The School of Greatness - Former Secret Service Agent Reveals How To Read ANYONE To Know Who You Can Really Trust
Episode Date: April 28, 2025Get my New York Times Bestselling book, Make Money Easy!Former Secret Service agent Evy Poumpouras reveals the hidden psychology of human behavior that was used to protect presidents and can transform... your relationships. Through harrowing experiences at Ground Zero on 9/11 and a near-death childbirth, Evy discovered a neutrality mindset that keeps her centered amid chaos. She shares tactical communication strategies that extracted confessions from hardened criminals and explains why comparing yourself to others sabotages your authenticity. This conversation unpacks how to read people accurately, gather intelligence in everyday interactions, and maintain your integrity when others want you to break.Evy’s BBC Maestro Course ‘The Art of Influence’Evy’s book Becoming Bulletproof: Protect Yourself, Read People, Influence Situations, and Live FearlesslyIn this episode you will learn:How to stop chasing external validation and find peace through a neutrality mindsetWhy watching other people's work can secretly sabotage your creative authenticityThe counterintuitive way to de-escalate conflict when someone is at their angriestHow to read when someone is lying by using strategic silence instead of more questionsThe exact technique Evy used to get confessions after other interrogators failedFor more information go to https://www.lewishowes.com/1764For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960More SOG episodes we think you’ll love:Mel Robbins – greatness.lnk.to/1761SCDr. Ramani Durvasula – greatness.lnk.to/1577SCJefferson Fisher – greatness.lnk.to/1737SC Get more from Lewis! Get my New York Times Bestselling book, Make Money Easy!Get The Greatness Mindset audiobook on SpotifyText Lewis AIYouTubeInstagramWebsiteTiktokFacebookX
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You can't look to other people to support you for you to go do something.
If you're saying you need to give me this so I can do this,
they're not the problem. Your thinking is the problem.
She's the Secret Service agent who's protected presidents.
And she looked after the Obamas, Clinton and Bush.
With a master's in forensic psychology, she worked complex undercover missions.
My girl, Evie Pomporez.
Ask people questions, drop a question, and go quiet.
Let them reveal themselves to you.
If you wanna know how to read people
and if you wanna know to gauge who's trustworthy,
who's not, who's reliable, let them show you.
But if you're jabbering away, you're not gonna see it.
The mistake we make is we think there's good and there's evil.
Evil people do bad things.
Good people do bad things. Good people do bad things.
Good people take advantage.
Good people will hurt you.
What's the tell or the question to know
if someone is really lying?
Okay, I'll answer this question.
You have really kind of exploded
in the last three or four years with your content.
And every time you come on my show
and the content I see online,
it's around human performance,
about optimizing yourself.
It's also around human psychology and understanding people.
It's understanding how to influence people in a positive way, understanding when someone's
trying to manipulate you.
All these things that you've learned through your studies, through real world experiences,
protecting presidents, through working in Secret Service,
all these different things.
I'm curious, what is the greatest skill
that you've developed in the last four years, five years,
since you've really kind of blown up in a bigger way
of all the interviews and the content you do on TV?
What is the biggest skill you've developed
in the last four or five years for yourself
that has continued to help you thrive personally because you had tons of skills when
you're working in the field but what about these last four or five years?
It's hard to say if it's just one thing. I think it's been a few things. One is I
let things be. I don't try very hard to analyze or understand.
I was listening to your story before about the million dollars, somebody owing it to
you.
And it's very easy to get in that rabbit hole and all these things come in.
And I've learned to kind of, I don't want to say surrender, but just let things be.
And instead of not getting stuck in the dwelling thing, I'm like, all right, there's a lesson for me to learn here.
That's one thing, like not trying so hard,
not chasing things so hard.
I've learned that the harder you chase,
it's like a frenzy and it doesn't work.
And when you kind of step back and you're like,
I'm just gonna let it happen.
I'm not saying don't do the work. You have to do the work
And I think that's the other thing you have to put in the work
It's and I don't you know what else I don't do I don't compare myself to other people really
No, how have you learned that because that's hard for a lot of people
The moment I start to do it I stop and this is I is, I've never said this, I'll say this here,
I've never watched anybody else's podcast interview, ever.
Not that I don't like your show, it's a great show.
I watch the clips, I watch the clips.
So for example, so I've done podcast interviews, right?
Your show, I won't sit and watch somebody else's
because I don't
want it to get into my head because then I start doing, oh, they did this or I should
say this or that. And to be frank, I actually learned this in Secret Service training from
shooting because when you would shoot, they'd like line you up and the targets were really
close to each other. I mean, safety, like within reason, but everybody could see everybody's target
and it was very easy for your eyes to go to the other person's target and you start to
kind of psych yourself out, oh his hole's perfect and mine sucks and you might think
like well what's the big deal? It is a big deal because when there's 40 special agents
watching everybody else, they're like she sucks, I'm not going to take her out with me, or he's not this, or they look like a mess. So you start to care. So I don't, Louis, as I
move up, I'm very careful. And when I look at other people's content, I look and I move on.
And that's a really big thing. And I don't try to do what other people do. And sometimes I have people hit me up and
they'll say, you know, I, Evy, you know, how can I be a better speaker? And you were talking about
that before, or how can I be a better interviewer on my podcast? And I want to sound like this
person. And I, and I, and I'm like, stop watching what other people do. If you want to mess with
your head, look at what everybody else is doing
and then compare it to you.
And then now instead of you being just like genuine
and authentic, you're trying to do what other people do
and that doesn't work.
And I really feel like that's the biggest thing.
Even when I go on the news,
I cover news here at 30 Rock,
for NBC I cover law enforcement and crime.
I listen to the other news anchors, but I'm always very careful when I listen to other
commentators to really just be like, just do your thing.
Just do your thing.
That's interesting you say that because...
It's interesting you say that because when I launched the School of Graveus over 12 years
ago, I remember saying to myself, I don't want to hear another podcast.
I don't want to listen to any podcast because I don't want to be influenced on what other
people are doing.
