The School of Greatness - How Faith, Neuroscience, and Meaning Work Together | Arthur Brooks
Episode Date: March 30, 2026Arthur Brooks opens with a startling truth: most of us are living inside a simulation, sacrificing meaning for dopamine hits from our devices. He explains that your brain has two operating systems, th...e ME self and the I self, and technology has hijacked the wrong one. Through neuroscience and ancient wisdom, Brooks maps the exact pathway from phone-enslaved to fully present, showing how boredom is not the enemy but the gateway to transcendence. The conversation moves from digital detox protocols to the four-stage neurochemistry of falling in love, then lands on something deeper: why success never delivers the happiness it promises. Brooks shares the specific daily rituals that transform relationships, the surprising intimacy of praying with your partner, and why your smartphone on the dinner table literally blocks your ability to bond with others. This is not another self-help conversation. This is the operating manual for being human in an age designed to keep you distracted. The Greatness Playbook: The Happiness Blueprint Edition Preorder your copy The Meaning of Your Life Arthur on Instagram Arthur on Facebook In this episode you will: Break free from phone addiction using three science-backed protocols that reprogram your neural pathways without going cold turkey Recognize when your brain is operating from the me self versus the I self, and why one destroys meaning while the other creates it Navigate the four neurochemical stages of falling in love so you move at the right speed instead of crashing from dopamine to oxytocin Apply the four-part algorithm that saves struggling relationships through eye contact, touch, fun, and spiritual practice Understand why chasing money and success before happiness guarantees misery, and how to reverse the order to find both For more information go to https://lewishowes.com/1908 For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960 Follow The Daily Motivation for essential highlights from The School of Greatness More SOG episodes we think you’ll love: Lewis Howes & Martha Higareda Price Pritchett Dr. Daniel Amen Get more from Lewis! Get my New York Times Bestselling book, Make Money Easy!Get The Greatness Mindset audiobook on SpotifyText Lewis AIYouTubeInstagramWebsiteTiktokFacebookX Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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Your brain is designed to ask all the big why questions on the right,
and then to solve how to and what questions on the left.
And the reason people are depressed today is because they're avoiding the big right-side questions.
The whole culture of technology and hustle and grind and online presence is all about staying in the left hemisphere of the brain.
That's the reason that people don't know the meaning of their lives.
He's a Harvard professor, international keynote speaker, New York Times bestselling author.
He spent the past two decades studying and teaching the art and science of happiness.
to millions of people. Dr. Arthur Brooks in the house.
Here's what's crazy about when you're living in the wrong side of your brain
because you're living in the matrix, you're living in the simulation of ordinary life.
Your great-grandfather never came home and said to great-grandma,
I had a panic attack behind the mule today.
It's laughable.
How could someone start going to the right side of their brain to find more meaning and purpose in their life rather than stress and chaos?
Yeah.
So to begin with, we have two kinds of.
of dilemmas as human beings. We have complicated dilemmas and complex dilemmas in life. Two kinds of
problems. Complicated problems are the how to and what problems that we're dealing with all day long.
Like how do I get from Orange County to Los Angeles, which I was dealing with this morning, right?
Or how do I, you know, how do I, you know, think about the next five years of the School of Greatness
podcast, which we were talking about, such an interesting, complicated problem, how to and what
problems. But those aren't the problems that you care about because what are we really talking about?
We were talking about your babies and your marriage and your faith.
Those are complex problems, which are impossible to solve.
They're easy to understand.
Impossible to solve.
You only live with them.
And the reason is, believe it or not, these two types of problems are processed in different
hemispheres of the brain.
This is a theory called hemispheric lateralization, which is a fancy way of saying the right
side and the left side do different things.
The left side does complicated problems.
Like how do I get to L.A.?
How do I build a toaster?
The right side says, why do I love my wife?
Who's God?
What's the meaning of life?
What's the meaning of life?
The mystery and the meaning.
And you'll never come to a conclusion.
And part of the reason is because that's not how your brain is designed.
Your brain is designed to ask all the big why questions on the right.
And then to solve how to and what questions on the left.
And the reason people are depressed today is because they're avoiding the big right side questions.
They're not even asking meaning questions.
Because the whole culture of technology and hustle and grind and you know online presence is all about saying in the left hemisphere of your brain
That's the reason that people don't know the meaning of their lives
That's this whole book how do you find the meaning of your life? It's go to the right side of your brain how you do that?
That's the challenge how could someone start going to the right side of their brain to find more meaning and purpose in their life rather than stress and chaos? Yeah
So to begin with most people don't realize that that's the problem
that they're using their brains in the wrong way.
The way that our brains have not been designed,
and again, whether you believe in God or not,
our brains have unambiguously been designed
with two halves for a reason.
The Y half and the what and how half.
And they don't realize that our culture,
our technology, our economy,
have ruled out the Y half systematically
over the past two decades.
So I'll give you an example of this.
You know, I started seeing a lot of this.
I started seeing this when I was out of teaching for a long time.
I went and I ran a company for 11 years.
And I came back in 2019 and it was a different world.
And when I left academia in 2008, academia was happier than the rest of the world.
People were falling in love and they're making, remember college?
Sure.
Fall in love and making friends.
Exploring big ideas.
You went out the world.
Yeah.
Having your mind blown?
Yeah.
2019, triple the rates of depression, double the rates of anxiety.
Why?
Exactly.
So I start asking them
and they start talking about meaning.
It's like, I don't know what I'm meant to do.
I mean, I'm going through, I'm studying this and doing that
and trying to get a good job.
But my life feels meaningless.
And saying my life feels meaningless
is the best predictor of depression and anxiety
for people under 35.
Saying that.
Saying that.
That's the predictor.
So then you start talking to them
and how they figure out how they live
and it turns out that life dramatically changed
after about 2008.
Social media?
Yeah.
Well, social media.
devices, the screens, the technology radically changed it. You talk to young people, they're like,
it's like I'm living in the matrix. You know, it's interesting you say that, not to cut you off
here. I saw a video recently, speaking of being on my device, but I saw a video talking about
a guy who's probably in his 40s, probably around my age with, I don't know, eight, nine,
10 year old son having a conversation. And he said, you know what our punishment used to be growing up,
you know, back on the 80s and 90s, staying inside. I don't know. Not being able to go outside.
was our punishment and the son was like, what do you mean?
I know.
Like, I want to be a punishment for me because I want to be on my phone or on computer or on like video games all day.
We're living the punishment voluntarily.
Here's the weird thing about it.
Here's what's crazy about when you're living in the wrong side of your brain because you're living in the matrix.
You're living in the simulation of ordinary life.
Your great-grandfather, like great-grandpa house, never came home and said to great-grandma,
I had a panic attack behind a mule today.
It's laughable because his brain was working the way it's supposed to work.
They might have had hard days and stress, but not this type of stress.
And here's the weirder part.
His moment-to-moment life was actually pretty boring because he was behind that mule.
But his life wasn't boring.
A lot of young people today who are living in the Matrix, living in the left hemispheres of their brains,
moment-to-moment they have zero boredom, but their life is grindingly boring.
See, that's the thing.
There's the micro-bortem and the metabortem.
Interesting.
And that's the way to think about it.
To say, have I eradicated boredom for my life but my life is actually boring?
Then you know you're on the wrong side.
And you'll never find meaning until you can break out of that.
Because no one's actually bored anymore is what I'm hearing you say.
Because they can find all day along getting a dopamine hit on something,
watching something entertaining or funny or what's next or gambling or whatever it might be,
some type of hit that they don't allow for space to listen to what they're meant to do.
I have a call to get Harvard, a guy named Dad Gilbert.
ever had Dan Gilbert on the show.
I haven't, but I know the name.
You know him, right?
He's the world's leading expert on bored of him.
He's a visionary social psychologist.
He's the best in the business.
And he's done these experiments where you bring people into the lab, young people, like
undergraduates, they do anything for 20 bucks, right?
Yeah, yeah.
And he makes them sit in a room where there's nothing on the walls, nothing to do,
completely silent.
They have one choice besides sitting there quietly where they have a little key fob with a button
on it.
If you touch the button, you self-administer a painful electric shock.
I don't know how he got through this,
this through the internal review board, right?
Right?
That's all they can do.
Because he wants to know whether they choose boredom or shocks,
boredom or pain.
A quarter of the women shocked themselves.
Wow.
Two thirds of the guys.
He's like,
that's all you need to know.
That's all you need to know men and women, right?
But altogether,
more than half of the people gave themselves pain over boredom.
We solved the boredom problem.
Your iPhone is the solution to your boredom problem,
your device.
The problem is that it makes your brain work wrong because when you're never bored,
you don't use what's called the default mode networks that a structure is in your brain,
and you won't find meaning, you'll be in the wrong side of your brain all day long.
And so if you wake up and the first thing is you're falling next to your bed, big mistake,
and you'll get your phone, then your brain is programmed to that for the rest of the day.
And so you're looking at it while you're having your coffee and breakfast.
And then you go to work, which is in your guest room, which is a Zoom screen.
And then you're going to date by swiping right, right?
And then your friends are a lot of them, mostly on social media.
And then you do a lot of gaming because that's how you get your sense of fun and accomplishment.
And connection.
And then you're 12 hours a day online.
And guess what you don't have?
There's one thing.
That's a simulated life.
That's the Matrix.
That movie was popular.
I'm going to shock you.
20 years ago, right?
27.
1998?
1999.
99.
I know.
I know.
I know.
I know.
I know.
But that movie said that there was a great artificial intelligence.
a mechanical artificial intelligence
that was subjugating the human race,
it was sucking energy out of them in the form of attention,
keeping them in these pods
and giving them a simulation of real life that was pleasant.
And the reason that there's a rebellion against that
is because Neo, Keanu Reeves, wants meaning.
Lewis, we're in the matrix.
And the one thing you can't simulate
is the meaning of your life.
And that's what's actually happening.
So how do we start to simulate the meaning of our life?
We got to live like granddad house.
Right.
Now, the first thing that we need to do is get clean.
The first thing that we need to do is to actually break out of the addictive cycle.
Like a cleanse.
Yeah, like detox, actually is what it comes down to.
And the problem is, you know, you can't just recommend abstinence.
