The School of Greatness - 866 The Journey of Living through a Loss
Episode Date: October 23, 2019DEATH WITH NO REGRETS Losing a loved one is always difficult. Loss is difficult. Sometimes we’re prepared for it. Often, we are not. Either way, we know that death is a part of life. Are there lesso...ns we can learn from the experiences of others? Sometimes sharing your story will help. Other times, listening will help you learn. Someone else’s pain can help you on your journey. It’s a process that must be taken one day at a time. In today’s episode of The School of Greatness, I’ve combined key lessons on handling loss from Bronnie Ware, Grant Cardone, Lindsey Stirling, Chris Guillebeau, Whitney Cummings. Bronnie Ware, Grant Cardone, Lindsey Stirling, Chris Guillebeau, and Whitney Cummings share their stories on this episode and help us learn how to better deal with loss in our lives. Bronnie Ware is a teacher of courage and regret-free living. Having sat by the bedsides of the terminally ill for several years, she knows the pain of dying with regret. She has written three books: The Top Five Regrets of Dying, Your Year for Change, and Bloom. Grant Cardone is the author of eight business books, thirteen business programs, and is the CEO of seven privately held companies. Forbes calls him one of the top social media business influencers in the world. Lindsey Stirling is a violinist, dancer, performance artist, composer, and singer who presents amazing choreographed violin performances. Stirling earned second place on Dancing With The Stars, has been named Forbes magazine’s 30 Under 30 In Music, and was a quarter-finalist position on America’s Got Talent season five. Chris Guillebeau is a NY Times Best Selling Author, speaker, a modern-day explorer, and has been to nearly every country in the world. He is best known for The Art of Non-Conformity blog and book. He has also written guides for travel and small business topics under the brand Unconventional Guides. He organizes the annual World Domination Summit in Portland, Oregon. Whitney Cummings is a talented stand-up comedian, actress, and producer. The creative force behind the CBS sitcom 2 Broke Girls, the NBC sitcom Whitney, and the movie The Female Brain. She was also a producer and writer for the ABC revival of Roseanne. These fantastic individuals use their experiences to help us better deal with life’s challenges. So get ready to learn about loss, healing, and recovery on Episode 867. Some Questions I Ask: · How can we get better at expressing our feelings? (13:20) · What was the greatest lesson your mother taught you before she passed? (26:30) · How do you handle loss? (40:00) Lindsey Stirling · What is your goal for healing and recovery? (36:04) · How do you want to feel every day? (41:15) · Do you still do things to make your dad proud? (01:05:45) In This Episode You Will Learn: · The top five (5) regrets people have before they die. (9:10) · Why dreaming is important in your life. (18:45) · Why some people are scared they won’t be able to die. (26:00) · How to deal with losing both family members and friends. (9:03) · The process of dealing with loss and how to get through it. (33:40) · How loss sometimes makes things clearer in your life. (1:00:15) If you enjoyed this episode, check out the video, show notes, more at http://lewishowes.com/866, and follow me on http://instagram.com/lewishowes
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This is episode number 866, How to Live Without Regret.
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.
Thomas Campbell said, to live in hearts we leave behind is not to die. And William Penn said,
they that love beyond the world cannot be separated by it. Death cannot kill what never dies.
This is an interesting episode that I think many of you will find extremely powerful.
We've had so many amazing people on to talk about this subject, about loss, about how
to live without regret, about the powerful lessons from losing loved ones.
And I've talked about this many times where I haven't really lost that many people close to me.
I've lots of different friends from all over the world and different experiences of my life,
from sports to business to family and travel and all these different things I've done. I'm 36 years old.
I've interviewed over 500 plus people on the podcast. And I've been having these conversations
about loss because I haven't really lost someone really, really close to me. I've lost some friends
and grandparents, but I haven't lost someone in a shocking way.
And I wanted to dive into this topic a little bit more because I think sometimes we forget how sacred life is.
We forget how valuable this moment is, this present moment that gives us the gift of being,
the gift of experiencing joy, love, friendship, and the ability to go after our dreams.
And we forget these things. And in this
episode, it's really about remembering the power of all of this. And we talk about the five regrets
of the dying and how we can use them as a tool for living our best life. We talk about how a
parent's legacy can influence your work and future relationships, what death can teach you about the heart's resiliency,
how processing the spectrum of emotions is its own journey without a handbook, and how
death can bring clarity to your life, intentions, and a better understanding of who you are
and who you want to be.
We've got some incredible people in this episode.
and who you want to be. We've got some incredible people in this episode. Bronnie Ware, author of the top five regrets of the dying. We've got Grant Cardone, New York Times bestselling author,
who built a billion dollar portfolio. Lindsey Stirling, the violinist, singer, songwriter,
and YouTube sensation. Chris Guillebeau, New York Times bestselling author of The Art of
Nonconformity. And Whitney Cummings, who's a comedian, actor,
and producer, author who's appeared in multiple television shows and films, multiple stand-up
comedy shows as well. And each one of them has a specific experience to talk about this process
of how they became more of who they are through the experience of death from someone close to
them, through the experience of loss, how they overcame these experiences, what we can learn from these experiences, and so much more.