And I just said to myself, if I wanted to listen to a show, how would I want it to sound
for me?
Like what would I want?
Not trying to mimic everyone else. And I think it really served me well because I was like, okay, I want, not trying to mimic everyone else.
And I think it really served me well because I was like, okay, I want the intro music to
be positive.
I want it to be this.
I want to start this way.
And I want the flow to be a certain way.
And so I didn't have any, I guess, judgment about what other shows did.
And it's funny because I actually just listened to an episode of a more of a scripted show,
which I usually don't listen to.
But I listened to it and I was like, oh, that's interesting. an episode of a more of a scripted show which I usually don't listen to but I
listened to and I was like oh that's interesting and I could and I could I
saw myself comparing myself to a scripted show on how they use their
music and this and the voice acting and all that stuff and I think it was also
it being out of my industry being a scripted show actually it was like okay
with it because it was
adjacent but it wasn't in my kind of interview world and so I was able to get
some inspiration without being too judgmental of myself and kind of say how
can I pull from this industry into my industry so I thought that was also
something that was good but when I launched the show I didn't listen to any
podcasts and it was really helpful for me. But I also think, what about having a mentor though?
You had coaches and guides who you probably looked up to in Secret Service and training
that had a certain level of success, right?
So don't we want to also have certain mentors or coaches or people we can get feedback from
without comparing to but guiding us?
So I'm going to be honest, I've never had a mentor.
I've never had one.
I actually didn't even know what the word meant
for a long, long time until it became popular.
So I never had someone who I was like,
oh, I wanna be like that.
I didn't have that.
So maybe I didn't know what I was missing.
But you had coaches, right?
Or people that were like training you in the field.
Lewis, they're not coaches.
They're like drilling you to the ground.
They're trying to make you fail.
Lewis thinks it's like, hey, you go.
They're more like, you're a loser.
You're this.
You suck.
Quit now.
Quit.
Quit.
You're going to get somebody killed.
They were the opposite of mentors.
They were the opposite.
The first time I did, when I joined the NYPD, which
was before they built the new academy, which is really nice,
I went to the rinky dinky one.
It was attached to the 1-3 precinct
found in the 20s for my New Yorkers,
if you know where that is.
And this thing's like the stairwells are caving in.
It's like a dump.
It was wild, but there was a gym.
And the gym had this green line. And it was like the green lane of death and they would have you
run this line 25 times. 25 times was a mile and a half and like that was one of
the test markers they would do and you would run this line and they have you
run it ranks and you had to put your arm out so it was like shoulder to shoulder. I
couldn't fall back and then the person behind me couldn't fall back because if
it was just like this whole ranking system. If you fell back a little they would pull you out, they would yank you out and then
it's not like they feel bad for you. They put you in the middle and then they have you run suicides back and forth
across this huge gym. I mean people would, I would see grown men
go over, like puke, go over to the trash can pu puke, and then they'd be like, get back
in there.
So the first time, I wasn't a great runner.
I never really had to run before I went to the academy.
So my first run, I fall out.
I'm what they call a fallout.
And they yank me out.
I will never forget the instructor.
She was like, and it was a woman.
You think women, women. She was like, come on drama queen, get out. You know,
I was thinking, where is this coming from? And I'm doing my runs, my suicide runs. I'm
heaving. And then they have me and the other fallouts stand in the middle, the runs done.
They make everybody in the gym do an about face to look at the center and you're looking at about maybe 500 people. And they get in there and they're like, do
you see these people here in the middle? They're going to get you killed. So when you all go
in the locker room downstairs to change, you tell them they need to quit. You all should
not be here.
Get out.
So, those were my coaches, Louis.
Interesting.
When you have people trying to get you to quit and that's their job, how do you learn
to have self-respect or believe in yourself that you're capable of what they're not telling
you to do?
When I started in the NYPD and I joined, I was very naive.
I was like, NYPD Academy, it'll be like college.
I'm like, it'll be fine.
I just survived college and I was very wrong.
They're paramilitary structures.
So I was very novice.
I knew nobody in the military.
I knew nobody in law enforcement.
So when I went that first week
and everyone's yelling at you,
they're talking to you like you're garbage.
That's just the way it was.
I remember that first week being, what did I do?
And then my family too was not supportive at all.
They thought I was bonkers.
All my friends thought I was nuts.
So I was really, really very alone in that moment.
And I had one friend who had, he had done wrestling,
he sports when he was in high school.
And he's like, and I remember being upset.
He's like, and I was like, I'm gonna quit.
And he said to me, don't quit.
It's a game.
It's a game.
And I'm like, what do you mean it's a game?
I didn't understand.
He's like, that's what they do.
They wear you out.
They, and they want people to quit.
They want the weak to quit.
So the strong stay. And he's out. They want people to quit. They want the weak to quit, so the strong stay.
He's like, don't let them win.
I stuck it out, and every day got a little bit easier, and a little bit easier, and a
little bit easier.
But yeah, you go in there, you feel like a loser.
You do.
You feel like you're weak.
You're in front leaning rest for nothing.
I remember somebody's phone went off in my company, it was called a company, like in
the back.
Instructor hears it and he's like, everybody get down and they put us in front leaning
rest for something like 30 minutes.
So you don't know what that is?
What is that, a plank or something?
It's a plank.
Okay.
But a really horrible one.
Wow.
So it was, I had to really endure that and then you know when you go to
the US Secret Service Academy again like everyone's looking at you going and
that that's even more curated NYPD 1500 people in my class NYPD cadets first
month's 300 quit well they were happy to see you go. They're like, bye-bye.
Bye-bye. Don't come back. They didn't care. And then NYPD, now I went to a class of 50,
excuse me, Secret Service 54, and now like you're really seen. And there they,
they did, they invested in you because it was a much more lengthy process and they
did want to see you succeed,
but at the same time they're like,
hey man, if you can't cut it, there's the door.
And so you really have to endure and not,
and sometimes people may not want you there.
And then that's another obstacle,
but every day, everybody's seeing what you do.
And even grades, like they would post scores up
so people could see it.
