guarantee, I can guarantee that you're going to feel better about yourself
because you're making a difference for other people.
You always boost confidence when you do that.
I had two other things that came to my mind.
One is being your word to yourself.
That's a good one.
Being your word to other people and showing up the way you say you're going to be on time
or I'm going to help you with this thing and you actually follow through, that builds confidence
with yourself where you say, I'm going to walk three miles today.
Doing it and completing it as opposed to I'm going gonna walk three miles today, doing it and completing it,
as opposed to I'm gonna walk three miles today
and then you don't do it,
you lose confidence with yourself
because you aren't able to follow through on your word.
So that's an esteemable act on behalf of yourself.
Exactly.
Right, and I think, you know,
a close cousin to that is being gentle with yourself, right?
And understanding that we're all flawed human beings
and we mess up and we're not perfect.
So when you find yourself in the wake of such a misstep
to be like, it's okay.
Don't beat yourself up all day.
Yeah, like how can you practice self-love
and forgiveness of yourself?
Yeah, that's powerful.
I think also something else that came up for me was
using some of your time to follow the things that you feel like you're meant to follow.
Like following your dreams, your goals, a hobby, a passion, whatever it may be, using at least some
of your time dedicated towards what's in your heart telling you you should be doing. Yeah,
I think in a macro sense, what you're saying is to live your life more intentionally
and less reactively.
And that's become more difficult in our technology-infused era where it's so easy to just look at our phone and take ourselves out of the moment that we have
to be more rigorous with how we use our time and create boundaries around that quiet time,
that creative space, even if it's just a few minutes in the morning before you start just
responding and reacting to everything that's around you.
What's been the hardest thing for you to overcome in terms of using technology? Is it the phone first thing in the morning? Is it
on the phone too much? Is it watching Netflix too long? What's the thing for you you've had
to overcome in the last year? I mean, it's a struggle with the phone. You know what I mean?
Because- It's used for everything.
And for people like us, it's part of what we do, right? It's our business.
It's not like I'm not going on, you know, it's not like my relationship with the phone is to
see what my friends are doing on Facebook. It's like, I need to be posting these things.
Marketing and promoting and yeah.
And I think, you know, what I've had to do is just understand that I'm, you know, I'm there
to broadcast. And so, you know,
I don't get involved in Twitter spats and all that kind of stuff. Like every once in a while,
I mean, I think like, you know, Twitter for me, it's like, that's the, you know,
you can go down a rabbit hole. Well, I mean, I, I just, I'm scrolling. Like I don't get involved
in stuff. Like I post the podcast and I share, you know, interesting things from time to time
or an article that I think is worthy or a film that I think would be interesting for people to watch.
Like I'm, but I don't get involved in a lot of back and forth.
But you need to watch it.
But I'll watch it.
You know what I mean?
I'll be like, this drama is unfolding and I have to see what's, you know, how this is going to play out.
And it's not good.
So, you know, I go through periods where I take those apps off my phone.
And it's not good.
So, you know, I go through periods where I take those apps off my phone.
You know, if I have to use them, I'll make sure that it's on a browser on my computer, which makes it just a little bit more difficult.
You listen to a lot of Cal Newport for that, the deep work.
Well, Cal is like, you know.
He has no social media.
I know.
It's like, you know, good luck getting in touch with that guy.
You know what I mean?
Nice, yeah.
He's on email.
But, you know, it's like, you know, there could be all kinds of stuff going on on the on social networks about his books and
he would have no idea no idea and you know what he's probably happier happier more productive
certainly freer yeah more connected to his family and friends probably freer that's interesting so
the phone has been a challenge for you yeah Yeah, of course. Especially in a pandemic when we're stuck at home,
you know, it just gets ratcheted up. I mean, how does that look for you?
Some days I'm really good. Other days I'm like nine hours on my phone. Jeez, what was I doing?
You know, it's like a lot of it is work related and connecting with my team on FaceTime or talking
to my girlfriend or whatever it may be. But just screen time, nine hours.
I saw one day, I was like, usually it's like six or seven,
but I saw nine hours.
I was like, man, what was I doing all day?
And so it's just being very deliberate
with our time on the phone.
And I use my phone a lot more than my computer also.