Because, you know, somebody asks you, dude, I drink all the time.
You're going to say, stop drinking completely, obviously.
But you can't do that with your technology because you can't get into your bank account.
And that ship has sailed completely.
Yes.
Which means you need moderation.
It's a much harder thing to do.
But there's a lot of data.
There's a lot of research, neuroscience research,
that shows how you can actually moderate your device use
that will revolutionize your relationship to the devices.
You can solve this problem with basically three steps.
Tech-free times, tech-free zones and tech fasts.
That's all you need to do.
And the tech-free times are first hour in the morning,
meal times, and last hour at night.
That's all you need.
Just tech-free times.
because of the neural programming is going on first hour of the day,
the neurochemistry of what's actually happening while you eat,
which is that you're looking into other people's eyes
while you're having a conversation.
We're evolved to do that over the last 250,000 years
since the beginning of the Pleistocene, homo sapiens,
have actually communed with their kin
while they shove pieces of yak meat into their mouths around a fire.
They put it in there, yeah, yeah.
If you see your phone on the table,
it cuts off the neuropeptide that is occurring to bond you to others.
It's called oxytocin.
You cut the oxytocin flow by looking at your phone.
Literally, experiments that show this.
So what you said?
First hour, mealtime.
And it was the last hour.
Last hour, yeah.
Last hour, because that's when you should be communing with your babies and your wife.
And also, you don't want to interrupt the functioning of the pineal gland, which, as you
know, melatonin, et cetera.
You won't be able to wind down.
You'll be stressed out.
So that's the times.
You said zones?
zones there are certain zones this is physical zones number one is a bedroom no devices in
the bedroom and you don't just say I'm going to stop scrolling leave it downstairs plugged in in a closet
and take a book to bed I get crazy idea you got two things a book and an alarm clock nuts right
the challenge is I listen to me to sleep but it's like in the morning too I listen to do it
I know and so you got to figure out a way to get around this and and there are ways to do it with
notifications office center or so yeah yeah yeah and and and
And then the second zone is there shouldn't be a classroom in the world from kindergarten through PhD that has a phone in it.
I don't understand how teachers can teach today.
I don't know how teachers can do it.
Well,
allowing kids to have a phone at their desk.
They weren't really teaching when I was a kid either.
I mean,
still, but it's even harder now.
I feel like.
There's 27 states that still don't, that have completely unfettered access to telephones in public schools.
It's craziness that we do this.
And there's a complete lack of will of imagination and, you know, moral,
will on the part of politicians and educators for sure. And the last is tech fast. Everybody should
have, I recommend spiritual retreats to people all the time. You know, Buddhist retreats, Hindu
retreats, Jewish retreats. I go on a Catholic retreat four days a year, silent retreat. No,
no devices. Oh, it's man, it's like magic. It's a total cleanse. Yeah, I've done it a few times where
I've gone on vacation and I've left the phone at home. It's hard. First time was like,
what do you do? I was like, how do we get to the hotel?
How do I get my car?
I was like, I don't know.
I noticed like your brain doesn't work.
The other day.
But it was such an adventure.
I was like, I just stop at a gas station and ask for direction.
How do I get here?
It was like, oh, man, I'm living in 1990s again.
You know, it's like, let's go.
I feel like Lewis and Clark.
And so the other day when that big Verizon outage, you just, were you aware of this?
I was in New York.
And I came out of, you know, taping a show.
And my phone didn't work.
It was the SOS thing.
And I had to call an Uber and get to the Newark Airport and fly back to L.A.
How'd you do it?
And so I had to find a Wi-Fi network and actually call the Uber.
And there was no phone calls and there was no text.
And then I got to the airport and got on the plane and there was no Wi-Fi on the plane for six hours.
What do you do?
I had the monkey on my back.
I felt like I was like, what do you have to be bored?
I know.
You have to be on a plane and read a book or like a heroin addict detoxing in jail or something.
Like refreshing.
Sweating.
So that's really helpful.
The first day is hard.
The second day is easier.
The third day is good.
The fourth day is bliss.
It's like, I never want to go back.
I know.
I want 40 days.
Right.
You want 40 days.
So these are the three things to do.
The first thing you do is you get clean.
Yeah.
And you get clean by doing those three things.
And then you start living in a new way.
That systematically opens up the right hemisphere of her brain.
That's really what my research is about is the six ways you can do it.
And I mean, again, it's, in a way, it's gimmicky.
Because there's six big ways that you can do it.
But if you do this in six months, you'll know the meaning of it.
A hundred percent.
Yeah.
We're talking about your book, the meaning of your life, which I think a lot of people are
struggling to figure out these days.
And I'm curious because you are such a devout, what you've been, 45 years you've been
all in on Catholicism, right?
45 years.
Yeah, I'm practically a cradle Catholic.
Right?
So I'm 61, but yeah, so people can do the math, right?
So you've been doing this for a long time all in.
You go to Mass every morning, 6 a.m. or almost every morning, you know, maybe once in a while
you miss or something, but you're like in it.
Yeah.
but you're like best friends with Dalai Lama and other spiritual leaders.
And you actually invited me to go.
I know, I invited you to go.
I wanted you to go.
Please.
And so how do you navigate being all in as a Catholic, believing what you believe, but being
very close to other spiritual leaders of other faiths that don't believe what you believe at all?
How do you commingle, find connection, and not judge others' beliefs?
but also be close with them and find fulfillment and meaning from those relationships
and those spiritual practices as well, which are different or maybe aren't in alignment with
the Catholic faith.
Yeah.
So it's one thing to think that you're right is something else to think that somebody else is
wrong.
And we want to solve every problem.
The left brain solution is always, let me figure it out.
And once I figured it out, then I know that this is right and everything else is wrong.
I have a right brain orientation toward my brain.
faith, which is I believe that this is what God wants for me. I don't know what God wants for
others. I don't know. And I can't know. I believe that people, that God puts people in my life
for a reason. I believe that you and I met for a reason. We met at a thing in Idaho. It was awesome.
I was awesome. Man, I feel like I've known this guy for years. It's the first time I met you.
There's a reason that you meet people, that people are actually put into your life.
and for you to adjudicate that on the basis of whatever beliefs that you have, that's hubris
a lot of the time. You know, it's God put you here for a reason for me to learn and grow. And the
Dalai Lama, boy, oh boy, he told me, I want you to be a better Catholic. Really? I want you to be a
better Catholic, is what he said. Really? Because he believes that that's God's will for my life. That's
what he actually believes. And I learned so much, you know, from my Hindu teachers, from my
Jewish teachers, from my Muslim teachers, people that I've talked to that have made me so much
stronger in my own faith. I believe my faith is what God wants for me. I don't know what's
right. I don't know. I just know that I believe that this is right for me. And I'm not a universalist.
You know, good. I mean, I want everybody to be Catholic. I want everybody to go to Mass with me. Absolutely.
That's the world that I want. But that's not the world that I find. And I believe that there's a reason
that I'm finding the world that I am.
But isn't part of the Catholic faith
to preach the gospel and invite and recruit,
but convert others to Catholicism, to the faith?
Yes, and there's different ways to do that.
There's different ways to be a missionary.
One good way to be a missionary,
like I teach at Harvard University,
which is not known as a big Catholic institution.
No, right?
But Boston is, isn't it?
Kind of, except, you know, it's the Northeast.
It's post-Christian, man.
The way that I actually, I bring people,
people closer, I believe, to my faith is by how I live my life and the excellence that I bring
to things.
But is that enough?
Just being a good person.
I think that that opens the door because people will see, there's two things to do.
Be impeccable and great at what you do and have people know that you have a strong belief.
That's really important.
So people watching this are like, Lewis is on a spiritual journey and he's going to Catholic
Mass and he's literally the best in the world at what he does.
that's missionary work right there that's the mission field right i mean it's like it's a mormon
missionary told me this one time a guy worked for at the rand corporation i was a military operations
research analyst early early early on my career i was doing math modeling for the air force and this
guy was an old school applied mathematician he was Mormon and uh letter day saint and he told me about
his mission in in in france i said you have missionary in france because they all go on a mission right
Two years.
Yeah, yeah.
And I said, how many people do you convert?
He said, precious few.
And there's a lot.
The French, you know.
Yeah.
And he doesn't speak the language.
He has to learn the language-wise there.
Yeah, yeah.
And he said, so how did you, how did you, you know, maintain a good attitude about it?
And he said, I would say, Lord, have him not shut the door all the way.
Because he figured out that his job was getting the door open an inch.
And his beliefs were that God would do the rest.
Wow. So here's the thing. You meet people at different points in their own journey. You're at a different point in your journey. I'm at a different point in your journey. A lot of people watching us are different points in their journey. And all we can ask them is to not close the door completely to open the door one inch. And if we believe what we say we believe about God and his goodness, God will do what he's supposed to do in their lives. Our job is to not close the door. And if you go in and you say, repent or die, the door's closing. Right? That's going to close.
the door, not open the door. Your excellence will open the door. How do you navigate in your soul
and in your mind that if you're with the dilemma or another spiritual teacher or anyone who's
on their own journey of life, that if they don't convert and baptize and become Catholic,
like they're not going to heaven essentially. How do you reconcile with that? Knowing that you
care deeply and love this person and you want them to live a beautiful life here and after
here, how do you navigate that world?
Well, part of that is that there's a kind of a, there's a fundamentalist version of that
that a lot of people learn in the United States, which is literally if you're not this,
then this, right?
But the truth is that Catholics in particular, they don't believe that.
I mean, there's a lot, we believe that there's a lot, a lot of people going to heaven
who are not Catholics or even Christian.
on the contrary.
They have a different set of experiences
from different parts of the world
and they're implicitly baptized effectively.
And they have a lot to teach us.
You know, what that says is that if you were raised as a Catholic,
then the standard is different for you.
The obligation is different for you.
The will be end to you if you're not living up to it.
Right.
But that the Dalai Lama has a, you know,
there's a, God had a different plan in the Dalai Lama's life.
And there's a different,
trajectory for what he believes. And so I think that it's it's fair to say that there's a lot of ways to
interpret that and it doesn't have to be literal. Interesting. Do you think it's possible for someone to find
meaning without having some type of faith or belief in God? Yes, I do. And that really comes from
this idea of transcendence, which is one of the six ways of finding the meaning of your life, is transcending
yourself. My path isn't the only path to meaning. It isn't. Now religion is really, really good for this.