So there was no-
Yeah, it's no-
No, so you're, it's also the shame that you don't want
of not performing.
So it's not just for yourself.
It's like everybody seeing you not do what you need to do.
I mean, so, I mean, I know there's people here
who've had maybe parents that didn't believe in them or
siblings that were putting them down or just didn't have good
experiences as adults where people weren't empowering them.
So how did you learn to feel empowered when people were
trying to force you to quit? They wanted you to be
humiliated. They wanted you to look bad. They were happy if you
failed. How did you stay, I guess, confident or believing
that you were above it and created an environment of,
I'm okay, no matter what they think?
So there's kind of two lanes.
One lane is it's people that love you and care about you,
but don't support you.
And then the other lane is people that may be envy you
or jealous of you, do want your harm.
This lane here,
they need to not be in your life. And the moment you realize that, you don't have
to tell them, but you should start to fade out. You know who those folks are
and you don't need to be like, hey you know what, save it. Save it because you
need that energy so that you can go do what you need to do. Right? The point is to fade out.
And then before you know it, you're not there anymore.
And they're like, where'd she go? I've been gone months.
The other lane is that people that you really want to support you
and you want them to do that for you, but they forgive them.
My parents were immigrants. My mother grew up in a village, like literally a village, dirt poor. I mean the bathroom was in the forest.
And when I was a kid I would go visit, like it was a hole in the ground and the shack next to the chicken coop.
And so my mother group, my father group, very poor, dirt poor, they were from Greece.
So they couldn't understand what I was doing.
They didn't understand it.
My brother, he's like, you can go be a cop.
You know, he didn't like cops.
I didn't even like them.
But life takes you in a weird path.
So I just learned, like, forgive them.
But, you know, I'm going to be transparent with you.
Like, you can't look to other people to support you for you to go do something. It's nice if you can get it, but like, if you're saying, you need to
give me this so I can do this, they're not the problem. Your thinking is the problem.
Can you explain more of that? It is, I'm not going to do this because I don't have support, my mom's not behind me,
my dad's not behind me, this person is supporting me, my friends are making fun of me.
So what I just did is I made these external factors, the deciding factors of whether I
do something or not.
And then, you know, we've all been there, we listen to other people, myself included,
and then we are pissed. Why, we listen to other people, myself included, and then we are pissed.
Why did I listen to this person?
And then we're mad at them.
Uh-uh.
We have to be mad at ourselves and be like, I chose to listen.
And so I had to learn over time, don't listen.
And you also know intuitively, if it feels like you need to go this way then just go and if you're wrong
You're wrong. Like if you fail you fail
I'll share the story with you because as you were talking I was thinking about when you were sharing all the ways in which
You failed or you didn't feel right before I went to the NYPD
I actually took a test to be a probationary
NYPD, I actually took a test to be a probationary, not a police officer, to work as a probation officer. And I started leaning into law enforcement. I really wanted the job. It was going to be
my first real job out of college. And I was like, so I get a date and time to go take
the test. I go to Brooklyn. I won't forget it. I'm super nervous because I'm like, wow,
this is like a real job. You know, again again, I came from very a labor background, my parents, you know.
And so I show up to take this test.
I'm really, really nervous to take this test.
And I'm taking the test and they ask us a question.
I had to write an essay, but I was so nervous.
I had a hard time writing my essay.
Time's up. I didn't do a good job.
And I knew it. I'm like, I failed this thing.
And sure enough, I didn't do a good job. And I knew it. I'm like, I failed this thing.
And sure enough, I failed it.
Fast forward a couple of months,
a couple of maybe weeks ahead,
the woman who gave it to us,
there was a woman who gave us the test, like the proctor.
I go to a wedding and I see her,
now she's a probationary officer,
and I see her at a wedding and I'm like,
oh my gosh, that's the woman that gave me the test.
So I muster up my courage because I felt shame because I failed it. I'm a probationary officer. And I see her at a wedding, and I'm like, oh my gosh, that's the woman that gave me the test.
So I muster up my courage,
because I felt shame because I failed it.
She failed you.
She failed me, but I failed myself,
because I didn't do a good job on that test.
So I go up to her and I'm like, hi, I'm so-and-so.
I took the test a couple of weeks ago.
I didn't do very well.
Hopefully I'll get a second chance.
But I just wanted to come over and say hello, despite feeling that shame.
And I turn, you know, she shakes my hand.
She gives me one of those.
I turn around, I walk away.
Now my mom, who's seated at a table across,
my mom's like a very, I don't wanna say naive,
but like she's just not,
she doesn't look for negative things.
I go back and my mom says to me, come here.
Who was that?
And I said, oh, that was a woman who proctored the exam.
She was the recruiter, the one that didn't do well.
She's like, the moment you turned your back,
she was laughing at you with her table
and saying stuff about you, why?
And I remember, I remember I was like, because I failed and I didn't do well on that
test and she's probably looking at like who's this dit, who thinks she's going to go into this field,
you know. So can that crush you? Sure, I'd be lying if I didn't say like I felt shame, but then
there's also this other part of you that's just like, onward, you know?
And so from that, I became a Secret Service agent.
So very good.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'm curious about this, because I
know there's a lot of givers in this room, people that
want to give generously and have a lot of love in their hearts
and just think everyone, or maybe not in New York,
but think everyone's positive.
Growing up in Ohio, I was just like, ah, everyone's a good person.
But then I moved to New York and I was like, oh, okay, it's a different vibe.
Got to get that thick skin up in here.
But people are getting, I'm just teasing.
But as a, you know, as a master of human behavior, human psychology, human nature, how do you
think people can really understand if someone's
being a giver and generous with trying to meet them or connect with them, whether it
be intimately or career business-wise versus actually wanting to take something from that
person? How can you tell if someone's really a giver when they connect with you or they
really have a different agenda?
So this is where the naiveness comes in.
We project onto others what we think they are
because of what's in our heart.
I'm a giver so everybody is.
Yeah.
In my background in the US Secret Service,
I was a polygraph examiner and an interrogator.