So it's like, okay, if I was on my computer
for five hours a day creating or something,
it'd be similar.
But it's challenging.
Well, I think the more important metric, it's less about time and it's more about how much of that is being used for consumption and how much of it is being used for creation.
If you're using it to create, that's a different relationship than it is to just mindlessly scroll and consume what other people are creating.
One of the reasons I love the podcast is because it's like an hour or two of no phone.
And just connecting with someone and just learning, creating, being.
It's one of the things I love about it.
It's like you have to put that aside.
You can't have a computer or a phone.
You've got an iPad in front of you, though. Well can take notes here. It's got my questions here, but I'm not using it for something
One of the things I did I bought this last night
I was like, you know what?
I always tell myself that I'm not gonna have my phone in my room or I'm not gonna check it in the first
10 or 20 minutes or something and I do it for a couple days and I always fall back in that pattern for whatever reason like I get lazy I just plug it in and then I'm like oh something's happening
in the morning and I never feel good when I do that and so last night I actually went on Amazon
and I was like I need to find the most simplest alarm clock and also when I was interviewing Jay
Shetty he was like it's never good to wake up to an alarm you don't want to be alarmed when you
wake up you're automatically in fear and reaction yeah I was like I've's never good to wake up to an alarm. You don't want to be alarmed when you wake up. You're automatically in fear and reaction.
I was like, I've been doing that my whole life.
And I was like, how can I get an alarm clock that just has like nature sounds,
that just has like birds, you know, water, and wake me up more relaxed.
Right.
And I'm excited to try it.
And I'm like, okay, if I can have an alarm that's not alarming,
but wakes me up peacefully,
and my phone is in another room, then I feel like I can really start to create different habits for myself.
So I'm excited about that.
It's good.
I mean, I have pretty hard and fast rules about the morning time.
The morning, for me, is my most creative part of the day.
for me is my most creative part of the day.
And I try to really honor that by not getting on the phone and doing meditation and journaling and creative work.
I don't schedule any phone calls or meetings before 12.
You know, that's when, after I do that, I train.
And like, that's really, you know, I'm fortunate in that I'm self-employed
and I have control over my schedule. And I fully understand that, you know, that, I train. And that's really, I'm fortunate in that I'm self-employed and I have control over my schedule
and I fully understand that that's a luxury
and a lot of people don't have that.
But I think really being mindful and intentional
about that first hour after you wake up in the morning
is super important because you're setting the tone
for how the whole day is gonna go.
And if you wake up alarmed and then
immediately go to your phone and you're just reacting, then you're not in control of your
life. Your life is being dictated and controlled by external forces. Now, you know, we all have,
you know, we all, you know, we all have to respond to the world, right? But if you can just delay that a little bit
and use that morning time to connect with yourself,
to remind yourself about why it is that you're doing
whatever it is you're going to do on that day,
I think you're in a better position
to just be more present and responsive
rather than reactive when the stresses of the day start
getting hurled at you. Yeah. Being more in reflection mode than reaction mode, I think is
key. What do you think is the thing that's going to help take you to the next level over the next
decade? 54 right now? Yeah, I'm 54. What do you think over the next six years? What's the next level?
What is the next level for you?
I mean, I don't, you know, to be honest,
I don't really think of my life in those terms.
Like I don't, it's not like, oh, I'm doing this,
but I really want to be here.
Maybe it's not creating more.
It's just being something greater,
whether that's being more intentional in my marriage
or relationships or being more intentional in my marriage or relationships or
being more intentional here, what's going to make you a better version of you?
Whether it's serving more people or doing or pulling less on projects, you know.
It's hard because like, I'm really happy right now and I'm really happy with my life and I feel
so grateful that I get to do what I do. And if this was it, like, I'm good.
Like, it doesn't have to be,
I'm not doing it to get to some other place.
And I think that the thing that I wanna be able to master
that I have struggled with is just being able to
live more in joy
and appreciation of that.
Like intellectually, I understand it.
I can connect with that gratitude when I focus on it,
but it doesn't come easy to me.
Like I'm still a grinder.
And this vocation that I built for myself,
I'm very proud of. But when it began,
there was a level of like financial desperation that I was in and uncertainty. And I leveraged
those as motivation. And I was able to kind of climb out of that and create something that now
is very stable and successful. But I still operate with a little PTSD from that.