I'm excited for you to dive into this because I feel like this is something we don't talk about
enough. It's something that we're afraid of. And the things that we're afraid of usually cripple
us and have power over us. And I don't want them to have power over you. This is something
that we're all going to experience. And I want to bring a little bit more peace, a little bit more
understanding of the things that sometimes we can't understand. And that's what this is all about.
And I really hope you find value out of this. And please share it with a friend. If you know
someone who's lost someone recently in their life, please send them this link,
lewishouse.com slash 866, or just copy and paste the link on the Apple podcast or Spotify
or wherever you're listening to this podcast episode.
And share with me on social media what you think at Lewis House.
I would love to know your thoughts.
And without further ado,
let's dive into this episode on how to live without regret.
Usually there's top five regrets and we can share those quickly. The first one is I wish I had the
courage to live a life true to myself and not the life that others expected me. And I think
so many people
live what their parents want them to do with their friends or society right we see that a lot and
it's sad we were just talking about this with another guest Robert Green who was on who's like
most people they wake up at like 27 to 30 and they realize like I'm down a path that I don't
want to do yes they have like a quarter lifelife crisis or something, and they're like, what do I really want to do?
What did I want to do as a child?
Or wake up at 50 or 60 and say that.
Yeah, it's even worse.
Yes.
That's even worse.
But it's true, it happens a lot.
So that's the first regret.
The second one is I wish I hadn't worked so hard.
Now, I'm curious about this because I actually believe in working really hard on a greater purpose.
Yes.
A purpose to impact the people around you, your society, your community, and to spread a message.
Sure.
And so I go back and forth when I read that.
I'm like, what does that mean, not work so hard?
Does it mean
like just chill out all day and relax with your friends and, you know? No, I mean. You've got to
make a living. You want to make an impact. You want to achieve certain things, right? Yes. Yeah.
But it's also about working efficiently, which I'm sure you do. And it's about leaving space
for other areas of your life and not making work your whole life. So it's not
about working so hard that you don't put all of your passion into what you love doing, especially
if you've done the work and you've got yourself onto a path where you're doing your life's work.
And so, of course, we're passionate about it. We want to bring that message out and share it and give it our best love.
But it's not our whole life.
And we need to actually turn off from work sometimes and say, okay, well, now I'm going to spend time with relationships, with friends,
with family, with movement, with nature.
Adventure, play.
All of that because all of that nourishes our soul as well.
And the more we can find space or create space for those other areas,
the more heart we bring to our work anyway and the more efficiency we bring to our work.
That's right.
Because it's all well and good to work a 60-hour week,
but if you're really only doing 10 hours of quality work.
And if your health is suffering or relationships are suffering,
you're missing the juice of life. And that's not success. Yeah. I agree. The third regret is I wish
I'd had the courage to express my feelings. Do most people not express themselves? Not to the
depth that they'd like to. Why is that? They're afraid of what other people think about them.
Yeah, the vulnerability. And sometimes just the communication channels haven't been developed
enough so they don't actually know how to.
It's not so much that they don't want to.
Certainly there are a couple of patients in there who really wanted to
but just didn't know how to start the ball rolling,
even with their families.
You know, a gentleman in his 90s died feeling like his family
didn't even know him.
Wow.
And he wanted to but he just couldn't start the ball rolling
to open up to that level of vulnerability.
Do a lot of these individuals write letters of their feelings
and then, like, leave them behind when they're gone?
Well, some did, but no, not many.
Not many.
I mean, I had to pass on messages a lot,
and I think other carers sometimes play that role as well.
But what I found was with my patients, I ended up being their main carer.
So I would go in for a day or two and that's what happens.
When someone's home sick, they get three or four different carers
over the first week or two and then they say,
I want Bronnie or I want so-and-so.
And so you become their main carer.
And so, you know, there were times they'd say,
I want you to tell my son this.
And I'd say, well, you're still alive. You can tell him yourself. Come on, you can do it. Or I
would facilitate, you know, a start of a conversation sometimes and then silently leave the room.
There you go. Yeah, yeah. That's good. Okay. So wishing we had the courage to express our
feelings. How do you think we can express our feelings now while we're alive and healthy and well so that we don't regret that? What is
the process to expressing ourselves better? Well, I think it's how to avoid all of the regrets,
and that is to face the fact that we're going to die and that we're on limited time.
And the more we can actually bring that realisation into our belief systems and our
conversations and society's beliefs, then the more courage we have anyway, because we realise,
okay, I don't have all the time in the world to do what I want to do and to say what I need to say
and everything else. And so to find those levels of vulnerability, it takes courage. Any form of
regret-free living is going to take immense courage. But when you use death as a tool for
living and you say, I'm on limited time, you do find that courage because not only do you
realise you've got to say this stuff or you're going to regret it later or you're going to leave
it too late, but you also just end up not caring so much what people think of you because they're going to die,
you're going to die. We're all just doing the best we can. And you really do let go of the
opinions of others when you face death completely, like when you courageously.