Yes.
Spirituality is really, really good for finding meaning.
But what you really want is to transcend yourself
because, you know, left to your device is you're going to be in the psychodrama.
Me, me, me, me, me, my job, my car, my money, my...
So tedious, Lewis.
It's so boring.
But Mother Nature wants you to be the star of your psychodrama.
I mean, think of all the dreams you had last night.
You were the star in everyone.
It's like, ah!
And what are the great truths that we find in all of the experiments in social psychology?
If I can get you to think about others and stand in awe of something bigger than yourself,
you will find meaning.
Why?
Because that's what illuminates activity in the right hemisphere of the brain.
You'll start using your brain in a more meaningful way.
There's two ways to do that.
One is to stand in awe of something greater.
Our mutual friend, Brian Holliday, right?
He talks about Stoic philosophy.
That's a great way to actually be looking down at or standing in awe, walking in nature
before dawn. The Hindus call that the Brahma Mahorta, which means the creator's time in
Sanskrit without devices. Yeah. Let the sun come up as you walk. To start of a posse of meditation
practice, to listen to the fugues of Johann Sebastian Bach, to do what you need to do to stand in
awe of something that's not just my little psychodrama. The other way is to transcend yourself
by serving other people. So one of those weirdest things is that we always want to serve ourselves,
but when we're induced to serve other people,
then meaning pours into the vessel that is your life.
So much.
And you've told me about this.
I mean, you've been doing this.
People watching the show,
they don't know all the service stuff
that you're actually engaged in.
And you think, well, Louis House, what a great guy.
Truly, truly is true.
But it's also you need it.
You actually need it to feel fully alive.
Every day I wake up and I just say,
thank you God.
Thank you, God.
And I really reflect on the beauty, the abundance,
the relationships, the health, the opportunities, because they weren't always there.
There was times when I didn't have those things and I really suffered for years and decades.
I had an internal suffering because I was thinking of self so much.
Right.
Oh, it'll make you suffer, baby.
Suffering.
Why me?
Why this?
Why that person?
Why am I experiencing this?
Why me, me, me, me, me.
Right.
And I had a big wake-up call around 30 where I was like, man, I am a selfish ego.
Maniac. You know, I wasn't really. I was still a happy guy. You were a monster. I wasn't, but like to myself, I was like, I'm beating myself up constantly, focusing on myself. Sure, I was still giving and adding value to the world. It wasn't and I was like loving and happy and joyful outwardly. I know. I wasn't. No, no, because you're doing something that's go. So this is this is a distinction that William James, the father of psychology in 1890, he called the me self versus the eye self. Human beings are, you know, what the homo sapient.
advantage neurocognitively is the existence and size of the prefrontal cortex.
That's the bumper of tissue behind your forehead. That's 30% of your brain by weight. That is
the supercomputer of the ages. There's, you know, AI is never going to come close to that.
It just isn't. I mean, people who say that it's going to become more human. No, the prefrontal
cortex does amazing things. Among other things, it allows you to be two people and time travel.
Isn't it fascinating? Oh, it's amazing. So you go, you think about, you know, I did that thing
and I really regret it.
And what if it had turned out differently,
then the present would be different.
You're practicing to be better in the future.
Yes.
By time travel, I think I'm going to do this tomorrow,
but maybe I'll do this.
Maybe I'll do this.
You know, you and I were talking about
all the cool things that are happening in your business
and five different things that could happen in your business.
We were time traveling five years into Lewis House future.
Imagine the world.
Exactly.
And then we come back to the present and say,
which one of the paths do we want to take?
That's time travel.
It's amazing how that works.
We also can think about me looking out
or me looking in to understand myself.
William James said,
the more time you spend in the me self looking in,
the less happy you're going to be.
And the more of the time that you spend in the eye self,
you need both because you've got to know
what you're doing in the world and what's going on,
but you also have to understand your place in the world.
Yes.
So you need both.
The problem is that Mother Nature wants you to think,
me, me, me, me, me,
happiness comes by looking out at the world.
I have this really interesting experience
with this guy who did,
physical therapy for me because my back hurts a lot.
That's wear and tear, man.
That's like, kids, when you're 61, you'll understand.
But he's a beautiful person and his loving person.
Physical therapists are funny because you've noticed that the best ones, they're full of love.
And that's their actual super strength.
And they listen to you and, okay.
They want to know you.
They want to heal you is what it comes down to.
And this guy was a classic.
He did acupuncture and physical therapy.
He was really helping me with my back a lot.
I said, you know, you have crazy gifts.
And, you know, how did you get here?
He's a young guy's your age.
And he said, oh, it's a long path.
I said, tell me more.
Because now I'm a behavioral scientist I want to know, right?
He says, yeah, no, I used to be a fitness influencer.
Really?
He said, yeah.
He says, I was selling my body.
I was selling pictures of myself, my shirt off.
Yeah.
Diet plans, exercise routines, et cetera.
And he said, I realized that was just completely.
I was miserable. He said, I hadn't eaten what I wanted to eat for 10 years. Chicken and rice
every day. I know. Because he's trying to stay at sub 10 body fat. Uh-huh. So hard. Under,
yeah, 10% body fat. Either you've got weird genetics or you're unhappy. Yeah, yeah. I mean, I got weird
genetics. And you train hard. Yeah. And I could stay at seven, but that's because of my genetics,
not because I'm making myself miserable because nobody wants me to take my shirt off on the internet.
So you should, though. My wife was like, put her.
on. Anyway, so.
Huberman did it. It exploded the internet. I know. I know. He broke the internet. But I know.
But somebody took a picture of him and he allowed it to be posted, but probably. I don't know.
But, but, you know, he said that he realized that he was thinking about himself too much and he needed
to fix it. So he's a smart guy. So he, the first thing he did is he's got rid of his social
media accounts. Step two is he enrolled in physical therapy schools. He got something new.
The third thing he did was, he's going to blow your mind, he took every mirror out of his house.
I love that.
Every mirror, gone.
God, I was just thinking about this one day about how mirrors, that invention of mirror has probably ruined human psychology.
No, because it basically, it torched, I self, me self.
Yes.
And then, and then he showered in the dark for a year so he couldn't see his abs.
You didn't see the water rushing down.
It's like, look in my abs.
But he can't see it because.
he was so attuned to criticizing himself and belittling himself.
Shaming himself.
Yeah.
What is this little fat?
I got to eat more.
I got to whatever, yeah.
The me self does this to you.
Wow.
It makes you crazy.
It makes you completely nuts.
So the whole point is that you need to look out more.
Look at that.
That's self transcendence.
Standing in awe, serving others, puts you into the eye self and you find the meaning
of your life because your brain works right.
So this comes from the philosophy, the theology, the neuroscience.
It all works together.
Yes.
You want to find the meaning of life?
life, stop looking at yourself. So true, man. Around 29, when I was 29, so 13 years ago, I guess,
almost 14 years ago, I'd gotten off my sister's couch where I was like suffering and broke
and had no purpose. I started building a business. I started pursuing these things. And five,
six years later, I'm 28, 29, 30. And I make my first million dollars and I'm building a little
personal brand and I have some influence. And I'm like,
making a name for myself in this online marketing world.
And I feel like I'm the most miserable I am
after about five, six years of this.
Because I was like, so focused on me and more.
Well, there was also another error that people make
that really hurts their search for meaning.
And it's very common.
It's not, you never cast dispersions
for people making this error.
And this is what I say on my first day of class.
I teach MBA students at the Harvard Business School.
They want to be unbelievably successful.
And they're going to be, right?
They want to make millions of dollars.
They want to raise a bunch of money.
They want to sell companies, all this.
They want to be masters of the universe.
They want to be rich.
Power.
And here's what they think.
If I get the money, if I get the power, if I get the fame, then I'll be happy.
Right.
And I say this on the first day of class and it makes them panic and you're going to see why because you're a striver par excellence.
I say, go for the happiness.
And I'm going to teach you how and then you'll be successful enough.
And the rest doesn't matter.
But you know what makes them panic?
What?
Enough.
Because at the Harvard Business School, there's no such thing as enough.
And for all the strivers who, look, why do you watch the school of greatness?
Do you want more?
Because there's not enough.
And I admire strivers.
I admire strivers.
But this is the key thing.
And this is what you were experiencing.
If you think that the money and the power and the honor, but mostly the money for what
you were doing with direct marketing, right?
All the stuff that you were doing, you thought that that would bring you, that you
would arrive at some level, that first million dollars would help you
arrive at some level of happiness. It's a little peace. But now look at your life. Your life is full of love.
You have a friendship with God. You have a you're living with your guru. Yeah. You got your babies
who are the future you. That's that's really the source of happiness and makes you successful enough.
Yeah. That's the beautiful thing. That's what people need to actually focus on. And that's what will
happen when you take the mirrors out of your life. Yeah. Whether that's literal mirror,
or, you know, other...
Metaphoric mirrors, like notifications.
Exactly.
Because, you know, or your view counts or whatever it might be
because I remember reflecting at this time.
I had kind of a big breakthrough
and I'm like maybe over a three to six month window
of my life during that time
where I had it all, but all my relationships were falling apart.
Business relationships,
it was with a girlfriend that was falling apart,
friendships, like things were falling apart
and I was at the center of all those.
Yeah, yeah.
So in the beginning,
I'm like, this person's doing this and she did it. He did. And then I go, oh, but it's all happening.
I'm at the center. I'm the common denominator of all these things. The me self was saying something is
happening so that I'm not being loved enough. The I self says I need to go love more. And that's what I
started doing. I said, I went through my own healing journey around that time. I started opening up
about the different things that I was going through from childhood sexual abuse and other things
that I've talked about many times. Yeah, very public. And I realized I need to serve more.
I was like, I felt my first big calling was like, you've got to serve those that can't serve themselves.
And I thought about what is something that's meaningful for me?
I struggled in school my entire life.
I struggled at learning, sitting in a classroom, reading textbooks.
It didn't work well for how I.
Are you dyslexic?
Very.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I was always in the bottom of my class.
I was always like, and they used to rank us on our grade cards back in the day.