Really?
And feel like I have to keep, you know,
I have to like, it's got to be like this.
Like I hold onto it very tightly.
And I think the opportunity for me
is to mature out of that trauma
and just be more in joy and appreciation.
The trauma from 14 years ago. So that I can have more fun throughout the day yeah and i think also with that focus and that addictive tendency i tend
to you know live my life like this um which cuts me off more than I would like from friends and intimacy with people that I care about,
if I'm being really honest.
Wow, that's interesting.
So I have great relationships with my kids
and my marriage is great and all of that,
but I could do better with my friendships for sure.
And I think the pandemic has brought that into focus
in a way that maybe I wouldn't have appreciated.
So, I always look at situations like this,
like, oh, rather than the pandemic happening to us,
how can we look at it as happening for us?
Like, where is the growth opportunity here?
And that's kind of what's been coming up for me.
Where do you think you're lacking intimacy the most?
I think just in being more available to my friends.
You know what I mean?
Like, I'm busy.
I got this going on.
You know, like, we just get caught up in our lives, you know?
And then our lives move quickly, you know?
I can tell you as somebody who's older than you,
it's like, wow.
I'm 54, really?
Because I feel like I'm 30.
But then I'm like, my beard's white, dude.
You know?
And I want to be a better friend, I think.
So I'm 37.
Where were you at 37?
I was seven years sober and
very intent
on becoming
a successful lawyer in Los
Angeles. You were still a lawyer then?
Oh yeah, I was a lawyer until
I was 40. So I practiced law
for, I don't know,
15 years or something.
Yeah, I was working across the street here as a lawyer.
Jamming, you know, the square peg into a round hole,
determined to make it work,
and blindly unaware that I was chasing the wrong goal.
You know, I've chased the wrong goal.
And out of sheer determination and perseverance,
you know, and holding on tightly to
it, refusing to see what was obvious to a lot of people, which was that like, I don't think this
is the right career for you. But you were holding onto it to achieve it and you achieved a certain
level of success. I was living my life in accordance with a set of rules that I don't
want to say the wrong thing. They weren't yours.
Yeah, they weren't mine.
And I didn't have the conscious awareness to understand
that I was living my life in accordance with somebody else's rule book
and not my own.
And I wasn't self-integrated enough to realize that.
And it took another crisis for me to say,
I never really asked myself what it is
that I wanted. Like I just was the guy who, you know, got to try to get the good grades and get
into the best school that I could and, and, you know, go to grad school and get the best job.
And then, you know, to wake up at 40 and think, I don't think that I'm climbing the right ladder
here. It wasn't until you were 40 when you realized that?
Yeah, I mean, that was when I had that.
That's when I was like, you know, 50 pounds overweight and had the staircase thing.
You couldn't climb anyways.
Yeah, I needed a different kind of intervention in my life and a redirect.
So it took a little bit of a mini crisis for me to realize that.
So it took a little bit of a mini crisis for me to realize that.
And I never felt entitled to even ponder what it was that I wanted out of life or what it might be that would get me excited to get out of bed in the morning.
I was like, I'm a person of a certain education,
and there are expectations that are built into that,
and this is what I need to do.
And I had to, like, you had to drive that into a brick wall
in order to re-examine it, ultimately deconstruct it.
So if you're 37, looking back,
what are three things you would have let go of
or eliminated in your life that weren't working for you?
I would have told myself to just stop already, like quit, like what are you doing?
Like you're not on the right path for yourself. It's okay, it's not about failure, it's about
honoring yourself. You know, I was living for social and parental approval at that time.
And I think that's the case with a lot of people.
Were you living more for parent or social approval?
It was a little bit of both.
I mean, I love my parents, but I grew up in a household where you were expected to perform at a certain level. And I got self-esteem from
trying to live up to those expectations, even though I could never quite get to that point.
I would chase that for a very long time and ultimately couldn't find myself until
I'd exasperated that.
Okay, so let go of that, quit.
What else would you have done?
Well, I would have said stop drinking,
but I'd already stopped drinking by that point.