Yeah. And it doesn't mean you don't stop loving
but you stop caring about all the superficial stuff.
And so you do learn to be more courageous because you realise, okay,
this may or may not be received how,
if you're expressing some really deep vulnerability,
it may or may not be received how you'd love it to be received
but it's better than not saying it. It's better than
dying with the regret of having kept it inside. Right. Not sharing, yeah. The fourth one is,
I wish I'd stayed in touch with my friends. Do people lose out of touch with their friends a
lot, you think? Well, this was before social media. Yeah. And now you can check in. Yeah,
yeah. And even checking in through social media and letting people know that you're there
is fantastic,
but it's never going to...
It's still superficial at a level, right?
It's not the same as having a face-to-face conversation
or a good laugh with your old friends
or even a phone call is better than a social media thing or a text.
Right.
But, yeah, it was a deep regret
because friends become your family in so many ways and they hold a lot of memories for you as well,
a lot of the fun memories that you may not necessarily have shared
with your family.
I mean some families are entwined and their brothers
and sisters are their best mates.
But most of us choose our own family of friends.
And so, yeah, friends can really bring home memories and do reminiscing because
nostalgia and yeah dying people want to live as long as they can and they want to reflect and
they want to do some storytelling and some giggling and some reminiscing about the good old
days and if you lose touch with your friends you're're there with maybe, you know, a loving-hearted carer and your adult kids or your young kids, whatever,
or no one.
You're just reflecting to yourself, having a conversation about the glory days
or something, yeah, as opposed to with someone you share to it.
Yeah, as in someone's saying, and then you might only be able to handle
a 10-minute conversation every few hours, but that 10-minute conversation
can just, you know know I've seen people
just lying there with tears of laughter in their eyes and and they're just like oh I can't talk
anymore just give me a rest but they're just so happy because they've had their friends visiting
and sharing those memories that's nice yeah yeah and I wish I'd let myself be happier
why do we not allow ourselves to be happy happy I think a lot of it's probably worth,
you know, we don't realize we deserve to be. We're shaped again by the opinions of others.
Don't want to look a fool. Don't want to be too silly and childish when that's actually
great medicine to be like that. It's about the opinions of others and just realising we actually
are allowed to be that just because someone says we're this and this and this and this
doesn't mean we're any of that. Yeah. And so, you know, something I used to cop as a kid,
you're never going to, you're a dreamer, you'll never amount to anything, you know, stuff like
that. You used to hear that? Yeah, all the time from, particularly from my father amount to anything you know stuff like that you used to hear that yeah all the time from particularly from my father and that's encouraging oh that's not it that's like one
percent that's okay though that's okay we healed as best we could but I did take that on for a long
time because whenever I'd have these dreams I think well I'm never going to amount to anything
and I was a singer-songwriter I started playing playing when I was 35, wrote my first song.
And I'd be up on the stage and I'd be playing and I just,
that's all I'd hear in my head.
You know, you're a dreamer.
This is never going to amount to anything.
And I'd just shake and just dream of walking off the stage.
And then eventually I, you know, did my own healing and realised,
well, that's his stuff. That's his
regrets. And it's really got nothing to do with me. And if I'm not going to dream, I'm not going
to ever get anywhere. You've got to be a dreamer. You have to dare to dream. And it's only the
dreamers that really make huge, significant, beautiful change in the world that shake up
things. That's it. That's it.
Yeah, I want to take a moment right here and let you know about something that for me has been helpful in getting my message out into the world.
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Yeah, there was cancer.
Yeah.
And so the organs are shutting down now.
Wow, man.
And within 10 hours, let me see, from the time I had the conversation with her,
the next morning, got her in the Honda, drove her home,
put her in the living room for a couple hours, let her sit in her nice boy.
I said, okay, where do you want to finish this?
She's like, in my bed.
Took her to the bedroom.
You know, just about 11 o'clock that night, finally.
And she said, about 30 minutes before she finished,
she's like,
she's like, I'm scared.
Wow.
And I said, what are you scared of?
You got to hold it together, right?
Because,
and she says, I'm scared I can't die.
She wasn't scared of dying.
She was scared she couldn't.
I said, dude, you can do this.
You've done everything you needed to do.
You did a great job.
You don't owe anybody anything.
Just rock on, man.
Wow.
She was afraid that she couldn't die.
Like she would drag on or...
Yeah.
And just kind of be in pain.
She wasn't scared of dying.
Yeah.
She was scared she couldn't.
Wow.
So.
You were there?
Was your whole family there?
I was right there with her.
Had my hand on her.
No doctors in the room.
While she passed?
Yeah.
Wow.
So.
She was my bud, man.
Wow.
Yeah.
God damn.
What was. I don't know. What was the greatest lesson she taught you?
Oh, shit, man.
She was just, she was a very negative person.
Like, I have a lot of that.
Like, the second, the second he said, he says, oh, Grant, you're a positive person.
I said, dude, I am not a positive person.
Like, do not.
No one should confuse me with a motivational person.
Because I'm not a positive person.
Why aren't you?
Because I understand that people die.
Yeah.