They sent me to become, to do the lie detector test
and I would help the US Secret
Service and local police and I'd also go overseas to interview people who did really, who committed
crimes, right? The mistake we make is we think there's good and there's evil. Evil people do bad things. Good people do bad things. Good people take
advantage. Good people will hurt you. And so the thing that I hear people and the
mistake is they're so nice. Oh he's such a nice guy or she's such a nice
person or you know I don't understand what happened. Don't do that.
Don't do that. Don't do that.
But can't you go on the, but then you have to always be on guard with everyone you meet?
No, you need to be aware. You need to have your brain on.
You can't turn it off because you're like, oh, everyone's great because it's not.
There's a naiveness to it and that's on you.
Like it just isn't. it's just the truth.
And so when you live in that reality
and you look at people, even if they're nice,
a nice person can hurt you.
A nice person can take advantage of you.
Good people do these things.
So I always tell people, look at the behavior.
If that relationship becomes imbalanced,
so if you become the giver giver giver,
they're taking, taking, taking, you've helped create that imbalance. You also play a role in that. Yes
You also play a role in that and if you keep giving because you're thinking oh, I'll eventually get back pause and stop
People show you pay attention. I always say look at the behavior of the person don't label people
Label the behavior labels the person. Don't label people. Label the behavior. Labels are for clothing.
Label what they show you. They will show you. So if it becomes one way which you help to
foster and that's okay, correct it and then pull back. You know, and even today I'm always
aware it's not that I don't, you know,
I don't want to believe in people, I do,
but it's kind of like President Reagan used to say this,
trust, but verify.
Ah.
Ah.
Ah.
So, let's say you started some type of giving,
taking relationship.
It doesn't matter if it's intimate or career or whatever,
but you meet someone and they're they're taking your giving.
How can you
start to make it shift so you can feel better without being a jerk or saying you never give me anything in return and being like
you're they're supposed to give you something in return. How can you shift that energy?
It depends what you want. If it's that much of a taker,
goodbye. Yeah. like you can't change
people and people people will see people and we're like oh they have the
potential it's not do they have the potential what could it be what it was
it's like what do you have now you must live in truth what is the reality not
what you wish it to be not what you want it to be not what it was what not what
they could be and then at the same time, allow people to be what they are. This is what I
have, what do I want to do with it? But we try so hard, I'm going to this, I'm going
to shift, I'm going to do that, and then that's going to yield me this. You're 50% of the
equation, but they're the other 50. And they've got their own brain, their own intuition,
their own intentions, their own whatever's going on and then we're going to come in and
what? And a little bit like how narcissistic of that of us is that to think like oh I can
do this. Let people be what they want to be. Now if they want to shift and change to have
a better relationship with you because you want to make that investment, make it. But some people don't. Leave them. And then now you have a choice. Do I keep you in my life? Okay.
If I don't keep you, goodbye. If I do keep you, how much do I keep you or how much do I interact with you
so that I am also healthy?
Right?
Mm-hmm. Right?
Mm-hmm.
I'm curious, have you noticed differences from working in government or working in the
Secret Service world versus, I guess, working in the civilian world afterwards and how people
act and interact?
Oh yeah.
What's the difference between the government world versus civilian world?
Well, I can't say government because it's a big word.
I can say US Secret Service because everyone's right.
But I'll give you an example.
If a special agent said to me, Evie,
I'll call you tomorrow at 9, they called me tomorrow at 9.
If a special agent was like, I'll meet you there at 9,
they were there at 850.
Or in the civilian world, it's like
I
Forgot I went by Starbucks
You know, I overslept like you showed up like you you
You showed up and also
There was a lot less personal stuff
Like you didn't bring your baggage with you everywhere you went.
Really?
You burden other people.
It's okay to go to people for guidance once in a while
but it's also how much are you going,
how much are you taking from people?
So if I come in with all my problems to work,
you're just like, I don't wanna stand next to her, I'm gonna get one right in the head because she's
gonna be thinking about, you gotta be on the ball. So you gotta perform. Also like
sick leave did not exist. You never called out sick, at least on the
president's detail, you never called out sick. Sick leave was something you scheduled. So if you were sick, you showed up either sick to the White House and maybe they would
send you home or you were in the hospital.
You could not call out sick because if I called out sick, the whole system or structure that
was created would collapse.
Just one player not there.
So you showed up.
So in the civilian world, not everybody shows up. So you choose who you're going to be. You
could look at other people that like, but they do that. I don't care about them.
It's always like, what's your integrity? What's your character. You show people who you are. So when people
know that you're the person who's going to show up, it's actually competence. When they know you're
going to be there, you're reliable, you're consistent, you do what you're going to say
you're going to do. That is huge. People today, Lewis, call me up and they tell me all sorts of
stuff. I have people come to me and if I need something, people always deliver.
And I was thinking about this. I'm like, why is that?
Why is it that if I have somebody call me, my phone rings or if I call someone, they answer on the first ring.
And I'm like, you know what? I'm like, because I brought that integrity and ethos with me.
And they're like, I know she will come through and I
think that's kind of the difference from the civilian world. Not everybody's like
that but those are the differences I see. How do you navigate it then you know
being in the I guess the public world more rather than the private world where
you're getting pulled in a lot of directions, you're building your business,
your brands, you have opportunities left and right.
People are trying to, you know, whatever.
Get something from you or help you
or say they're gonna help you, but then they don't deliver.
How do you navigate that emotionally or mentally
in this kind of world?
You have to be careful.
Like I'm always discernment.
Discernment, Like turn that brain on and really think and listen to what people tell you.
I don't even want to say turn that brain off.
It's just like listen.
Look at, look at, you know Odysseus, the ancient Greek saying, look at your opponent.
It will tell you everything you need to know.
Don't listen.
Look at them.
When I say look, like look at what they show you and everybody here's the thing everybody in pursuit of their self-interest
Right, it's not always going to be in alignment with what you want
I they want this but it might not be to my best interest
So you have to look at what they're selling you, what they want from you, what they're asking of you.
Whether you want to give them that or not, you don't just always have to give.