I think the other thing that I was doing at that time,
because I was so caught up in external validation it was like I need to get the
better car or like let me move into this apartment and I was living outside of my
means so the biggest piece of advice that I always give to young people and
certainly would have given to myself would be to live as leanly as possible
yeah to you know let go of all that stuff because it just buys you options
and opportunities you have choices but if you you know incur go of all that stuff because it just buys you options and opportunities you have
choices but if you you know incur debt and live outside of those means then you become enslaved
to whatever you know salary you're earning that paycheck then becomes your master and you're
unable to pivot and make choices even Even if you want to chase that dream
or do that thing, you don't feel capable of doing it because you're servicing a lifestyle.
You think a lot of people are still in that space today in their late 30s that they're
overexpending their finances, they're in debt they're doing
stuff they don't want to do for others approvals and they're addicted to
something that's holding them back I think there's two camps you know I think
there is a generation of young people who are very influenced by you know
Instagram culture and they see guys with Lambos and yachts and all that kind of
stuff and it's just like that's what I got to have and they're not successful so there's a certain level yeah
you're not successful unless you're standing in front of a private jet or something like that
and so that motivates young people to live outside their means to try to front that they're you know
that they're uh you know living in a certain way that is in accordance with that set of parameters.
And I'm sure that there's a lot of young people who are in debt or living way outside of their
means in order to look good on Instagram or TikTok or whatever it is. At the same time, there's a whole new generation of young people who are more on the Joshua Fields Milburn tip of living minimally.
You get to my age and it's like, oh, those young people.
But I look at Gen Z and I'm very encouraged because this is a generation of people who actually care about things that matter.
They're making life decisions and career decisions based upon social responsibility and personal
fulfillment. And they're not about the bling. They're about like finding meaning in their career
choices and their lifestyle choices. And so I'm very, when I see that message out there,
that message of minimalism and trying to identify
what your values are and organizing your life
in accordance with that as opposed to what comes
on the other side of that, which is what we just
talked about, I get a lot of hope and enthusiasm for
that ethos. And that was not something, when I was growing up, nobody was talking about minimalism
when I was in my 20s. It was about more and more and more, keeping up with everyone, right?
Yeah. I grew up in the 80s, and it was Wall Street and greed is good. There was nobody
pushing back on that at that time.
Yeah, it was being celebrated.
And it still is now.
You know, we're having a, you know, the moment that we're in right now is very similar to the 80s in certain regards.
The social media culture.
There is this other, you know, kind of very cool sensibility
among young people where they're not buying into that
and they do care about things like the environment
and sustainability and conscious capitalism
and like how am I gonna stake my claim
but actually do good for others
and I think that's very cool.
I have a theory that the next year
the media's gonna continue with the hype of fear because
they're making so much money right now by getting everyone's attention with
just spreading fear fear obviously a lot of stuff is happening and real and
things are happening but it's sensationalizing it so much to gain our
attention so they can make money as well it's not here's the facts and what to do
about it it's blowing everything out out of proportion in certain areas so they can get more viewers,
more listeners, and more dollars.
With whether that theory is accurate or not, if that does happen next year where news continues
to sensationalize things, how can we manage that emotionally so we don't fall into the
trap and lose ourselves more as a society
in the next year. Yeah, I mean, I would completely agree that we're in a media environment that
thrives on dividing people and fomenting fear. I think that that culture is going to meet its
moment when Trump leaves office and they have to find a different way of maintaining eyeballs and ears.
So that's going to be interesting to see how that unfolds.
But I think the message, and to answer your question, is that we have to be more conscious and mindful about our information diet.
And it goes back to being proactive and in control of how
you're living your life or reactive, right? We can all scroll through these platforms and let our
dopamine get spiked by whatever outrageous headline or story that we see. But we have to remind
ourselves and remember that we have a choice about whether we need to consume that or not.
remember that we have a choice about whether we need to consume that or not. And I think that's why I feel so strongly about podcasting, because I feel like in many ways it's an antidote to that
culture. Because we're having long-form conversations, they're by their very nature
going to be laced with nuance and a good faith attempt at understanding whether you know two people
sitting across from each other agree on everything or not at least there's an effort to to have a
mature thoughtful exchange and that's anathema to the clickbait fear-based media climate
that basically monopolizes most of our attention.