I don't know if they still do it.
So I was always in the bottom four from middle school through high school.
And I just struggled and I just felt like man, I'm never going to be smart enough.
You felt stupid, right?
Very stupid.
Every day, not enough.
Stupid.
The way I learned was through sports, through mentors, through coaches.
And because you're super athletic.
Yeah.
I mean, you're professional athlete.
I leaned into that.
And I was like, okay, I can find value here.
But I was like, I need to start serving.
What is the thing that I care about?
I care about education and I care about kids.
Yeah.
Because I struggled as a kid.
Right.
So I said, I need to find ways to start.
serve children to have education.
And that's something I did.
I've launched my first school with an organization called Pence of the Promise
was 14 years ago.
And I don't know how many schools I've built
to the last 14 years and brought others to serve
and travel the world in these communities.
And seeing the joy of these children having a place to go
to learn, at least I had a school.
Even though I didn't feel like it worked well for me,
I had somewhere to go.
So many kids that don't have that.
And that's something I'm doing through this mission,
now, instead of just selling something to make money, I was like, how can I build something
that serves? How can I do both and?
Yeah. And it was, it's intensely satisfying. Intensely. Because it just jams you into the
eyeself. Yes. You're loving outwardly. Constantly. Notwithstanding anything that comes back.
Exactly. Without expectation of return. Yeah. That's what we're built to do.
Serving. The more I think about that, how can I continue to serve at the highest level?
use my gifts and talents and serve people at the highest level.
It's the most rewarding feeling.
I know.
I know.
It's the most rewarding feeling.
That's transcendence.
It is.
That's what people want.
That's what they need.
But Mother Nature and the current environment and the culture and the technology will force
you away from that.
And that's why we need to live in a very propulsive way.
We need to live in an entrepreneurial way where we're living the state.
startup of our own lives, doing something that, you know, people, people are very, very,
and very positively interested in a lot of content on the internet that, that urges them to do
uncomfortable hard things, right? I mean, all the bro podcasts are out there like, grind it out
harder, work harder. And tons of dudes are like, yeah, give that to me. I mean, it's interesting
because Jordan Peterson, my friend Jordan Peterson, I mean, he's very, very, very successful,
giving hard advice. Yes. Giving really hard advice.
And I understand why, because people have this sense that there's something bigger, there's something better.
They're looking for meaning.
And so they're willing to walk towards something that's incredibly uncomfortable.
By the way, this is a second avenue toward meaning is understanding suffering.
Do hard things.
It is doing hard things, but understanding suffering.
Because when you understand the way that suffering actually works and you're no longer resisting it,
you will find meaning.
Your brain will work right at the bottom line.
Yes.
And that's what a lot of people are grasping toward.
A lot of young people on the internet are grasping at this, this kind of thing.
And that's the kind of thing that we're talking about here.
That when you're doing something that's an uncomfortable thing, it's a morally uncomfortable thing.
It's an emotionally uncomfortable thing.
It's a spiritual uncomfortable thing.
Or, yeah, it's a cold plunge or whatever.
You're doing this thing.
So you're exploring the space.
You're transcending yourself.
You're exploring the space of actually non-resistance towards suffering.
Yes.
And you're saying, I don't know why I feel better.
because the right hemisphere of your brain is illuminated and you have an understanding
and inchoate understanding, a wordless, ineffable understanding of the meaning of your life.
I mean, you work with a lot of high achievers.
I feel like a lot of people that watch and listen to this show, they're consciously
trying to achieve something greater in their life.
That's why they're here.
And I love this kind of like speech that I heard Jim Carrey give.
I think it was at the Golden Globes one year where he said, you know, I'm two-time
Golden Globe winner, Jim Carrey.
And if I can become three-time, go to Globe winner Jim Carrey, then I'll be enough.
It's like this kind of anecdote of like how many more.
He was making a joke and people laughed.
They laughed.
Yeah.
But it's like how much, you know what I'm talking about this?
I do.
I know that's very, he's a very profound guy.
I want to interview him so bad.
He's a very profound.
I bet he won't.
Hey, Jim.
Come on the show.
I know.
I want to interview him so back.
I think it'd be fascinating.
But I love his thought process around that.
And I'm sure he struggled many years because he never, maybe didn't feel enough for a long time.
Yeah.
I think he's, I think he's talked openly.
about his struggles actually yeah and there was another interview he did where he said he was going to
retire a few years ago and someone said no you can't retire like you're too talented the journalist
was saying like please don't retire and he goes i'm going to say something that most celebrities will
never admit to and he said i've done enough i have enough i am enough and most celebrities will
won't admit to that right now easy for him to say at his age and his career and his but it's not
You know, it just gets harder and harder.
It just gets harder and harder.
Like that need for validation, that need for being in the game, being talked about.
The more famous you are, the more famous you need to be.
Gosh.
The richer you are, the richer you need to be.
That's just, and the reason is because you're on the hedonic treadmill.
There isn't enough.
There isn't enough in the world.
It's said these rewards, these worldly rewards.
This is what St. Thomas Aquinas, he called the world's idols.
and the world's idols are the things that beguile you,
and they have a kind of a divine feel to them,
but they lead you away from what you truly want,
which is the mission and meaning of your life.
They lead you away from it,
because they look like they're going to bring you to it,
but they actually don't.
So they're like drinking salt water.
The more that you drink, the thirstyer you get.
And actually, every single one of all the strivers watching us right now,
and you and me, there's one that beguiles us more than the others.
And if you have information, if you have knowledge about which is your idol, you got power.
You want to play, what's my idol?
What's your idol?
Yeah.
I'm going to play with you.
What's your idol?
So let's find out.
Let's find out.
Kids, you can play along at home.
I played, what's my idol?
So I play this game with my students.
Because if they know their idol, they have power.
Your idol is what will always lead you astray.
And when you look back to the times of your life where you suffered the most, it's because
you were beguiled by that idol the most. And it's always one of four things. Money, power,
pleasure, or honor. And honor means like internet famous. Credibility or something. Yeah. Prestige.
Admiration of the right people or admiration of lots of people. Success addicted people who get
famous when they're young, they seek the admiration of strangers. That's the honor idol. And we can talk about
that one because that was super dangerous.
What was the third one?
Pleasure.
Pleasure, money, pleasure.
Money, power, pleasure, honor.
Those are the four.
Now, this comes from Aristotle via Thomas Aquinas in 1265 and his Summa Theologia.
He was an unbelievably adroit behavioral scientist way before his time.
And all this stuff that I were talking about here has been completely validated by modern
neuroscience and behavioral science.
Okay.
But it was the 13th century.
It's unbelievable.
Okay.
So here's how it works with.
Here's how what's my idol.
So what I'm going to do is, I'm not going to ask you what it is.
I'm going to ask you what is not.
Okay.
Before we figure that, what is the idol of most Harvard Business School students coming in?
What is most of their, is there one?
They think it's money and it isn't.
What is it?
We'll see.
Okay.
Okay.
Gosh.
So we're going to take the idols away and one of the reasons is because this is an elimination
technique that's the most accurate way for you to figure out all kinds of things in life.
This is cognitively a very powerful technique for finding something.
So I want you to look at these things and I want you to get rid of one you care about the
least, which doesn't mean you don't have it.
What it means is you have the population average, which you know, you take away money, for
example, you're the population average in the United States.
That's pretty darn good.
But the problem is this, you're not extraordinary in it, which means it sucks if it's your
idol.
Gosh.
Okay, so money, power, pleasure, fame.
Which one do you got to get rid of first?
Which do you care about the least?
What if you feel like you have all four?
Because you do have all four.
Because you're Mr. Big and, of course, you care about all four of them.
But which one would you, could you kick away most easily?
I can make a prediction for you already.
What's not your idol?
Power means influence over other people.
I guess power is going to be the one.
Because I'd rather have honor than, I don't want to.
Look, with your honor is kind of power?
No, no, no, no.
It's self-respect.
It's like, oh.
Power's influence over other people so they do what you want.
Now, how do I know that about you?
Because you're highly intelligent.
You'd be a CEO of a big company right now.
And you're not.
You're running an enterprise.
That's an idea enterprise.
It's not on a skeleton crew.
I mean, there's a bunch of people around us right now that are doing good work.
But the whole point is you'd have a big company.
You'd be running a big public company.
And you'd be the chairman and CEO.
And Lewis House could absolutely have that gig.
Yeah.
If power were the thing.
Okay, good.
So you got three left.
Money, pleasure.
I already know what I already know what my what's that let's let's eliminate it a little bit more okay
which one do you get rid of next it gets harder I feel like gosh this is interesting because I was
just telling Martha last night I go you know I could live in a two-bedroom apartment and be fine yeah
you know it's actually not money yeah I was not I mean money's great I like having it like as a
security I guess but I don't see the thing is security I don't buy stuff security isn't security isn't
a money idol yeah security is a pleasure on
Yeah, okay.
What it is is if you, and one of the things that people manage, they'll say, well, I'm not motivated a pleasure.
How often you check your stock portfolio every day?
Right, right.
Yeah, yeah.
So.
I don't know.
Every day.
Yeah.
And so comfort, security and feeling good are all the same idle.
That's interesting because money, I know it's not.
I mean, listen, I'm a driven business entrepreneur that needs to make money to pay for people's lives and my livelihood.
but I turn down money all the time.
Like the reason I know it's not my own,
because I get sponsorship and deal offers all the time to pay me.
I'm like, no, I don't want to make money to do that.
I get it.
And so for me, it doesn't mean I don't want lots of it,
but I want to do it the right way.
I get it.
And it's nice.
It's nice.
But the two-bedroom apartment wasn't.
I was living the dream in a two-bedroom apartment.
It wasn't a lot worse than a huge house.
I was living the dream and I had less things.
to manage. Yeah. No. And when you, I'm grateful for my home, but I was still living the dream.
Okay, we've got number two is gone. Now it gets real hard because there's two left. So what does
pleasure mean versus on? Pleasure means there's three things that pleasure could be. Number one is
feeling good, feeling good. Number two is comfort. Number three is security. That's the pleasure
idol. And then fame is there are very many different kinds of fame. One is, you know,
they're internet famous, which yeah, they're, which by the way, you are.
there is prestige in the eyes of the right people and there's the admiration of people.