You want to have that discernment. Make good choices.
You're going to make bad ones or make mistakes sometimes. It's okay.
And at the same time, don't be afraid to make mistakes.
But I navigate carefully, because you're right, as you,
and again, I was listening backstage.
You know, as you move up, as you've done well,
it's like, hey, Louis, remember me from middle school?
You know, and I'll get messages sometimes.
I got a message from a girl that bullied me.
Like, hey, Evy, oh my god, remember me?
We used to go to school together.
Like, on social media, I'm like, this person?
You know, she's remembering like rainbows and unicorns.
And I'm like, do you remember what you did to me, right?
Those things will happen.
But going back to originally what you asked me,
the key is this, we don't bend the world to us, we don't make people adapt to
us, we become adaptable to the world.
So when I shift, I shift with who I have in front of me.
This is not manipulation and this is not me pretending to be something I'm not.
I look at the human being I have, I look at the behavior and I adapt to them and to their
world.
I don't make people come to me.
Really?
No, because that's rigidity
and then I'm gonna have problems.
That's the mindset.
Well, I'm just gonna show up, I'm gonna be me
and you know, whoever likes it.
Good luck with that.
And if they don't accept me at my worst,
they don't deserve me at my best,
that type of saying, right?
Yeah, it's like, who do I have in front of me?
Also, who is this person?
What do they need from me?
Sometimes you may have to work or do business
with someone you don't like.
You may not have a choice.
That's OK, but then you adapt your behavior
to fit that situation.
That's what I mean by adapt.
What's the environment I'm in?
And what version of myself do I need
to bring to be successful in this environment?
Some people, you have to be careful.
Some people, you shouldn't share so much.
Some people, you can be open with.
Some people, you can go to share a problem.
Some people, you cannot.
You adapt to the world and you will do great.
It was the same thing that I learned
when I did interviewing or when I dealt with the public.
If I had somebody highly emotional, okay,
I knew that I would have to pull back
on the Secret Service persona
and bring more of Evy in the room.
Or I would look at them,
like there was this young woman who,
you talked about sexual assaults against children.
Sadly, I worked many of those cases.
There are so many out there and it's just such a prolific problem and it's just not talked about.
But I would work so many cases where I would have to talk to offenders and sometimes I would have to see who do I have in the room.
One case, I had a nanny,
and she had done something to an infant.
And there was a fracture in the infant's arm,
and they suspected the nanny.
State police interviews her multiple times.
They're like, nanny's gonna give you nothing.
And the state police actually called U.S. Secret Service
and said, look, we think she did it.
Maybe the dad, can you send an agent up?
And so I would go out to help with these difficult cases.
And in fact, they were like, we're not sure
if it's the nanny, we're not sure if it's the dad.
So I remember, I was like, send me their statements,
because they gave written statements.
And I read the statements.
And after I read the nanny statement, I'm like,
I want the nanny, it's not the dad.
So I sit with the nanny, this is young woman,
single mom, overworked, two kids of her own.
She's trying to show up to do babysitting,
to make a living.
She's sitting in my chair and she's like this.
And she's talking to me like this
and I mean this girl looks broke. I mean broke in so many ways. So I can't come in like,
hi I'm special agent so and so good to meet you have a seat. Hi I'm Evy. How are you? Can I get
you something? Do you want something to eat? Do you want something to drink? Please sit down.
Do you want something to eat? Do you want something to drink?
Please, sit down."
And she had a softer tone.
I brought in my softer tone.
That's what I mean by adaptability.
It was still me, but it was the version of me she needed to get through that interview.
I also needed to know what she did or didn't do.
So she had been interviewed four times by state police, gave nothing, hour and a half,
I had a confession.
I didn't even have to polygraph her.
So people will reveal more and adapt to you more
if you're willing to adapt to them.
Let go of your ego a bit.
Let's stop flexing, we don't need to flex so much.
Is it more of the questions in which you ask or the energy in which you bring the questions
that get someone to reveal the truth about something they're holding back?
It is both.
It is both.
Actually it's probably less of you asking questions and more of you shutting up.
Shut up.
It's like my ethos.
When you talk a lot, you do not allow other people to reveal themselves to you.
I don't like to talk.
I know I'm on stage and I know I'm doing the Talking With Lewis, but in reality, I am that
person who's just like, tell me about yourself,
because I don't want to talk about myself.
Ask people questions, drop a question, and go quiet.
Let them reveal themselves to you.
If you wanna know how to read people,
and if you wanna know to gauge who's trustworthy,
who's not, who's reliable, let them show you.
But if you're jabbering away, you're not gonna see it.
So there's so much power in gathering,
I call it gather intelligence.
Gather intelligence on the people around you.
Then you can make educated and well-informed decisions
on who you should do business with,
who you should date, who you should marry,
who you should be around,
and who you should have no contact with.
But you can't make those decisions when you're doing all the talking.
I really am a proponent of less, less, less, less.
And you know, honestly, people love to talk about themselves, don't they?
Let them go.
They're going to love you for it.
Exactly.
They're going to be like, that lady, Evy, I love her.
Love talking to her.
Exactly.
Exactly.
You know? There are some people, Evy, that lady, Evie. I love her. Love talking to her. Exactly.
Exactly.
You know?
There are some people, Evie, that are masters at lying.
There's some people that are not good liars.
And you can tell like, oh, there's something off.
They have easy tells or they're just like, it's hard for them to lie.
Right?
They'll try, but you know something's off.
But for those who are masters at lying, or maybe they just hide just enough of the truth
that they just don't enough of the truth, or
they just don't reveal certain truth, it's like a gray area.
What's the tell or the question to know if someone is really lying?
Okay, I'll answer this question, but I'm curious, what kind of liar are you?
Everybody lies, we're all liars.
Let's own it.
I'm a naive liar.