Like, I understand that life is hard and that there's evil. I know there people die. Yeah. Like, I understand that life is hard
and that there's evil.
I know there's evil.
I confront.
Like, that's what people don't like about me, dude.
Like, who says, okay, you're going to die?
It's hard, man.
It's really hard to be that honest.
Dude, my dad died when I was 10.
My older brother died when I was 20.
So by the time I was 20, I'm like, oh, people die.
Wow.
Like you start getting used to it.
Not just your grandparent or something.
No, no.
See, I know there's people I know today that have never had a death in their family.
They've never experienced it.
Yeah.
And then they're shocked when their dad dies.
I'm like, what did you think was going to happen?
Or their dog dies. I'm like, guys, you think was gonna happen? Or their dog dies.
I'm like, guys, you got a dog.
It's a Great Dane.
It's got a life of 11 years.
Hopefully it dies before you do.
My kids already know, like my seven and nine year old,
they already confront the issue of me as a body
not being around one day.
So my mom taught me a lot, man.
She taught me, you know she taught me you know she talked
tried to taught me out of most everything I ever did because she was
negative she was a mother and it's a mother a mother protect you make
mother's 50% negative has to be right you know you're gonna get a cold put
your shoes on don't go out in the rain.
So I had to learn how not to listen to that 50%.
Wow.
Was there anything that she taught you in the end?
Or any regrets from what you had done
or what you hadn't done or a promise you made yourself
after she passed where you're like,
you know what, I haven't been doing
what I really need to be doing here, here, here.
Is there anything like that for you?
You know, not with her, you know.
I mean, I told her when I was a kid,
when I got clean from drugs, I said,
one day I'm gonna buy you a Jaguar.
I never bought it for her.
She called me one day, she was a funny lady.
She said some football player had bought their mom a house.
And I was wealthy at the time. She said some football player had bought their mom a house.
And I was wealthy at the time.
I was living in La Jolla down south of here, and I'd done well.
I was still single.
She's like, so-and-so bought her mom a house.
Where's my car?
I'm like, he'll end up broke, too.
You ain't getting a house.
She didn't want a house. I mean, she didn't want any of that stuff.
What did she want? You ain't getting a house. Right. She didn't want a house. I mean, she didn't want any of that stuff. Yeah.
What did she want?
She didn't have a lot of dreams, I don't think.
She lived way below her potential.
Yeah.
And that's why I understand women.
You know, my mom was a, she was a 50s housewife.
Mm-hmm.
And my mother lived for her children.
Yeah.
50s housewife. And my mother lived for her children. And so part of this, I think, is part of my hardness and the way I prioritize things. I know my mother made a mistake
putting her kids first. Wow. That was a mistake for her. Wow. What should she have done? She
should have put herself first, not us first. Why?
Because she was more worried about five little kids than her own dreams.
And when I watched my dad die, I left her to run everything.
He died suddenly, and she never dated again.
Wow.
She was 40.
Let's see, I guess she was 38. Never went on a date, again. Wow. She was 40. Let's see, I was, I guess she was 38.
Never went on a date, dude.
Wow.
She had a stepfather and she's like, or stepmother, and she's like, I'm not giving my kids a stepmother.
Everything now is about the kids.
It's not enough for a human being, dude. You can't be happy just living for kids that are going to move out.
You know, so. What advice would you have to women about following their dreams?
Dude, all people, men and women,
they should be more greedy about their personal dreams.
What if they say, well, I've got these five kids
and I've got this responsibility?
Yeah, you do, but you also have a responsibility yourself.
If I can't take care of me, how can I take care of somebody else?
This has always been my battle cry. I can't take care of me, how can I take care of somebody else? This has always been my battle cry.
Like, I have to take care of me.
And how can I help anyone?
I'm broken.
I'm messed up, you know?
I'm coming out of a treatment center for drug addiction.
I didn't need to help anybody else.
I needed to get on solid ground.
You know, and I needed to make sure I wasn't going back to treatment. And then I needed to get on solid ground, you know, and I needed to make sure I
wasn't going back to treatment. And then I needed to clean up the mess that I made. I needed to do
this for me because, and that has been my contention now for many years, like just keep
slowly taking care of your neighborhood until you're in another zip code.
My third album was writing
all about loss. My best friend
and my keyboard player,
who I'd toured with for years, he passed
away suddenly, and then my dad
was also going through cancer, and he
passed away right as I was finishing the album.
So the album was bookended
by the most extreme
depression and sorrow that I had ever felt.
And loss, and like, I had ever felt and loss.
And, like, I just didn't know you could feel that.
And so that album was heavily charged with a lot of hard things.
And one thing that was so exciting about this album was, like, I don't know,
loss, I feel like it changes you.
And I had come to accept that, like, this was a new version of myself
and that kind of the rose-tinted glasses Lindsay had left and died with them.
And I was like, I just don't think I'll ever be the same again
because it had been years.