Those are different kinds of fame, but they're all the same model.
So what's the difference between pleasure and honor?
Pleasure and honor is honor is the reflection of other people's feelings toward you.
Pleasure is how you feel.
So you got to get rid of.
That doesn't mean, I know you want both.
Yeah, yeah.
But you want to feel good and I want.
And you want other people to, you want other people's feelings about you.
You care about other people think.
Yeah, yeah.
I want to feel like.
Yeah.
So you got to get rid of one of a, what really is motivating you more.
And again, this is not that, this is not to live a life of vice.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
No, this just means you're trying to find what actually would lead you astray.
The one that I care about the most, like, holding on to more?
No, not the one that actually kind of, the one that drives you a little bit more.
The one that I want more, but the one that I want to, that's less holding me on.
I feel like.
This takes work, I know.
Yeah, I mean, I might need to.
dive deeper on this because they're in some ways I'm working more and more to care less what
people think about me that's why I'm taking you know a little reason right tell me is because it's
your idol maybe that's probably that's probably it in the last four years I have done so much work
and maybe I talked about this with you when we're at the mastermind where I've had to create
so many boundaries with influential people billionaires celebrities or just everyday people
that want things or that expect something from me.
Right.
They expect me to be the good guy that always delivers that's like willing to do whatever it takes
to help them.
Yeah.
The fact that you're concerned.
Yeah.
Indicates that you're self-aware, but that is the tendency.
Yes.
Here's the deal.
When you were a kid, when you were a kid, you learned something about yourself.
Yeah.
Which is that you got attention and affection when you did stuff.
Yes.
Right?
And you felt crummy about yourself when you weren't able to do something.
Why?
because you had a learning disability,
which made it hard for you to do things
and made you feel crummy about yourself.
But then when you achieved, especially as an athlete,
that adults gave you attention and affection.
And what you learned from that is that love is earned.
You learned that love is earned.
That's actually wrong, by the way.
Martha doesn't love you because of what you give her.
She loves you as a grace.
Love is a free gift freely given.
It is.
The problem is that when you wire that in,
when you have the programming as a child that love is earned,
you will become a success machine.
Yes.
And the success machine has to understand whether or not it's functioning.
And how do you know it's functioning?
Because of points on the board.
And the points on the board comes from the affection of strangers
and the admiration of other people and the viewer numbers and the bank account.
That's an honor idol.
Yeah.
So in the last few years, I've really worked to knock that down.
Yeah, for sure.
And you're working on it's important.
It's going to be a lifelong journey, I'm sure.
But it's, it was, and it was scary the moment I started to say, I need to create boundaries
with all these people.
Right.
And get on the phone and say, you're not a good friend.
And no, I'm not going to do this for you.
And take the reactions and know that they might talk bad about me and know that they may have
a different viewpoint of me.
And like the grieving, the loss of that, like, clinging on to that idol was scary for the last,
for two, three years ago.
Yeah.
And so I don't feel it as much.
Like sure, I want to like look good in the eyes of other people, but not at the detriment of my own happiness
Right. And here's the point. That's great. Yeah. The point is in your weak moments. You'll snap back into the honor idol.
Hopefully not. Well, I mean, there's we're all weak. Yeah, yeah, of course. You know, it's not like you're gonna go on a bend of
You know of that. You're not gonna become a monster because you're not a monster, but the whole point is that self-knowledge is critically important. Here's mine. Yes
I would get rid of power. I was a CEO. I hate the thing I hated most about being a CEO, I hate the thing I hated most about being a
was having power over the people.
Okay.
When people called me boss, it bummed me out.
And the reason is because I hate people having power over me.
Uh-huh.
You always admire the people who have your idol.
And so if you look at a politician who kind of admires demagogic, tyrannical despots
in other countries, it's because that's what he wants.
Right?
You always admire.
If somebody who admires billionaires wants to be a billionaire.
Yes.
That's what I kind of, admires the richness in their lives.
Okay.
Power.
I don't even like it.
let alone have it as an idol. Okay. Number two is money. So we have the same. I've had it. I haven't
had it. Yeah. Number three, I would get rid of, I would get rid of pleasure because I actually
I'm a pretty austere guy. Comfort is not important to me. I get up before dawn every single day,
including Sundays. I work out every day. I bring pain. Yeah. I'm in that place too. My problem is the
same as yours, man. I mean, I want the admiration of strangers. Love is earned. I got the attention
of adults when I played the French horn as a little kid.
That was when I felt special.
That's when I felt like you were a CEO and then teacher.
And so the result is that I'm a success addict.
And, you know, I'm a self-objectifying success addict.
And the result is that, you know, my worst moments, Lewis, or when I spent the 14th hour
at the office looking for the admiration of strangers as opposed to the first hour with my
kids when they were little and they grew up.
I wanted to be special more than I wanted to be happy.
Wow. And that's my weakness. And consciousness of this has allowed me to take my life back. And when I take my life back, I understand what the real meaning of my life actually is. That's why everybody needs to play this game. What is the real meaning of your life? The real meaning of my life is to love and be loved. The meaning of my life is to lift people up and bring them together in bonds of happiness and love using the gifts that I've been given, which is science and ideas. That's what it is. But I can't do that when I'm just trying to get a problem.
applause. It's like, eh. Why do so many smart, intelligent people sabotage their own happiness?
Because they're in, well, there's a couple of different things going on. Because you're
extremely smart. They'll leave that. So they'll leave their happiness on the table. And then
there's some that will actually sabotage their own happiness. And those are two different
problems. Number one, many strivers will will forego happiness because they actually know what they
need. I was interviewing this woman in my research who was a billionaire, I mean, in finance,
iconic in the industry, my age at the time. I was in my 50s at the time. And she was confessing
to me that she was horribly unhappy. She said, I got everything I wanted, but I'm unhappy. I said,
well, talk to me, sister. Yeah. Right. And she says, well, my husband and I were like roommates.
I'm cordial with my adult kids. You know, I think my employees are afraid of me, you know.
I'm not taking care of myself the way I should.
I drink too much, I'm not going to the gym.
I used to be religious when I was a child
that gave me so much joy, but I never even practiced my faith.
What should I do, professor?
And I'm like, you don't need a Harvard professor
to tell you, you just gave yourself your own prescription.
I mean, go away with your husband, get to know your kids,
step back from your firm, go to A, A, A, go back to church, do your thing.
And she said, I know, I know, I know, I said, so why not?
And she thought about it.
And she said, because I've always chosen to be special,
rather than happy.
See, here's the calculus.
Any loser can have love relationships,
but not everybody can build a company.
People will, homo sapiens, we're weird, dude.
We will choose specialness over happiness all day long.
Can you be special and happy at the same time?
Of course, except there are sacrifices in your specialness
that you need to do what every other person can do
because we are built to love each other.
We are built to love our kids.
We are built to serve our marriages.
We're built to do that.
And that's, it's not special because everybody can do it.
And here's the thing.
Most people would look at you and say, man, if I had Lewis houses, money and prestige,
then I would actually be happy.
But I can't get it.
So, okay, I guess I'll do this dumb thing.
I'll just take my kid to the park and play ball.
That's the secret.
And because they feel like they can't be special, then they choose the happiness and they have a good life.
But people who are.
But here's the thing.
probably 80 to 90% of the world
has the ability to be happy
because they're not special
and yet they're still not choosing how to be happy.
They're still not leaning into
this is the life that I have,
I have a good life, but I'm still not happy.
I know. I know.
Because I'm missing the special.
I know.
So they have it and they still diminish it
because they don't have what they're unsatisfied
with what they actually have.
And so they want that thing
and they don't get that thing.
They're frustrated about that thing
and they're also all missing the opportunity
to do the things that they need to do.
And that's a, there's a lot of desperation that goes into that.
I wind up talking about that an awful lot and just my general work on the science of happiness.
Yes.
Yes.
But when it comes to the struggle, the striving and this paradox of striving, this is your whole audience.
Want to know why?
Because your show is not called the school of good enough.
No.
It's not the school of average.
It's not the school of, okay.
School of awesome, kind of.
You know, it's the school of greatness.
And I really admire that.
But you can't sacrifice the love and
your life on the altar of what you're trying to do in the world's eyes.
Yes.
That's why.
That's not greatness.
If you're special,
but you have no great relationships,
I don't think that's greatness.
Yeah.
If you're pursuing money, power,
pleasure, and fame,
there's a problem per se.
I mean, there's nothing wrong with those things,
but they should lead you to what you should truly want,
which is your faith, your family,
your friends,
and work that serves.
Faith, family, friends,
and work that serves.
Those will bring authentic happiness.
Yeah, and if you, it sounds like what I'm hearing you say, if you focus on your faith, your family,
your friends, and work that serves, it may lead you to more money, more power, more.
I got the dayday, it will, actually.
More, you know, honor.
You'll be successful.
It'll be a byproduct of you doing that.
And then it'll be your responsibility to not give too much emphasis on that.
It'll be the, you know, Ryan Holiday, Marcus,
Aurelius, needing someone to say you're just a man.
Right.
Like reminding you, you're just a man.
That's why you get married.
You're just a man, right?
Even when you're this like God or in your own world or something, it's like you need
a reminder daily that you're just a man.
Yeah, for sure.
And it's going to be taken.
It's going to be taken away.
All of it is taken away.
Right.
That's right.
You and I were talking about this earlier that, you know, a great CEO one time told me who
had managed, he was a private equity manager, meaning that he bought and sold companies,
and he had seen the careers of thousands of CEOs. And I asked him, because I was a CEO at the time,
close friend, how do I understand the end of my career as a CEO? And he said, there's two ways.
You can quit before you're ready or you can quit on somebody else's terms. Those are the only
two doors. So his recommendation was quit before you're ready. But the whole point is,
things end. Here's what doesn't end.
Love. Love doesn't end. You know, what do you want to be doing on your last day? What do you want people to say at your funeral?
Lewis House had five million miles on Delta Airlines. I mean, who he couldn't use?