But I think it's no mistake that podcasting has become,
like look, we were talking about when we started,
like could you have imagined that podcasting
would have matured to the kind of attention
that it's getting right now.
It's crazy, right?
Who would have thought that people have time
to spend an hour, two hours, in some cases three hours
to listen to a conversation?
People would have said, you're crazy,
but I think it's hardwired into us.
It's like that campfire that we're missing,
especially in a pandemic when we can't connect with people in
the manner that we would like. And I really see that this medium is in many ways a response and
an answer to that fear-based culture to say, we're not going to stand for that. We're better than
that. And the fact that people are cottoning
on to podcasting and enjoying it and, and this medium, it continues to grow at the rate that
it's growing speaks to that, um, human quality. And that's something that I find, I find hopeful.
Yeah. It's inspiring. You've been in a, what looks like on Instagram, a healthy relationship
for a long time. You've been married for how long? Been together 20. We've been married for 15,
16. No. Yeah. 16. That's yours. She's going to get you for that one. No, no, no. If I asked her,
she'd be like, how old are you? Yeah. Right. What would you say are the three things that have allowed you to thrive through all the ups and downs, pandemic, children, hormones, projects, success, challenges, addiction?
What's allowed you to continue to thrive?
Obviously, nothing ever being perfect, but grow and improve.
In my relationship with Julie?
Yeah. I think the first thing is that we're both very independent people
and we're not looking to the other person to solve our problems for ourselves.
So there's a mutual respect.
Julie doesn't need me to complete her.
I don't need her to complete me.
Julie doesn't need me to complete her.
I don't need her to complete me.
That's on us and our relationship with ourselves and our spiritual lives and our emotional lives. It's hard to find someone like that who understands it's their responsibility to complete themselves.
Yeah.
How do you find someone or how do you encourage someone to live by that idea when they've been told a story pretty much their whole life?
That the princess needs the prince to come and rescue them? How does someone embrace it and realize that that's a better lifestyle?
Well, you come into the world alone and you die alone, my friend.
style? Well, you come into the world alone and you die alone, my friend. And you've got to be on this journey of growth for yourself. It can't be contingent on another person. And I think a lot
of people who are in pain or are looking for some, grounding, often look to that other person. If I can just,
you know, if I date that person, then I'm going to be okay. And it's never the case. Like,
you've got to be okay with yourself in order to attract that person, you know, into your life to
begin with. Water rises to its own level.
And I've had to learn this the hard way over many years.
I don't know how you can compel that in somebody.
They've gotta figure that out for themselves.
But I think when you're in a relationship,
and you're projecting onto that other person
some A, some idealized version of who they are
and an expectation that they need to fulfill some need that you have,
you're in for a ride, right?
It'd be a challenge.
So you've got to figure out how to have those needs met yourself
outside of that relationship so that when you come together,
you're both
complete individuals you can share and meet each other where you're at mm-hmm
and that's hard you know it's really hard what's been the biggest challenge
you guys have had overcome together you know I think that that the biggest
challenge that we've had was navigating really difficult financial times where we almost lost our house.
And I think we've talked about this before.
We went through an extended number of years, as a matter of fact, where it was really difficult for us to figure out how to make ends meet.
And I was very close to going back to being a lawyer.
Had I not had Julie's support, I very well would have done that. It was only because
she was able to have faith in what we were trying to accomplish when my faith faltered,
that I was able to stay in it. And that's very, very rare. I mean, I think most
partners would have said, go get a job. Go you know and as a as as you know a man who had
children it was emasculating and very difficult and that's not that that was a situation that i
think probably would have broken most marriages and we were able to leverage that to grow closer
and become completely aligned in our vision
and what we wanted to achieve and accomplish.
And that's not to say it was easy
because it was the most difficult thing
that we've ever done,
but it really did bring us closer
and it bonded us in a way that I just, I don't know.
It's really special that's pretty
cool i think the lesson is like when you're in a crisis understand that it can fracture you or
just as just as likely bring you together if you can like get really grounded in what's occurring
and and open up the channel of communication allow allow yourself to be vulnerable, and use it as an opportunity to find a way to come closer together.
Yeah, it's pretty cool.