It's now been three years since all of that happened,
and it took about two years to come fully out of that depression,
and I realized it was right about the same time,
a few months before I started this album,
that I was like, I started to feel myself again. And I was like, oh my gosh, it's not that I was gone. It's not that I disappeared or I died with them like a part of me. It's no, I was just,
I was just covered up for a while. And that's why I decided to call this album Artemis because
the moon is such cool. Like it has such a cool symbolism of hope and the fact
that you know you look at the moon sometimes it's big and bright and it glows and it can light up
the night and other times you look up and you can't even find it and it looks like it might
not even be there anymore and that was like me I was like oh my gosh I was I wasn't gone I was just
covered in shadow and I think that through our, like whether it's a hard relationship or a depression or loss or grief, whatever, we sometimes metaphorically get covered by those things.
And you might think that you're not there anymore, but it doesn't mean that you're not still powerful and full of light and love and that you won't come back to full light.
And so I wrote this album from a place of like, oh, my gosh, I'm still full of light.
And that's what the album's about.
That's what the story's about.
Yeah.
I like it.
Thank you.
I'm so excited to share that message.
You mentioned loss again.
I've, you know, part of my,
I feel like I'm a pretty balanced human being
where I take on all my fears.
Every year I write a list of my fears
and I try to overcome them.
I love that.
From what would be public speaking to salsa dancing to singing in public
to all these different things, I'm like, okay, what is an emotional fear for me?
Ooh, yeah.
Right?
An inner fear, not like spiders or snakes,
but like what's a thing that I would be embarrassed by
or afraid or feel insecure about?
And then I try to conquer those every year.
I've never lost someone close to me.
Except for grandparents who were, you know, it was their time.
I've never had a sudden loss.
And it's a fear of mine.
Because I have a lot of great relationships.
And I know a lot of people.
And I know it's just a matter of time where someone that I know.
It's part of life.
It's part of life.
Yeah.
And I don't know if it's going to be in a know, in a few years or 10 years, but it's
going to happen eventually.
Yeah.
Someone is going to die.
Yeah.
And it scares me.
So, and I'm not saying like, I want this to happen now because I don't want to.
Of course not.
No.
But how do you, how did you handle it when you had two very close relationships in the
same, you know, in a very close period of time pass away, how did you handle it?
And how are you going to handle it in the future when someone close to you passes?
I don't think it gets easier.
Like, you know what I mean?
Like, I lost my best friend.
Then I lost my dad.
And it's not like, well, I've been through this once before.
It was easier.
Yeah.
No.
I think loss will always be extremely hard,
but I learned that the heart is so resilient. I said, when I lost my best friend, it was the
first time I'd ever felt that kind of pain. And I just thought to myself, I will never be whole
again. And then my dad died and I was like, I will never recover from this. Like they
were the two most important, most prevalent men in my life. And so, you know, but the heart heals
and the most amazing thing about it for me, I think is my, I'm so grateful that I'm a very
like spiritual and a very religious person because I've always believed in angels. And I think my belief in angels has like given me so
much grace through this because as hard as it is, it's amazing that like that, that pain just gets
like farther away. I've always missed them, but it taught me to live in the moment with people
because that's the thing you regret more than anything. Like it's just wishing that you could
like relive some of those moments and like like, realize how special they were and, like, tell people how special they were.
With my best friend, he passed away suddenly, and I was like, oh, my gosh, I never had a chance to
say even goodbye. I never had a chance to, like, really tell him what he meant to me, and that was,
like, devastating, but I believe in angels, And since then, I feel like I have had
some of the most beautiful experiences where I know they were close to me and I know they were
guiding my steps. And it's like, I don't think they're far. I think that sometimes in a way that
they're able to be with me more than they ever could have before. And they're a part of my
adventures still. And I believe I'll see them again like a hundred percent and it just makes you remember how finite this life is if you have
a belief in a afterlife like this life is just like a glimpse so my brother made a tragic choice
that's what happened yeah okay and it was very it seemed very impulsive and uh
there i mean like looking back we can kind of identify maybe some signs or something but at
the time none of us had any idea right what's been coming up for you this last eight nine months
in this process you know you've been working with someone on this what do you feel like it's been
coming up for you is there any lessons that you've learned from this i haven't lost a family member
that close to me so i have no context of how you're feeling and i'm not going to act like i do
know how you're feeling but i can assume that there are people listening who have lost someone
very close to them who can relate completely to what you're feeling right now so i'm curious
what the lesson is you're gaining or what you're feeling right now. So I'm curious what the lesson
is you're gaining or what you're learning about yourself in this process. It's a tricky thing
because, you know, in my books and in my blog and all this, I write prescriptive. I try to write
prescriptively and here are the steps. And if you want to travel the world, here's how you get the
frequent flyer miles to do it. If you want to start a business, here are the eight steps.