Cares. Who cares? And we all kind of know that. I mean, it's funny because, you know, that was the premise of a great George Clooney movie up in the air was he was looking for meaning and counting it. And airline
miles. Crazy. And then he finally got that. He arrived. Yeah, he arrived. In the middle of a flight,
right? Like he, the captain came out and stacked next to him and said, what was it? Like,
I know. Like, you got the most points in the world. And the captain sat next to him and he's like,
and then it just, what do you want to do now. He realized how empty it was. His new, he's got that
George Clef. What a great actor. He's got that new movie on Netflix. Jay Kelly. Have you seen it?
It's called Jay Kelly. It's not at all. It's the same movie as up in the air. He's a, he's a movie
are playing an aging movie star who's looking for the ultimate role because then he'll have arrived
and he'll be enough and he sacrificed all of his his happiness and his love relationships to be special
he chose specialness over happiness that's that's that's the premise of the movie it's a very
very beautiful movie actually why is this drug or idol of specialness over happiness seem to
captivate most of the world yeah so and that's evolution and there's an actual actual we have an
evolutionary biological explanation for this. We're born. Homo sapiens are not are not made to be happy.
We're made to be special. Homo sapiens, the brain of Homo sapiens is the same as it was at the
beginning of the Pleistocene era 250,000 years ago when all of humanity lived in bands of 30 to 50
kin-based individuals, hierarchical kin-based groups of 30 to 50. And what do you want? You want to
maintain and rise in that particular hierarchy, which is like, and the way,
that you do that was with more hunting skills, et cetera. Why? Because you get more food and you get
more mates. We're that simple in its way. And that is metastasized in modern society in wanting
more internet followers, more Instagram followers, having a lot of likes. That's how we're actually, you know,
being rewarded for dragging in a slightly bigger gazelle into the cave. But that's all, that
that, milieu explains so much of our relationships. You know, for example, one of the things that we
find in relationships between husbands and wives. The reason that marriages fail is because women
are not adored by their husbands and or husbands are not admired by their wives. This is the fuel
of happiness in these traditional relationships. And so what she needs to hear because of the evolutionary
biology, like she has a huge commitment and investment in raising kids. Carries them. I mean, your
wife just carried your babies for months and she's taking care of them. They die without her,
right? And so the result of it is that she needs the protector who has a complete commitment to
her. And how does she know the commitment through the adoration? And so she wants to hear, honey,
I would fight a tiger for you with my hands and only you. And what do you need to hear? That is the
biggest gazelle anybody's ever dragged into this cave. You're so big and strong. You're going to
feed our family for two weeks. And that motivates all of this behavior. And we go out and risk our
lives again. Again and again and again. I mean, like I do 150 talks a year, public talks a year.
And two weeks ago, I was in Columbus, Ohio. And I was from from. It's great. People are awesome.
Cold right now, though. Yeah. It's good. Cold. 17,000 Catholic missionaries in the audience.
Wow, that's cool. 17,000, right? And I was, I was super nervous.
You want to why?
Why?
Because Esther was in the front row.
My wife.
Because she was in the front row.
Because she was in the front row.
You were nervous.
That was why I was nervous.
Because I want her to admire me.
All I want is my wife's admiration.
Not the 17,000.
Yeah, yeah.
And so this is the example of how the evolutionary biology man, it has teeth.
And when we understand ourselves in this context, we understand all the things that we do.
This is why we go after those worldly idols is because we want to rise in the kin-based hierarchy of 30
to 50 individuals, which has been exploded in the people.
billions of people.
That's crazy.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
And when you know that, you've got power.
Because then you don't have to be a prisoner of the moral of the animal impulse.
You can get into the space of your moral aspiration.
That's what the amazing human brain allows you to do.
Speaking of marriage, you've been married for 30.
34 years.
34 years.
You've got a lot of great wisdom on marriage and relationships.
And in a time where it feels like people are struggling the most in relationships
with themselves, but also in intimacy with the committed partners.
Right.
What are the keys to having a successful, happy marriage or relationship?
And why do most marriages fail?
Yeah.
So there's so much on that these days.
But the biggest problem that we see is that your marriage is not a problem that you can solve.
Your marriage is not a left brain complicated problem.
It's not an algorithm.
And our culture has actually told us that we should be able to solve every problem.
Right.
And with proper information, we should be able to solve the problem.
And when people conclude that when they can't solve their marriage, that something is actually wrong with the relationship.
So the approach is wrong.
Your marriage is a right brain phenomenon.
You'll never solve it.
You only live in it and love in it.
It's a permanent state of disequilibrium.
That's what your marriage is supposed to be.
My wife might be totally pissed off at me at the end of the day.
I know she loves me.
We'll have a conflict.
I know we'll have a conflict.
We have 10,000 arguments.
because of me, because of her, because we're human beings living in this complex relationship.
The number one thing is not understanding the nature of living with another person is what it
comes down to and appreciating the complexity of that and trying to force it into this complicated
problem that you can Google, that you can ask chat GPT.
See, we think that those are the things, those, and solve it.
Yeah, and this is a wrong kind, in other words, they're dealing with the wrong kind of problem.
That's number one.
Number two is that the way that we've now entered into relationships is through complicated tools.
So you don't just meet somebody and let sparks fly a little bit.
It's funny because the way that the human brain is designed for relationships to start is kind of a four-step neurochemical process.
Yes.
Number one is attraction.
And attraction is largely governed by testosterone and estrogen, sex hormones.
Men and women both have both, by the way.
I mean, men have both, and so do women.
Men obviously have more testosterone, women have more estrogen.
And that's how you spark, which is why no matter how emancipated and modern you are,
you still want to look nice.
Yes.
And the reason is because that's what actually sparks in the brain of somebody that you want to connect to.
Interest.
The second part is where it gets really complicated and interesting.
This is when the neurochemistry actually really starts to flow in terms of noradrenaline,
in norophenephyran and and dopamine.
And that's anticipation of reward and euphoria.
So when you're kind of interested in somebody,
you have this undue interest in like,
I think I'm gonna, I think I just got a text from her.
It's a text.
Who cares?
You asked, want to get dinner?
Are you waiting for the next?
That's because your neurochemistry is really, really hopped up.
You've got high levels of norophenephyran,
which is a stress hormone and dopamine,
which is anticipation of reward.
Then when you're falling in love,
this weird thing happens, which is that your serotonin tanks by like a third. Now, when serotonin
is low in the synapse, that's, that provokes the feeling of clinical depression. And that,
that starts this process of ruminative sadness. When you're falling in love. When you're falling in
love, it's actually almost indistinguishable from, from clinical depression. And the reason is because
you're ruminating on the other person. That's why you'll send a thousand stupid text messages
when you don't hear from the person,
you're getting digger and digging yourself
into a deeper and deeper hole.
That's because you're doing insane things
because your brain is slightly insane.
Because you're bonding the other person.
You ruminate almost depressively on the other person
because you're bonding to the other person
because you're basically creating kin
for somebody with whom you're biologically unrelated, ideally.
And the last is what you want to get to is oxytocin of vasopressin,
which are these neuropeptides in the brain
where actually you are kin.
and that's your person.
This person is part of your tribe.
You've actually adopted somebody into your family.
Crazy.
That's, that's a, you and you feel like you've been together forever.
That's oxytocin is the way that that works.
And you want to go one, two, three, four.
When it doesn't work, when relationships are askew,
it's because they go in different speeds
through that neurochemical cascade or somebody stops after stage two.
That's when things aren't working.
There's some people who go through them too fast
and freak out their other partner.
These are people who have emophilia, not within age.
It's not a blood disorder.
Emophilia, which is excessively quickly falling in love.
There's a lot of what I teach my students,
is about actually how this neurochemistry
of actually how all this stuff works.
You gotta slow the falling in love process down, I feel like.
Oh, yeah.
You want to walk through this.
Not sprint and jumping, right?
Yeah.
Well, and the older you are, the slower it is.
Yeah.
If you fall in love, people in their 80s will fall in love.
But when you're 16 years old,
it'll be like four days and you're going through the entire process.
Love. Yeah. Yeah, yeah. That's kind of how it works. But anyway, this is how I teach an awful lot about it. And this is a miracle. I mean, our brains are amazing on how this whole thing works. So in modern life, the problem is that with technology, we're torquing this entire process. And it's not working right. You know, I'll give you a classic example. Most dating apps allow you to curate your profile in a way that you're looking for yourself because we're so narcissistic. I want somebody who votes like me. You know, for example,
And I'm not going to say which political side it is, but one political side,
71% of people say they won't date somebody who's not on that political side.
Man.
The other side is 41%.
So use your imagination.
Anyway, so, but the whole point is that we curate for compatibility,
but the human brain wants complementarity.
It wants sexy difference.
And the applications, what they do,
it's compatibility is a left brain solution.
complementarity is a right brain phenomenon.
And so all the technology is making us fall in love wrong.
So we're not.
I mean, if someone's been in a relationship for a few years or been married for a while and it's not working.
Right.
How do they improve their relationship or marriage?
Yeah.
So I have a lot of my wife and I actually do a lot of this stuff together.
But there are a lot of deep work that you can actually do.
But I've got a kind of a break glass thing to think about.
Actually, believe it or not, there's an algorithm of things that will save most relationships.
Really?
Some of it's biological and some of it's actually more in terms of learning.
So number one is, believe it or not, it's eye contact.
So most couples, when they're on the rocks, is they've stopped looking at each other in the eyes.
Believe it or not, that's characteristic of relationships that have gone cold.
And part of the reason is because men, in a heterosexual relationship, a man and a woman,
the man has stopped looking at his wife or partner.
when he's talking to her.
And the reason is because guys are really good at that.
You know, I can talk to each other and have a, you know, men when they're together, they
tend to...
Look at other stuff.
Yeah, they're like talking to each other deeply about things while watching a football game.
Yeah, exactly.
That's called parallel play.
Men have deep relationships as they're walking together towards something side by side, right?
Eye contact is not as common, and it's actually not as necessary because men have less
oxytocin.
About a third is much oxytocin, and oxytocin is pumped.
out when you're making eye contact.
Why?
Well, the reason is because women get a lot of oxytocin as they lay eyes,
I have eye contact with their babies.
So when babies nurse, they're looking into their mother's eyes.
It is powerful, man.
And my baby is staring at you or they're eating?
You're like, I know, I know.
I know.
It's like, stop, what are you?
Staring at me, you're freaking me out.