So this was, I mean, this was,
the hardest part of it was like after Finding Ultra came out.
Really?
Yeah.
After the book came out?
Yeah.
Because that's when I finally walked away from being a lawyer,
and I was like, I'm going to step into this other thing.
But that thing was very ill-defined at that time.
And I had trust and faith that the universe would show up, you know, because I'd written this book and I was starting to get a little bit of interest in the things that I cared about talking about.
But the phone didn't ring for a long time.
and the things that I cared about talking about, but the phone didn't ring for a long time.
And even when things seemingly were happening
on the outside, like financially,
it was very difficult to make it work.
So it took a long time.
When did the book come out?
2012.
Yeah, wow.
So between 2012 and 2015, it was pretty tough.
Really? Yeah. Yeah, and I did the podcast for a long time Between 2012 and like 2015 it was it was pretty tough really yeah
Yeah, and I did the podcast for a long time before
Monetizing it in any way the podcast never I don't know if I ever thought that it like when we started it like I didn't
Even know that it could be a thing like start years at end of 2012. Yeah, I started my at the beginning of January 2013
Yeah, we like two months apart to a master at the very end of 2013. Yeah, we were like two months apart.
I mean, I started at the very end of 2012.
Yeah, I remember.
Remember, people didn't even know how to find the podcast
out on their phone then.
Yeah.
It was like, how do I listen to this?
Where do I go?
I still get that.
I know, man.
But it's more accessible now.
So that was the hardest time, 2012 to 2015.
I mean, I've had plenty of hard times,
but I think as a married couple,
like trying to traverse that together with children
was difficult.
Because they've got needs and expenses
and school and college.
And also other people saying,
what are you doing?
Like he's out like going running.
For two hours.
Go work.
He's like going to ride his bike for eight hours today and you guys can't go work he's like a ride his bike for
eight hours today and you guys can't put like food on the table you know it was it was rough like
having to having to wherewithal to like mute out all the the noise and say we're on this path
we believe in this path and it might take longer than we wish or that we thought, but to maintain, you know, adherence to that and have the conviction
was very difficult. But I look back on it now, like all hard things with great gratitude,
because I think that we had to burn, you know, in that fire in order to, you know,
carry the resonance that we're able to carry today.
You know, like that hardship crafted us.
It hardened us and wizened us
so that we could be better servants ultimately.
Do you think if we don't go through hard things
growing up in the first 20, 30 years of our life
where everything just seems to,
we have great parents, you know, we stay healthy, we work hard and we get the job right away. Do
you feel like we're not going to be as fully fulfilled unless we go through hardships? Or
is it possible to be happy and fulfilled when everything works out easier for you?
I don't know. I mean, you know, listen, I don't have to tell you, I'm sure the most
interesting people that you've had on the podcast are all people that went through really hard stuff, right?
It forces you to meet your maker.
You get clear on who you want to be.
You develop the skills that you need to tackle obstacles and get through hard stuff.
And it turns you into, it forces you to become, it's either gonna destroy you or it's gonna
expedite that process of self-actualization.
And you ultimately have stories to tell
and you become an interesting person, right?
That's not to say that you have to have that
in order to be happy and fulfilled and purposeful
and all of those things.
Like everything else, it is available to us.
I just think it's harder when the universe doesn't foist it upon you. But that being said,
nobody gets out of life alive, right? And I think even if you had great parents, nobody gets through
the first 20 years of their life without some kind of trauma that's formative, even if they're not consciously aware of it. So everybody has their stuff. And the people that I find to be
the people that I want to spend time with are the people that face those hard things and have the
courage to not only work through them, but share their vulnerabilities,
because that creates the intimacy and the bond.
And I think that that's freely available to everybody.
That's cool.
Why did you decide to write a book again and use a beautiful book?
I mean, it's amazing.
It's like a piece of art.
Yeah, thank you.
But there's a lot of people who have done books
around their podcasts or their blogs. You've done it in a unique, thank you. But this is a, there's a lot of people who have done books around their podcasts
or their blogs.
You've done it in a unique, different way.
Why did you decide to create this?
Well, first of all, you said, part of it is what you just said, which is that you
talk to people and they're like, how do I hear this podcast?
You know?
Right.