This is what, you know, is so new to me because I start a business here are the eight steps this is what you know
is so new to me because i don't know that there are eight steps i don't know that there's like
here's lesson number one here's lesson number two like i have like sometimes moments of insight
or whatever but i don't know like i i feel like it's like um it's not like a hierarchy of lessons
it's more like a cobweb or something yeah and somehow maybe they connect but i don't
quite see where they are so this is like i feel like this is the new quest you know which is is
not something i ever would have it's not what you set out predicted or imagine go for sure and i
don't even i'm not even really describing it in very like descriptive terms because i don't
necessarily know what's going to happen at the end or what the outcome is. But I feel like somehow,
somehow I have to be better because of this. Somehow I have to, to, you know, honor my brother,
um, maybe learn some lessons that he wasn't able to learn. And I don't necessarily know what all those are. Right. Right. Um, but I feel like that's, that's what I have to do. Yeah.
what all those are right right um but i feel like that's that's what i have to do yeah what do you think is the best way to honor him i don't know yet i don't think it's going to be like i don't
think it's going to be something you could package sure do you know what i mean yeah it's not like
there's a foundation it's like one day i'm going to come and i come out of this i'm going to start
a charity right you know and i'm going to like the rest of my life I'm going to raise money for this charity. That's too packaged.
So it's deeper.
I don't know what it is, but it's not something that I could just say one sentence.
Here's how I'm going to honor my brother.
The goal is to figure that out.
What's your vision for yourself during this process?
Have you thought about that?
Or are you just kind of like one day at a time?
No, I'm actually not very good at one day at a time.
I think that's a very good strategy.
I'm very future-oriented, which is kind of frustrating in a situation like this.
Because, you know, one, the situation with Ken, my brother, I can't change that.
Nothing in the future could ever change that.
And then also,
not just that situation, but just sadness and anxiety in general is kind of hard because I
want to be able to point to the one-year plan and the five-year plan, the 10-year plan. That's what
I've done. That's what you're good at. Yeah, I'm really good at that. So now it's like that's kind
of taken from me. You feel like you don't have a one or 10-year plan? I feel like I have a good
one-year plan. I don't feel like I have a good ten year plan no and why is that upsetting to you or why
is that bringing anxiety because it's brought me comfort in the past to have it and so now i don't
have it so now you're forced to live in the moment yeah or be more present it sounds like and not
have a plan not have a future like mapped out for you maybe so huh it's all new interesting okay what's so scary
about living in the moment or not having a plan i don't know if it's scary it's unfamiliar
okay you know for i mean that's that's why i had the quest i could always say i'm doing this
i was doing lots of other stuff too but then i had this anchor point right you know right and
if you always have something planned if you always have something
that you're kind of working toward then you don't necessarily have to answer all these difficult
day-to-day questions what's the most difficult day-to-day question well the different i mean
the questions of of like what's going on in our minds like why am i sometimes unhappy even though
i have a great life and and great success in lots of different
ways? Those kind of questions. Why do you think it is at the end of the day? Have you thought
more and more about this? I'm just kind of delving into it now. I mean, it's good to have
this conversation with you because I can say, honestly, I have not had this conversation,
certainly not in any kind of public setting like this at all.
I mean, the limited conversations have been with very close friends and therapy sessions.
There's not usually a microphone and a headset associated with it.
So that's why sometimes I don't know exactly how to answer.
Sure. Okay.
Well, what do you think has come up for you in these sessions?
The reason I'm sticking with this is because I love to have clarity too. You know what I mean?
For me, I'm a solutions type of guy. And so I'm trying to uncover what it is because I think
actually a lot of people are going to be appreciating this process. If you're not
watching this, Chris is a little uncomfortable. But I think it's important because I don't think you're alone, man.
I don't think you're alone.
I think it's a lot of people.
Maybe they have the success you do.
Maybe they don't.
Um, but they're at a crossroads where they're not sure what's going to happen the next three,
five, 10 years.
They don't have a plan figured out.
They're at a crossroads.
They're uncertain.
They're feeling like flat.
And I think this is more people than you think feel this way.
Sure.
Obviously, you have your own emotions and your own feelings and your own life that you've experienced.
But I think people are feeling a similar way that is really powerful.
And so I want to keep talking about this.
I want to keep diving into this.
Yeah.
I'm not necessarily uncomfortable in having this conversation.
Sure.
It's more that I'm uncomfortable in the situation.
That's what sucks.
Yes.
Actually, I want to be open and transparent about this because I realize a lot of people have struggles.
And for me, like so we've said I've had struggles and over time and now I had this situational tragedy.
I guess my point for me is I'm tired of accepting it.
Like I'm tired of accepting that I'm always going to be anxious or I'm going to be sad.
It's this complicated thing because to get through something like this, you have to make your peace with it.
That's something that I'm kind of learning at least in the counseling.
Is this the peace with your own flatness in your life or the peace with your brother's
death? I don't know because it's all connected. I haven't found a way to separate it.
So I think you have to kind of walk through that. I went on a trip recently and it was a great trip.
I went around the world, had a lot of really fun experiences. And so the trip was great.
Situationally, everything was fine. But I was also, almost every single day I cried. And so kind of came back out
of that and went back to my little counseling session. And I told that story and she said,
that's great. I was like, what do you mean? She's like, I think we're going to be able to work
through this now because you're not coming you know coming to you're not coming
to peace with it but we're actually acknowledging we're trying to acknowledge it you know but i
guess what i said about accepting it is maybe i feel like for a while i've as i as we said before
i kind of sweep it under the rug or put it aside and i guess it's just come to a point in my life
where i have to do something about this like i have have to. And I don't know exactly how I will resolve that.