What kind of liar? I'm a naive liar. What does that mean? It means
It means if he asked it's here's the thing when when Martha
This is a commitment I made to Martha when the day I met her I said you asked me anything I'll tell you the truth
But you don't have to but also
don't ask me sir I may not want to have the conversation that you're asking me
so I may say like I'm not having this conversation so don't ask certain things
that also know you don't want to know about my past so it's more like it's not
like harmful stuff like I just don't want it to about my past. So it's more like it's not like harmful
stuff like I just don't want it to be some ideas in her mind about whatever
past relationships or just positions whatever it might be right it's like
okay let's keep certain things out. Do you see how much you learn when you don't talk?
So it's more of a naive, exactly. I'm just sharing everything now.
No but I told her I told her you asked a question, I'll give you the truth.
But you ask me a question, I may not reply and say,
you know, it's not something I wanna talk about also.
So it's like, I'm being naive or I'm just not sharing,
but I'm being honest with you that I don't wanna share.
But she'll ask me a lot of stuff and I'm like,
it took me a lot of courage in the first year
of dating Martha, where she would ask me very lot of stuff and I'm like, it took me a lot of courage in the first year of dating Martha, where she would ask me
very vulnerable, intimate stuff
and I would just tell her the truth.
And I was so used to getting screamed at in the past
that I was waiting for like this reaction.
And this is when I knew that Martha was the right match
for me, when I could be fully truthful
about anything that I'm afraid of or ashamed of,
or just like things that I've done or whatever it might be and her accept me maybe
shouldn't like it it's not like she was like oh I'm glad you did that or went
through that experience but she was like okay I accept you like I understand this
is part of your past and it's all the part of you and that's okay and I accept
you and I never felt emotionally safe in intimacy because when I would share the truth, I would
always have some negative reaction or some blow up or frustration or sadness, whatever
it might be.
So for me, it allowed me to continue to be truthful about everything and feel like, oh,
I'm going to feel safe either way.
But I don't think you should be truthful to everyone
about certain things.
It depends on context, right?
So you know, well, Martha's a great interviewer,
by the way.
She's great.
I need to meet her.
She's great.
She makes you feel very safe in her presence.
So what she does, and is what you should all learn to do,
is she doesn't show judgment.
If she wants to know the truth about something, you want to be non-judgmental.
Even if that person is telling you something you don't want to hear.
Let's say you have a partner or spouse or someone you're with, and you're trying to
figure out if they're cheating on you.
I'll make it super simple.
And if they start to reveal stuff and you start yelling, guess what? Interview's over. So here's the question. What is your goal? If your goal is I need to find out what this person has done
so I can make a decision of whether I want to stay with them or not. I need information.
So this is when you have to self-regulate and say,
I'm not here to yell, I'm here to get intelligence, intel,
so I can make a good decision.
Because when you don't have intelligence, you make bad decisions.
When people feel that you're going to judge them,
they're going to stop telling you stuff and they're going to filter information.
And then you're going to make bad decisions in life because you don't know the
truth and the choices you make are made of bad information. That's the key. Then when you get
everything you need to get, then you can go. So there's a difference. Do you want to be right
and ream the person or do you want to get the information so that you can truly know what to do?
So that you can play chess. There's checkers and then there's chess. People that yell and scream and sh-
And you know, and I'm not saying that sometimes it's very emotional and we lose it. Self-regulate like own it.
I'll tell you the story. I had a boyfriend. Actually boyfriend, we were together. He leaves me.
He starts dating somebody else. Broke, boyfriend, we were together. He leaves me.
He starts dating somebody else.
Broke my heart, broke my heart.
How old are you, roughly?
I'm in my 20s.
I'm in my late 20s.
Secret service agent.
I know.
He was a secret service agent.
You mean that?
He was as well.
He was as well.
He was as well.
So he leaves me, breaks up with me, and then I surmise he's back but
something wasn't right right and I'm a polygraph examiner at this point so and
I surmised I'm like I think he's still talking to her but he's trying to talk
to me hmm so sneaky dog sneaky dog so as painful as it was sneaky I start asking
questions you know what happened?
You must miss her.
You talk to her?
What was that like?
And he starts revealing information to me.
Now, my heart's broken as I'm hearing this.
Don't get me wrong.
But he starts revealing, yes, I'm talking to her, and I'm talking to you,
and I don't know what to do.
I'm so confused.
I'm like, must be confusing, you confusing you know I mean tell me more so I'm sitting
listening through this but you're also emotionally as a human you probably
miss him or you felt hurt or sad or maybe you still have some feel for New
York I was doing every like FFF like I'm trying to make this PG rated this
interview but inside here I'm like yeah I'm like I'm trying to make this PG rated this interview but inside here I'm like yeah yeah yeah I'm gonna key your car that's what I was thinking like I'm gonna key this guy's car
that's what we do in New York it's like I was playing it all out in my head I'm listening to
this because I need to know what's going on so I can make a decision because I don't want to
get hurt again yeah Yeah. First time.
OK. Second time.
It's on me. So he reveals everything.
He's like, you know, so in the end, it's like, I just don't
know what to do.
I don't know who to be with.
This is where I got him. I got it all.
I was just like, so it ends.
I have everything I need now.
So I still couldn't help myself.
I'm not saying you should do this, but I was like, you know
what? Let me make it easy for you. I'm no longer a choice. I
Suggest you go to her
Now I'd be lying if I didn't tell you I hope I broke my heart
But at least I had enough information
So I can make a good decision for myself.
Because I didn't show judgment because he could have started telling me this stuff and
I could have shredded him.
I'm Greek.
I'm from New York.
Forget it.
How do you, I mean, how did you develop enough self-worth that once you were, I guess, hurt
or left that you didn't feel like you were to go
back to the same person who hurt you because I know I've made that mistake in
the past I'm sure people here who have gotten back into a relationship where
they're like oh this person I knew they weren't right for me I knew there was
something off we broke up and now we're gonna go try it again but something's
still not off how did you get the courage or the worth of the the knowledge
I guess, to
say, I'm going to be okay without this person, even though they're saying they want me back?
And maybe I miss them a little bit, but I'm going to be okay.
Because you are going to be okay. In the end, isn't it always okay? It always levels out,
right? It's always okay in the end. It always is. No matter what you go through, it's like this.