So I wanted to, I wanted to create a love letter to my guests and also to
the audience not everybody listens to every episode and even if you have listened to you know
a large portion of of the catalog it's easy to forget because you're commuting or you're at the
gym or you're in the car and i wanted to basically create a series this will this is the first volume and what i hope will be an annual
thing of of putting down on paper um some of the lessons and the wisdom that the guests have have
imparted over the years on the podcast so yeah the book the book's called Voicing Change. I mean, it's basically, I took 50 guests
that I've had over the years.
We transcribed the podcast, excerpted out
some of the nuggets.
I have essays contributed by some people
and I write thoughtful introductions for each of them.
And it's all packaged in this coffee table type book
with beautiful photographs so that anyone would feel great about leaving it out on this coffee table type book with beautiful photographs so that anyone would feel
great about leaving it out on their coffee table for people to peruse. And we decided to do it as
a self-published thing. Really? It's been a cool experience. I see that here, Ritual Enterprises.
What was that like? It's been cool. The other books we did, we've done four, Julie and I together have done four books,
all with publishers.
So I'm well-versed in how all of that works.
And we've had great experiences with all of those.
This book was a little bit different.
It's, you know, a heavy, expensive book
because it's a, you know,
it's like a cookbook.
It's full of photographs and stuff like that.
And given that it's expensive to produce.
The margins would be so low if you're working with a publisher.
Yeah, the margins are crazy low.
And I would never be able to get the advance that would make sense for me.
So I also wanted to be able to do a new one every year.
That's cool.
And this is a book that I'm not trying to get on the New York Times bestseller list with this book.
This book is for the fans and it's for people that love podcasts and people who want inspiration.
So it's not about it being at the airport bookstore or being on some list.
It's just something that I wanted to offer.
I wanted to own it and control it.
And I'm in a position where I've got a team of really talented, amazing artists that I could work with on this.
So we've had to create, like, infrastructure and a whole business around it because we're handling, not only do we handle design.
Printing.
Production, printing.
Shipping.
Everything.
And we're doing, yeah, we're handling all the shipping and the fulfillment and the customer service and all of that.
It's not on Amazon?
No, it's not even on Amazon.
Like, we're not putting it on Amazon.
It's through your website. You have to buy it shipped out from your place. We'll ship it's not on Amazon. No, it's not even on Amazon. Like we're not putting it on Amazon.
Through your website, you have to buy it,
shipped out from your place.
We'll ship it globally, you know,
but it's gonna, the shipping's expensive.
Like everybody's so used to free shipping now.
So they're like, oh my God, it's like $25.
And it's like, but that's what it is.
Like I'm not making any money.
That's what shipping actually costs, you know?
So that's been interesting navigating all of that.
But it's a different relationship to the book because we're self publishing it I feel
more emotionally connected to it it's really cool yeah you're inspired me I
feel like I need to do something like this now it's been really beautiful it's
been really cool and the response has been great and it's just you know it's
gratifying who's the one person that you wish you could have had more time with in a conversation?
Oh, I mean, you know, I love to spend all day with everybody that comes on the show.
I mean, you know, there's, you can't ask me to choose among my baby, you know, the babies.
I would say Kobe Bryant for me.
Oh, yeah.
Well, I guess, right.
If you had to pick one person that was, you're like, oh, man, I wish I had another hour with that person.
Right.
That maybe you weren't as accessible to.
Yeah.
But I know it's hard to choose.
I know.
I know.
Even if it's an unknown person or just someone you had a great conversation with.
Well, I would suspect that you share this, which is that you do these podcast interviews, you create this connection
with the people that you talk about. And then a lot of these people end up your friends and
they're part of your life, right? So even if I wish a conversation had gone on longer than it had,
those people that I have that feeling towards, I end up having conversations with them later anyway
because they are part of my life.
And that's really, you know,
that's the great, beautiful, amazing thing
about hosting a podcast is you get this excuse
to talk to amazing people
and then you're connected to them.
It's amazing.
I love it.
Where can we get the book then?
Richroll.com?
Yeah, it's on my website.
There you go, richroll.com.
Shipping not included.
But it's worth it.
Don't at me about the shipping.
Yeah, but it's a beautiful experience to check out for sure.
Great wisdom.