You know, and what they're doing is that's pumping oxytocin
into mom's brain, which is really important for milk production.
So this is kind of how the biology
works. But the whole point is that women get three times as much oxytocin, and that's how they bond
to people more. And when dude, when you're not looking at her in the eyes, when you're talking to her,
you're denying her the feeling of love. And so the number one rule, high contact. Number one rule is
never say a word to her without looking at her in the eyes. When you're talking to her,
you're looking at her. Wow. And she'll be like, I'm happy or I don't know why. That's why. Number two.
Yeah. A, B.T. Always be touching. Always be touching. If you're with
each other if you're watching TV you're touching if you're sitting in church you're touching if
you're walking down the street you're holding hands when you when when when when you're
driving she's she's got her hand on your arm touch touch touch touch that's actually more important for men
than it is for women because when she you know like you're walking on the street with her and she
grabs your arm yeah yeah it's like that's a vasopressin pump man you know yeah i know you feel like you're
you are like seven feet tall but you know even i feel seven feet tall yeah and okay always be touching
always be touching. Number three, have more fun.
Yep. Now, that's important because couples that are on the rocks, they rehearse their grievance a lot.
And a lot of couples therapy is about rehearsing grievances.
Talking about the past, constantly, constantly.
The problem, you talk about problems. You got a problem, you go to therapy. They're going to talk about the problems.
Have more fun. Fun makes you forget problems.
Does add more fun into your plate.
Yeah, add more fun. Wash out the dirt in the glass by pouring a gallon bucket of water into the glass.
looking at the dirty glass and talking about it all day.
And not by stirring it up.
Yeah, just a spoon.
Pour fun into it.
Right.
And last but not least, pray or meditate together.
Yeah.
The single most intimate thing that couples do together is pray or meditate together.
And most couples never do it.
I mean, I talked to a Catholic couple who have been married for 60 years.
You pray together?
It's like, oh, that's kind of embarrassing.
But you have sex.
You're not praying together because praying feels more intimate.
And the reason is because one flesh in terms of sex is one thing.
One flesh in terms of the right hemispheres of your brain,
you're looking into the soul, man.
And you're praying in front of God in front of each other.
It's scary.
Do you pray with Martha?
Yeah.
Yeah.
And when you first started doing it was like, like, praying.
Well, no, I mean, you're praying together,
but you're praying to God together.
And at first it was probably awkward.
And the reason is because it was intimate,
it was the most intimate thing.
And I was also used to kind of praying alone
and like do my own practice and ritual.
Now it's like we're doing it together in certain ways.
And that's a really, really super, super deep right brain bonding experience.
This is the protocol.
You know, dude's protocols.
This is the protocol.
Four things.
Eye contact, always be touching, have more fun and pray together.
That should make any marriage last and be better.
Yeah, I know.
And I know people would be like, yeah, well, what if there's abuse?
I got it.
What if there's infidelity?
I got it.
I mean, I understand these radical, exogenous circumstances.
what we're talking about is the cooling of the ardor that naturally happens.
Yes.
And so if there's not these big, audacious, crazy problems, you're just kind of cold as I get
it back.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You're just kind of numb.
Yeah.
Walking through life, going through the motions.
You're basically, your brains are not neurochemically connecting.
With all this information that you have and you've studied and you've taught and you've
written about, what is the one thing you wish you would have done earlier in your life that
maybe you don't regret, but you're like, now that I know I could have done this better with
my wife or with my kids or with my purpose or with my whatever, what is the thing that's like,
this is the thing I really wish you would have done differently.
Yeah.
There are things.
There really are things.
I wish I'd chose more happiness or a specialness.
Really?
When my kids were little.
But then you wouldn't have this opportunity you have now.
I know.
You wouldn't have all the books and the Oprah and the Dalai Lama and the credibility and the money and the,
You wouldn't have this now.
You want to be speaking 150 times a year now
if you didn't pursue specialness for those decades.
But I'd have more love in my life.
I wouldn't have more love.
And related to that, here's a real regret.
What I was in my 20s and it was go, go, go.
I wasn't doing what I'm doing now.
I didn't get my PhD until I was 34, as a matter of fact.
I was a professional classical musician.
I was playing in the Barcelona City Orchestra.
I was the associate principal French horn.
I had a good career.
And I wanted literally to be the best French horn player in the world.
I was pursuing a career as a soloist.
Wow.
And I wanted to tour in the world.
It was a lot of work.
But it was also, it meant that I didn't,
and not all my relationships were bad.
I had some very close friends,
and I got married during that time.
And, you know, Esther's from Barcelona.
And so, but the one relationship that I marginalized
was with my parents.
I did.
I mean, I didn't, and my parents were interesting people.
My dad was a mathematics professor
with a PhD in biostatistics.
He was a really,
really serious intellectual. My mother was an artist of some renown in the Pacific Northwest where I grew up in Seattle.
And they were interesting, intelligent, cultivated, cultured people. And I knew that. I was like,
I want to know them more. But, you know, I was in my 20s. And yeah, I was living in Europe and the whole thing.
And then they died. Both of them died. Yeah. I mean, my dad died at 66. And my mom was, she suffered from dementia very
early. And so there wasn't, it wasn't the same. It wasn't the same. And then she died at 73.
But she was, she was suffering a loss of who she was significantly by the time she was my age and
younger. And I missed it. And I missed it because my own negligence. And I thought to myself,
you know, for a long time, I really, that was a source of suffering for me.
How, when you mean you missed it, was it like you saw them once or twice a year,
holidays like one week yeah never more than that a couple days you're in there yeah I
talked to them once a month or something like that yeah I mean it was like it was always
cordial yeah but it was like 20 years essentially it was like yeah and I'm gonna get to it I'm
gonna get to it I'm gonna get to it and they died and and and and I and I've suffered about
that for a long time I felt regret about that for a long time and then I had this
realization based on the research this is your question I realized I get a do-over and a do-over
with my kids and grandkids.
Wow.
That's my doover.
And I said, okay, what am I going to do?
And I looked at the work.
I looked at the research on this.
And you know how you do it?
You don't visit your grandkids.
You live with them.
And so we had a big day you're living.
You had a family meeting.
We had a family meeting on the basis of this.
And the family meeting was this.
I said, to my kids, you didn't know your grandparents very well.
You almost never saw them.
I didn't see my grandparents very often.
I didn't know my parents very well.
I wish they knew them well.
It's going to be better for you if we help you with your kids.
It's going to be better for us if we have a relationship with our grandchildren.
It's going to be better for all of us if we get in each other's way a lot.
Let's not visit each other.
Vacation should be apart.
Not together, yeah.
And that was entirely based on this behavioral science research.
Entirely.
And we had a big family meeting.
So you read like a research paper on this.
I read, you know, volumes on this.
And everything that was written on it.
What did the research say about this?
The research said, you're going to be happier and live longer if you're living around
and with your grandchildren.
And your grandchildren are going to be, have greater emotional, spiritual, and cognitive
development if they're around their grandchildren, their grandparents.
And there's going to be a better long-term relationship as people grow old if they have
a day-to-day relationship with their adult children.
That's what the day to say.
And so we have this big family meeting is literally better.
for every single generation. How would were your kids at this time? My kids were
early 20s, mid 20s. And my kids got married early. My kids are, their rebellion was like
going super trad, like super trad. They think me and Esther, we think we're these freaked out hippies.
Because you know, free will and musicians, man, and the whole thing we tell them stories about,
you know, and so my kids, you know, two of my kids are Marines, you know, and my two older kids got
married to 22 and 23 and 23 and 24.
They were like military and marriage early.
Yeah, yeah, and they're all religious.
And all my kids are religious.
And you know, when we were in our 20s, we were, I mean, we were screwing up.
And, you know, it's like, and we were doing all the stuff you're not supposed to.
We lived together before we got married and the whole thing that the Catholic Church is like, mm-mm, uh-uh, uh-uh.
And anyway, so and so my kids rebelled by being like a Catholic family in 1940.
So we had this meeting.
It's like, it's like, rebellion.
So, and we're like, these kids are so,
wears. Right, right, right. They're just doing everything by the book. I know. And so we had this family
meeting and we said, here's what the research says. And we all know it's true. Where do you want to
raise your kids? Where do you think you can have a good career and raise your kids? And they voted.
They voted the Washington, D.C. region where I had raised them, my wife and I had raised them.
And they wanted to send their kids to the same schools that they went to very, very strong Catholic
schools, really good Catholic schools. And so we all packed up moving vans and moved there. Wow.
We all, we made a family decision.
You know, we literally, it was one van had two families in it.
And then the others came from California.
And my daughter, who's the baby, she's 22.
She's still in the Marine Corps.
So what about the son-in-law or daughter-in-law?
They wanted family life.
They wanted to live with you.
They wanted family life.
And so we've got one of the families is literally in her house.
They're in the bottom floor.
We're in the top floor.
We have family meals together in the middle floor.
And we get in each other's way.
I mean, it's like some young.
You know, because there's friction in any family, but I'm telling you, man, it's better than
the author.
It is not overrated.
It is not over it.
I go home, I come home and my little grandson Joey.
My God.
It's like your dad again almost like you're like...
He's like, I'm changing diapers at 61.
And Joey's like, he comes me, Yiyu because I was in Catalan, in Barcelona, the language
is Catalan and that's grandfather and my wife is Yaya, so I'm Yayu.
Yayu, Yayu, wrestle, wrestle, he's two and a half.
We wrestle every day when I come home from work.
It's unbelievable.
Wow.
It's happiness.
How do you, I can see how amazing that would be.
But how do you in your mind as a father say, I need to not take the responsibility of like
taking care of my sons.
They need to get out into the world and like learn to go hunt themselves and learn to go
provide and learn to whatever, do their taxes, you know, and not have like dad still taking
care of them when they're 35 or 40.
Yeah.
How do you and that your mind live together?
Right.
And have this rich, beautiful life together.
but also allow them to be the man of the house.
Right.
And the answer is that you give them these responsibilities themselves.
So my sons make really good living.
They're really, really successful.
They're making money.
They're making good money.
They're taking care of their own household economically.
They're taking care of their own kids.
And I'm not telling them what to do.
If they need help with something, I'll help them with something.