But it's your choice if he wanted to go like this
or like this.
There's something I adopted and I really have to say
that being in the US Secret Service helped me adopt it.
Unawareingly, it's a neutrality mindset
where you don't have high highs and you don't have low lows.
And you kind of live always in the middle. So even when devastating things happen to you,
you don't drop. But at the same time, like I don't celebrate high highs. I'm not like, oh my God, you know, like my book is going to be this or my book's going to be that. Like you, like you
launch a book, you want it to be great, but you can't tie your happiness to how successful,
let's say, the book is or isn't.
I hope it does great, but if it doesn't do great, I'm okay.
Because if you're that extreme
where you celebrate the high highs,
then when you crash, you're gonna crash.
But if you're somewhere in the middle
and you have this, it's a neutrality mindset.
Actually, Dr. Gabrielle Lyon is the one who kind of like,
I think you've had her on your show as well.
So she's my doctor and she actually treats a lot
of Navy SEALs, Secret Service agents, stuff like that.
And she's like, you're all the same.
She's like, none of you get super excited,
but none of you get devastated when something happens
because you start to learn to live in this middle space because what you don't do is you don't allow external factors to dictate, I'm happy,
I'm sad, I'm steady. Now I might do this here and there but I'm not doing this and I'm not
doing this. The external environment cannot dictate and truly other people cannot dictate
where you're going to be
because people can come and people can go
and although something may start positive,
it may turn out a different way and it's okay.
Yeah, and going into the, you know,
getting the intel from someone,
you mentioned the word like not being judgmental.
I think one of the things that Martha has learned
through being an actor for a long time,
she's always telling me when you're taking on a role
of an actor as an actor and you're taking on a role
from a script, you can't judge the person
you're taking the role of.
You can't make them wrong for being a drug addict
or whatever it is, because you're not gonna be able
to live their experience as an actor.
I don't know if there's any actors in here if that relates to them but so maybe that's why she was able to be
non-judgmental with me because she's had that practice where it's almost like you're being
neutral in your emotions about someone so you can get more information from them. It doesn't mean
you accept them and you're going to be with them but you're being neutral, you're being non-judgmental
at least in the time being to get the information
Then you can make your judgments of whether you want to work with them or be with them or not, I guess
Yes, it's like you need information to make good decisions
But if you're getting bad information, you're gonna make bad decisions
It was it was the same thing like in the interview room
Like I interviewed people who committed terrorism or were terrorist sympathizers. So I mean, I was ground zero on September 11th,
like the US Secret Service field office for New York was there.
And I endured that whole day.
I lived through it and I'm fortunate to be here, but I lost colleagues and I lost friends.
Now, I did not when I would sit in an interview and I was trying to get information
on where the next attack would come from
I didn't walk into that room and be like, you know what you did?
Do you know what your belief system did?
Do you know what you killed you almost killed me and you almost caused this?
First of all, who would I be making that whole interview about?
Me What would I be making that whole interview about? Hmm. Me.
Why was I there?
I was there to get information to find out where the next attack was coming from so more
people didn't die.
That was my goal.
And so I would self-regulate and in all the interviews I did with terrorists or people
in that sphere, I never once ever, ever brought up 9-11 or my experience.
Really? No, because I would make it about myself. What is your mission? What is your goal? I need
information and what I needed was information on when the next attack was coming because sometimes
they'd come in and they'd say oh there's an attack coming. It's coming from here. And what their goal was is to get
us to shift all our resources here so the attack could come from here. But that, I would
make it about me. So it's like, what is your goal? Have your goal? What am I trying to
achieve? It's not that you're not going to feel things, but when you know your goal,
then you're able to steady yourself. So every time I walked in, what is my goal?
My goal is to get to X.
How do I get to X?
I'm not saying I'm not gonna be upset,
but you must regulate your emotions.
If it's like, well, this person did this to me,
it's not my fault.
No, no, no, no, no.
You decide what behavior you're going to show.
You decide what you reveal to others other people cannot be in charge of what your behavior is
Think about how powerless that makes you and it just makes you just like
Like anybody can do anything to you
Now if you want to lose it if you ever want to like burn a bridge, burn it.
Burn it to the ground.
Just make sure you are choosing rationally to burn the bridge.
And you don't want to go back.
You're not going back.
You could just be like, I'm going to burn this thing down and I'm okay with it.
Torch it.
But make sure you're doing it because you intelligently chose to do it. Not
because you lost control. Yeah. Somebody got the better of you and you said and
did things that you wish you hadn't done and now you're pissed at yourself. It's
gonna happen to you but at least learn from that. But don't, what sometimes we do
is like that person did this so I reacted to that so then you're just a reactive person
You're into that that's good
I've got two final questions for you
This has been really powerful every I appreciate you one of them is around the idea of
Adapting to the people that are in front of you like it
Yeah, I think you said adapt be adaptable to the world. Is that what you think you said? Something around that? How do we be adaptable and flexible around
different individuals without feeling like we're flip-floppy, chameleons, kind of like snaky,
like different? How can we be authentically ourselves but adaptable to someone else. So they feel it's also, you're being authentic.
First of all, be genuine.
Just be a genuine human being.
You don't have to agree with people,
but you can be genuine.
You can show people interest.
You can be curious.
Like you can be that.
Be a genuine person.
I wouldn't even say be authentic
because my authentic self likes to wear leggings and
no makeup and I don't want to bring her to a place like this.
Be a genuine person, but you can be genuine and adapt.
If I have somebody who's angry, I'm going to adapt to like, all right, I have somebody
who's angry and they're yelling or they're screaming or they're venting. So I understand
that I can't yell and scream and vent if I want to make progress in this situation. It depends
also what you want. Do I want to make progress? So I adapt to that behavior. I understand and I just
noticed through the training I've had that when somebody's in that heated zone, you go quiet.
Most people don't. Most people think, oh you yelled at me? You this? Oh I'm
gonna come back at you. And then you just, you just go at it all day long. If you're trying to make
progress, you're like, all right, let them vent. And then when they're done venting, it's like,
and you've had it where you're like, I'm done. Right? But when people try to tell you, calm down,
relax, you get more pissed off. because you just want to get it out.