But somehow I need to.
What do you want to feel every day?
If you can make a declaration like,
this moment moving forward, this is how I want to feel.
Purposeful.
Okay, what else?
I mean, that's good.
Start with that.
Purposeful, joyful.
Sure.
Purposeful, joyful.
Fulfilled, satisfied.
Yeah, those are good words. Okay. Yeah, I think I like the top two first. You know, purposeful, joyful. Sure. Purposeful, joyful. Fulfilled, satisfied. Yeah, those are good words.
Okay.
Yeah.
I like the top two first.
Purposeful, joyful.
But not sadness and anxiety.
Yeah, not to excess.
I think it's important to feel a range of emotions.
It's kind of like we said before, if you're always a winner, maybe you're not trying hard enough.
Right, right, right.
So I actually want to try for some stuff and not achieve it.
But yeah, I think it's the sustained nature of it that is problematic.
How did the relationship end for you when he passed?
With my dad?
Oh, it was...
Were you in a good place, do you feel like?
No, not really.
I mean, I don't...
I think that death is such a defining part.
You know, it's interesting because, and I don't know if anyone wants to hear about death,
but all the things that I'd been working on for so long kind of click into place when a death happens.
You know, working so hard on boundaries, working so hard on saying no,
working so hard at reducing the amount of things on my plate, working so hard to not do things out of obligation.
You know, I've spent so much time doing that.
And as soon as I lost my dad, it was like, I'm not doing that.
No, I'm not going on a hike with that person.
It just, everything becomes so clear what's important and what's not.
So it's interesting.
It's sad that it needs something like that to happen for us to course correct our life.
Or just me.
It could be me and what I needed.
It's a lot of people, though.
You know?
And, you know, I think that, and I don't know how that tool is helpful, don't kill your dad, to emotionally make the progress you need.
But, you know, it was something that was a little bit like, you know, his passing kind of was just a really big part of, you know, things,
you know, clicking into place. And in a weird way, I think it's the gift he would have wanted to give
me in a weird way. And he had a stroke. Both my parents had strokes, which is a big part of why
I got so into neurology and had to understand it really quick because I was all of a sudden in ERs
looking at brain scans and people talking about the prefrontal cortex.
I'm like, I have no idea what that means and finding out what part of the brain, you know, affects what.
And so I think that like ultimately he gave me this incredible gift that as a side effect of something kind of tragic.
Wow.
When did he pass?
About a year and a half ago.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, almost two years ago.
And it was interesting because you really find out who the people are around you when someone in your life passes.
Because grief makes you boring and makes you unable to give anything.
Wow.
And you really find out the kind of people that can show up and tolerate you grieving really calls out your circle.
Because it's, you realize like.
Probably being the fun one, the entertaining one.
Like, are you still my friend if I'm just staring at the wall like a zombie crying for six days?
Like, am I still someone that you want to be around?
So that was, the tectonic plates really shift in your life when something like that happens.
And I had just started dating the person I'm with and the way he handled it,
I think is really what made me
understand. What great partnership is. What he handled everything. Like he just went into
handle it mode. And I was like, okay. So I feel grateful that I think it's like the very,
a lot of the damage that my dad, I feel like I got from him, him passing at the time
that I had started dating,
Miles gave Miles the opportunity to step up and show me who he was.
It was kind of kismet.
It was sort of this weird divine thing where I was able to sort of,
him passing is how Miles was able to step up. Passing the torch.
I was able to kind of undo the cycle kind of thing through it.
It was pretty surreal.
Do you feel like you got to say everything you wanted to say to him?
No.
And that's okay.
You feel at peace about everything or you wish you would have?
I'm so not this person, but I'm going to be this person.
I did do ayahuasca a couple months after he passed, like six months, because the grief was just, I didn't know what to do with it.
Strong, yeah.
Yeah, and I think that because I'm such a keep moving to get out of your feelings anyway,
I really didn't want to run from it and for the grief to manifest in other ways.
You know, I didn't want that energy to come out and like the workaholism or the codependence or whatever.
And I actually think what happened for me with ayahuasca and why I think it's a helpful tool is I didn't
hallucinate on ayahuasca. I kind of realized that I was hallucinating every day. And on ayahuasca,
I kind of saw things clearly. And I was able to take on a lot of the things that I thought were
weaknesses from my dad as strength. And I was allowed to sort of accept the things in me that
I got from him and alchemize them into positives. You know, it's like he was always
working and too much. And what I was like, I was just trying to find ways to use what I thought
were weaknesses of his and make them strengths and accept the parts of him that were in me.
You know, I don't want to be like my dad. I don't want to be like my mom. That's all we say.
Maybe they had good things about them. Maybe we're just seeing them wrong. Or maybe we're just so wrapped up in our own judgment and blame that we can't see it.
You know, my dad had a very skeptical take on people. He always called everyone liars,
thieves, and worms is what he would say. And it's so negative, but I don't know. I found myself
overcompensating the pendulum swinging too hard and trusting too much and being.