I'm really proud of it.
Yeah, you should be.
This is really nice.
Great photography.
Really cool.
So congrats on this.
Richroll.com.
Check it out.
Check out Rich on YouTube.
Powerful YouTube channel as well. YouTube. Richroll.com. Check it out. Check out Rich on YouTube. Powerful YouTube channel as well.
YouTube slash Richroll.
And Richroll podcast.
Make sure you check this out.
Powerful stuff that you've always got.
And you really interview a lot of people in the ultra, you know,
endurance and health and wellness space, the biohacking space as well.
You do a lot of that more so than me, right?
You do a lot of like these extreme athletes or people that have gone above and beyond
physically, mentally.
Don't you do a lot of that?
I mean, I, you know, my rule with the podcast is I follow my curiosity.
And obviously you're going to have people on that, that, you know, are doing the things
that you're interested in.
And I'm part of that world and I'm interested in that world. So yeah, I've had a lot of those
kind of people on. That's cool, man. That's great. I'm curious what last time you shared your three
truths. I'm curious what they are now. I won't tell you what you said last time. I could never,
I couldn't, there's no way I'd be able to tell you what I said last time. My three truths. What
is the context of the three truths question is if it's your last day
and um you've accomplished everything in your life but everything you've ever created like this book
or the podcast or videos they all have to go with you that content to the next place wherever this
is right uh you get to live as long as you want but eventually you gotta take it all with you and
go somewhere and turn the lights off but you get to leave behind a piece of paper and write down three lessons from
your life that you would share with the world or three things you know to be
true.
And this would be all we have to remember you by these three truths.
Okay.
What did you say?
The first truth is approach your life from a perspective of service,
like live your life in service, like service. Live your life in service.
Give more than you seek to get, I think is important.
That's one truth.
Another truth would be,
and this is a mantra that I always repeat to myself,
mood follows action, and that speaks to
what we were talking about earlier about people
who struggle to achieve their goals
and succumb to analysis paralysis.
Like put the action before the emotional shift
that you seek tends to shock people
out of their status quo.
Third thing, third truth, truth that I've learned behind,
like learned as a result of my life.
Yeah, that you would share to the world, a lesson.
There is no destination.
So you've got to fall in love with the process of where it is that you're aiming to go.
to go. And that journey cannot be about material accumulation or status. It has to be one that has, one that's girded with internal meaning and purpose and value for yourself.
Yeah.
That's beautiful.
It's powerful.
I don't know if I said that as concisely as I would. It's powerful to me, man.
I love that.
Well, make sure you guys check out the book, podcast, the YouTube.
And Rich, you're a guy that does things with an artist.
You're like a beautiful artist in your attention to detail.
Like every piece of work you put out there.
This is the control freak bottleneck thing.
I know.
But it's like every book you've ever written is like beautifully done.
You bring a level of artistry to it.
You make it rich and meaningful just like consuming your information.
So I really appreciate that about you and your dedication to being the healthiest, happiest version of yourself no matter what is going on.
I think it's really hard for people to overcome an addiction, any type of addiction, bad food, alcohol, sex, whatever it may be.
It's really hard to overcome it and sustain it for as long as you have.
So I acknowledge you for that and living in that space consistently, man.
Thank you for that.
Can't wait to have you back on in the future, man.
Appreciate you.
I appreciate it.
Thank you, man.
Mad love and respect for everything that you've created and built here, man.
Appreciate it.
Appreciate you too.
Much love.
Thank you so much for listening today.
I'm so grateful that you're here and I hope you enjoyed it.
If you did,
please share it out with a friend right now. You can text a few friends, you can post it on social
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Because every week I'm sending out positive messages and inspiration right to your phone.
And I want to leave you with a quote from Karen Lam who said, a year from now, you may wish you had started today.
Oh my goodness, that one is big.
Every year, there's always something
I wish I would have started a year prior.
And that's why I constantly try to say,
you know what, this is meaningful.
This is something I wanna do.
So I'm gonna take action today
and just do a little bit every single day.
I wanna remind you, if no one's told you lately
that you are loved, you are worthy, and you matter.
And don't you ever, ever forget that. I'm so grateful for you. And you know what time it is. It's time to
go out there and do something great.