So let them get it out.
So that's what I mean by adapt.
I see what the behavior I have, I understand, let them get it out.
And then when they're done, now I can talk because now they're also ready to listen to
me.
Because sometimes we try to talk and interrupt them.
I had, there's a coffee chain, a big coffee chain.
I won't say which one, but one of the managers
came to me and he said, we need your help. He's like, I want to ask you for advice. He's
like, we get customers who come in and they lose their minds when we give them the wrong
drink, like dangerously so. And he said, I have an example to give you.
He said, one day somebody came in and we gave, he was given the wrong drink, the wrong coffee
concoction.
And he leaves, comes back, and he is livid.
And he starts yelling at the barista behind the bar.
And he's escalating and escalating and escalating to the point where he's
like I actually thought he was going to hit her. Wow. And he said I'm ashamed to
say I didn't know what to do. I was the person in charge and I didn't know what
to do and no matter what we did it escalated. So I said okay let me ask you
something. When he came in what did you guys do? Did you guys you know walk me
through what happened?
And when he comes in and he's yelling and we're telling him, calm down, we'll fix it
for you, sir, there's no need. And he's like, we fixed it for him. We gave him the right
drink. We even gave him a credit. It didn't matter. He just kept escalating and escalating.
And he's like, what did we do wrong? And I was like, it's not that what you did wrong,
but the thing that happened there is he was pissed and he just wanted to be heard and you kept
interrupting him he didn't even want it wasn't even the the drink because you
gave him the correct beverage he didn't even want that at that point you just
needed to let him vent but what you did is by interrupting him and by even by
fixing it and trying to get him
to stop, he just went up, up, up, up, up, up, and it got worse.
That's what I mean by adaptability.
What do I have in front of me and I have to adapt to that situation?
Now the normal New Yorker in me would be like, let's throw down.
Right?
But where would that get me?
Nowhere.
Know who you have in front of me me know what state of mind they're in
It's also what motivational mindset are people in what's going on in their head not your head, but you also have to have
enough
Be enough of a centered person
Not let your ego get in the way if you really want to be good at dealing with people
Your ego was will sabotage you because it's like,
how dare you talk to me like that?
How dare you this?
How dare you that?
And that's not a great place to be
because now you're really not going to make progress.
And it's like, do you want to,
do you want your ego to be satiated
or do you want to know what's going on around you
so that you can make intelligent decisions and handle people well?
I prefer the latter.
That's beautiful. That's beautiful.
I've got one final question for you.
I've got one final question, but before I before I ask it, I know you have a
program about the art of influence. Understanding yourself, reading other people, all these different things.
You've got an amazing program about this
that people can check out right here.
We'll also link it up on the recording
for people that are watching at home later.
So we'll have that up there for you guys to take a photo
of that, but I have one final question.
You have so much going on.
You're really a great resource for people
and having them understand themselves,
understand other people,
navigate relationships
differently, what is the thing you're most grateful for
in your life these days?
I wanna answer it thoughtfully.
I guess it shifts in that moment.
Overall, I'm just grateful for my life.
However that life turned out, I'm grateful for it.
In my culture, I'm Greek.
I'm Eastern Orthodox.
And we grew up, if you want something, you go to church.
You light a candle.
You actually light the candle.
It's very old school.
And then I was raised, you ask, candle like we have like you actually light the candle it's very old school and then I was raised like you ask you know and whatever you
believe in but in my culture it's like you ask God to like you know or whoever
you prayed you like to give you what you want and every time I find myself doing
that if I want something and I go to put that candle in the sand we put in the
sand I stop and I'm like I just want to say thank you for
everything you gave me.
I don't need anything.
I think I'm thankful for, and when I say my life, I guess I've had like two key moments
where really like I I
Thought my life would end like the job I had was very life and death and so those moments always existed
But I had two like real moments where I'm like, this is it. I'm gonna die one was September 11th
and
In that moment, I remember when everything was happening and I I really thought I was like, I'm gonna die.
It was when the first tower was coming down.
I'm like, I'm not gonna live through this.
And I remember thinking, man, I'm like, not yet.
There's so many things I didn't do.
I started thinking about the things I didn't do.
And I'm like, you know, if I live through this,
I'm gonna live my life.
I'm gonna live, I'm gonna do these things
so that I'm okay to go the next time comes.
And then the next time I really had it,
I really was gonna die was when I gave birth to my daughter.
Something happened during the delivery
and just my body just started to shut down
and I started, you know, my lungs started
filling up with water.
I couldn't breathe.
So my oxygen started going down.
My kidneys started shutting down.
So my body started shutting down and I could feel the fade.
I guess it felt like a fade.
And I remember, you know, I'm like, I'm dying again.
Wow.
And in that moment, I was like, but I'm OK to go this time.
I did everything I wanted to do, or at least I tried.
Now, of course, my husband's sitting there mortified
because he's about to lose me.
And I tell him the story later.
I'm like, I was OK to go.
He's like, are you out of your mind?
He's like, you were going to leave me with the, you know?
And I, you know, but it was
the truth.
You could see those were horribly traumatic events and it depends which way you want to
look at them and I look at them as two of the greatest blessings I've ever had.
And so I am grateful for those moments because they taught me what my life means
or what life means and they showed me that,
even to this day, I'm okay to go.
Are you okay to go?
If you're not, it's okay. You just have work to do.
Get yourself to that point.
I'm grateful for that.
That's beautiful. We are grateful for you.
We appreciate you.
Give it up, guys, for every one more time.
Thank you so much.
We appreciate you. I hope you enjoyed today's episode and it inspired you on your journey towards greatness.
Make sure to check out the show notes in the description for a full rundown of today's
episode with all the important links.
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love hearing feedback from you and it helps us figure out how we can support and serve
you moving forward. And I want to remind you of no one has told you lately that you are loved you are worthy and you matter
And now it's time to go out there and do something great