Going all in.
All in.
Trusting everybody.
Yeah, sure, manage my money.
Sure, I'll come stay at my house.
Sure.
And I just, I didn't have enough of that sort of what I call like healthy skepticism and healthy boundaries and a healthy sense of like seeing red flags, you know.
So I kind of, it helped me stop like divorcing myself from this
story that my parents were so messed up and I want to be totally different than them.
Do you feel like you do things to make your dad proud?
Oh my God.
Still?
Oh God. You're so good at this. I, when my dad passed, I had somewhat of an existential crisis
because I realized so much of my engine was to try to
impress him. Just him? Mom as well? I think more my dad. My mom, not so much. My mom was more like
physical stuff, like body appearance stuff that I've had to sort of work through. You got a great
combo. It's a whole other thing. Yeah, real doozy. Real one-two. They were made for each other.
You know, and I realized when my dad passed, I did have felt like I was sort of in a free fall because I was like, do I even want to do comedy?
Like the person that I was trying to impress is gone.
Like I don't even know why I'm doing any of this.
Wow.
And I canceled a bunch of projects I was doing.
I checked out of a lot of things.
I had to sort of completely revamp my priorities
and figure out what I wanted. What's the priorities now? The priorities now are, you know, for me,
I, and this probably sounds gross, but I'm big on making money because it is freedom. And I didn't
have that growing up. So I do try to make decisions based on it being lucrative enough
to be able to help a family
member out if they have an
issue. A lot of my family members don't have
health insurance and they didn't go to college.
For me, I take a lot
of pride in being able to earn
so that I can help people.
I don't have
cars and that's not my thing
and shoes and clearly clothes is not my thing and shoes and clearly
clothes is not my thing I like to be able to you know give people um the ability to sleep at night
because they're not stressing out about money you know so I do make a lot of decisions based on
earning you're not making millions at the comedy store I really know that that $15 the night you
saw me I made $15 you know so I work for free a lot because stand-up is like bodybuilding.
You're in the gym for a year making nothing, and then you get your special or whatever.
So I definitely, once my dad died, I got a little more mercenary about the way that I spent my time because I worked for free for so long and continued to until my dad passed.
And then just really high-quality, like, is this going to move the needle or not?
And after that, the first thing I did was Roseanne, which did not end as planned.
God, isn't that crazy?
It was so big.
Yeah.
Like, the launch and the show was so big.
Yeah.
And then one tweet ruins it all.
I don't think it was one.
It was other stuff.
I mean, there was, I found out.
It seemed like one tweet was what
ruined thousands of people ostensibly. Yes, exactly. It was one, the tweet that broke the
camel's back, but there was definitely more before that I hadn't seen. And that was my mistake. I
didn't follow her before. And you know, like my dad said, ask people questions. I didn't ask enough
questions and I didn't do enough research and you know, but did, you know, at the time, it was like we're going to reach a bunch of people
that we wouldn't reach normally.
And I think that Hollywood, we forget.
We're in this echo chamber,
and we are talking to such a small number of people,
and this is an opportunity to talk to more people.
So I think that since my dad passed,
I've just tried to be a little more big picture
in the things that I take.
I don't take jobs anymore to impress people.
I don't take jobs anymore because there's a celebrity involved who might, this person might think is impressive.
Like I don't have those sticky motives anymore. It's like, do I want to do it or not?
There you have it, my friend. I hope you enjoyed this powerful episode about
how to live without regret,
powerful lessons from losing loved ones, and the journey of living through loss.
It's not an easy experience.
It's challenging.
It's messy.
There's a lot of uncertainty, a lot of questioning.
But I hope this brought you some relief, hearing some stories and some strategies and tools that some other people have used in their process of loss and their journey.
Again, if you know one friend who might be experiencing some type of loss in the last
couple of years, who had a challenging time, just send them a text. If they lost a parent,
a friend, or anyone close to them, send them a text with this link, lewishouse.com slash 866, and ask them to
listen and reflect back to you the biggest takeaway they got from this episode. Share it on social
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greatness. I don't want you to regret not doing something that you know you want to do.
If there's something inside of you that's been burning in your life, in your heart,
that you want to do, that you've been thinking about, that you're afraid to do,
now is the time to do it.
You don't want to regret.
You don't want to regret not saying something to someone.
You don't want to regret not doing something for someone.
And you don't want to regret not doing something for yourself. Whether that's launching your book,
starting that business plan, you know, asking that person out on a date, whatever it is,
now is the time to do it. You never know if tomorrow is guaranteed. All we have is now.
Now is the time to get started and start pursuing the life of your dreams.
now is the time to get started and start pursuing the life of your dreams.
As William Penn said, they that love beyond the world cannot be separated by it. Death cannot kill what never dies. And Thomas Campbell said, to live in hearts we leave behind is not to die.
I love you so very much. I hope you feel that we are here for you, that we support you,
and that we believe in you. I believe in you, and I believe you have so much to live for,
and I can't wait to see what you create in the world. Now is the time to create it.
And as always, you know what time it is. It's time to go out there and do something great. Bye. Outro Music