And they always ask my advice, which is crazy.
It's cool.
But I'm asking their advice too.
Wow.
They're helping me a lot.
I mean, I'm just like this like freighted, dumb thing with somebody in my wife's family,
and I was feeling really, really, really crummy about it.
And I called my son Carlos.
And, you know, Carlos is 25 years old.
He gave me, he's like, gave me really, really good advice.
It was beautiful, actually, what he told me because, and people never ask their adult kids advice.
They're the best people who advise you because they're future you.
I mean, they're you, man.
And I asked my daughter, who's 22, and a second lieutenant in the Marine Corps at Quantico,
right now, she's tough as nails.
Four foot 11.
Crazy.
She's a killer of men.
And I ask her advice, and she always reliably gives me really, really good advice.
And there are certain things that they do that I can't do.
They do things that I actually can't do.
I'm not taking responsibility off their plate.
What we're really doing is their kind of family is a firm.
We're dividing and conquering the world together.
Wow.
And they know kind of what the deal is.
You know, I probably will die before my wife,
because that's generally speaking the way that it works.
God's law, not entirely.
Yeah.
And she will live in family for the rest of her life.
Wow.
That's beautiful.
Yeah.
And there will be intergenerational wealth.
But the transfer of intergenerational wealth is because we're each other's safety net.
Wow.
It's not so I can even get a boat, dude.
The expectation is that you'll leave more than you get.
And that our family will be able to do beautiful things philanthropically and we'll have
goals together as a family.
Is it going to work?
I hope.
And if it doesn't, that's it.
a lesson too. I've got a few final questions for you. This has been fascinating. We're talking
about the meaning of your life. And this is about finding purpose and an age of emptiness. And I think
there are a lot of empty people out here today. Again, if you guys don't have this book yet,
make sure to grab a copy, get one for a friend. If you know someone in your life who's struggling,
going through a down season of life, get them a copy as a gift, they will appreciate it.
Let's imagine you in 10 years, 71. Yeah. What is your advice your 71-year-old self is screaming at
you right now that you're not taking yeah that you know it will i get chills just
staying i know that you know will pull you to where you're meant to be whether it's your 71 year
old wiser self is more connected to god and knows what you need to go through or what you need to
let go of what is your future version of yourself saying to you right now why didn't you stop the
things you needed to stop in their time my 71 year old self is not going to be telling this is not
going to be telling me today is not telling me today that I'm missing opportunities to do more
in the world. My 71 year old self is telling me I'm missing opportunities to love more.
And that means I'm not stopping the things, the worldly things that I need to stop.
So what do you need to stop? Because I don't know how. I don't know how.
What are the things you think the 71 version of you is telling you to stop? And maybe it's
it through phases? Maybe it's not all right now. No, no, it's not all right now because all right now
probably means I got cancer or something, right? I mean, it's like a screeching halt where the car
hits a wall. That's usually catastrophic. But just because you can do 300 days a year on the road
doesn't mean you should. Just because you can do this book with the next big celebrity doesn't
mean you should. Just because you can teach here. So what is he saying that he knows best?
That you missed an opportunity to love your guru and to be close to you.
your guru. Your wife? Yes. And the reason you missed that opportunity is because you saw a shiny thing.
You went for it. And I went for it. But you're with your wife a lot. I'm with my wife a lot.
We are best friends. But I'm not doing enough. I'm not doing enough. What would be enough to be with
your guru, your wife more that you feel like your 71 year old self would say, we just do this.
Yeah, yeah. You just be like, that's it. You can still go chase these shiny objects. If you're being in
service to something greater and you'll get the rewards of the idols but you know as long as you're in
service it's all good but that was a good week there that was a good month like what would he be
clapping at and saying bravo arthur what would he be saying probably there would be a film flip of
mrs brooks saying don't you have something to do really yeah probably don't you have something to do
that would be like...
I've never heard that once.
I've never heard that once in my life.
Never once.
What would it take for you to get that this year?
We're at the beginning of the year still.
I know.
Is that even something that you think you should do this year?
It is something I need to do this year.
Is that a week long?
Is that a month?
Is that a day?
Is that three months?
That's a cadence.
That's a cadence of...
And it really starts with the time that you actually have.
I mean, one of the, you know, you always hear that you should have quality time versus quantity time.
The truth is you need both.
Yes.
With the people that you love, your little babies who are not going to be a little babies soon.
They're going to be saying words and walking around.
And pretty soon they're going to have a lot less interest in you.
I mean, you'll be the hero.
The good news, by the way, here's the crystal ball.
You're going to be their hero when they're in the 20s.
I've got to wait that long.
No, no, no.
You're going to be their hero up until they're 12.
and then again when they're 22.
That's good.
No, no, it's good.
It's really, really good.
Dad, dad's the best.
Dad's not the best for this.
Anyway.
So quantity and quality
are both really, really, really important.
So what it would take,
and this is the true
for everybody watching the School of Greatness,
is to be really there.
When you're there, to be there more,
and then to be really there when you're there.
That's what it really takes.
Now, let me take a side note.
let me tell you, which you may know or you may not know, why you're so good at what you do.
Tell me.
Because you're here now.
Yeah, present.
That's unusual.
You're looking into my soul.
The first time I met you, why did I love you the first time I met you?
Because you saw me.
You had just met me and you saw me.
Yeah.
That's a superpower.
You're super good at that.
Thank you.
And that's what your babies need.
And that's what your guru needs.
My wife, yeah, everyone.
Yeah.
That's what they.
And so the mistake that you could make or I could make
is to be fully present when we're doing what we do
for the admiration of the world
and using that super strength for the applause of the strangers
and not bringing it home.
Yeah.
And not bringing it home.
Do you do that sometimes?
Of course.
And that's the error I need to correct.
What would that look like this year?
If at the end of this year,
your seven one year old self said,
you know what, what you said on the school of greatness
was to really be there with quality,
quality and quantity.
Yeah.
And you did it this year.
What would need to happen from you to say, I did it this year?
Yeah.
Not the next 10 years, but this one year, I did it.
It would mean slowing down a little.
So what does that look like?
Give me an actual game.
That means another, at least another day a week at home.
One day a week at home.
And by the way, I have already set protocols in motion where I'm always home on weekends.
I don't travel weekends.
But plus that another day.
Yeah.
And another day and when I'm home, I'm home.
home when I'm home I'm home and it's not only phone texting you know it because the problem is
the cycles in the brain you know that feeling thinking about the next day yeah because it's the it's the
castles in the sky of course the school of greatness is a castle in the sky yes right is what it comes
down to and that leads to a whole lot of success but that is a tremendous sacrifice and it's
and it's a it's a sacrifice born by the people who love you the most and you and that's what it's
going to take. It's going to take something tangible, like a little bit more of a sacrifice
when it comes to being more present physically and also more psychologically where my right brain
is truly open so that my meaning can find me and that's only happening when you're truly present.
Here's the thing that you've read C.S. Lewis.
No, I haven't read much. But yeah, yeah, yeah. C.S. Lewis has this, uh, no, he is. He makes a
point. He's a the theologian and it's really worth reading. He wrote The Chronicles of Narnie,
which almost every kid knows about, but also very, very beautiful.
books about religion. And he makes this observation, which is scientifically very robust.
It's a very important point, that we spend all our time in the past and the present and
the future, right? But most people who are really ambitious are spending all their time
in the future. You can't love in the future. You can only love now. Yes. And so if you go home
and you're in the future, you're not loving at all. No. Love happens right now. Yes.
And when you've spent your time in the cycles living in the future, you've lost the
the opportunity to do the only love to experience the only love that you can experience as a human
being.
Wow.
And that's what I don't want to miss anymore.
That's what 71-year-old Arthur says, stop.
Fix it.
So what would one day a week look like?
Is that picking a day every week that you say this is off and I'm not off?
No, it's just actually having dinner together and being home and after dinner actually
being completely present.
Yeah, for sure.
I mean, it's like no problem with that.
I mean, she's going to work.
Yeah, yeah, okay.
It's not just sitting around waiting for her all.
And again, it sounds like I'm really, really, really geared toward my wife.
But there's a reason that she's put in my life.
She's my partner.
She's my partner.
It's like, and if you matter, man, she's ride or die, man.
It's cool.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
But ride or die deserves the very best.
And when she gets the very best, then I'm in my bliss.
And then I'm being the man that God wants me to be.
Yeah.
You're not.
That's the stakes.
You're not in the specialness of the world when you're in that moment.
I know.
You're not getting an award and on a stage.
Husband of the year.
Yeah.
But you're not getting the dopamine hit of more.
Of no.
Idols.
Exactly right.
You're getting more.
You're getting love.
Right.
Right.
And I'm a success addict.
Yeah.
Because I have the same childhood that you had.
I only got attention when I played the French horn when I got straight A's, whenever
I happened to do it.
And so I still think that points on the board, points on the board.
This is a way I do my work, by the way, because I want the solutions for myself.
Of course.
the show too, yeah. It's me, sir, it's not research. Isn't it interesting that your parents are no longer
with us, but you're still pursuing the same pursuits to get the attention? Oh, I know. I know.
It's like, I ask this all the time. I wonder if my dad's, I wonder if my dad would be proud of me.
He's been dead 23 years. I wonder if my dad would be proud of me. What do you think if he was alive?
Yeah, he'd be like, yeah, my son teaches a little school near, near Boston. He'd be making some sort
of corny dad professor joke. Yeah, yeah, he'd be, he'd be, he'd be, he'd think that's cool.
He'd think that's cool.
But I think about it all the time.
Would my dad be proud of me?
And this is how we are.
And this is a normal thing.
And it's a healthy thing, actually.
But you can't be animated by it in a particular way where you're trying and where you're
on the hit on a treadmill.
More, more, more, more.
You can't be subjugated to that.
Do you feel sad that he wasn't able to watch everything you've done in the last 20 years?
Yeah.
It's sad for me.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, my dad passed four years ago.
It's sad for me.
But he was, he also had a brain injury like 20 years ago.
So he was kind of like, I guess, maybe similar to your mom.
He wasn't able to have a relationship with me.
He didn't have the memory.
He didn't have the cognitive skills.
And he was kind of like a child as an adult.
He died near 39.
Yeah, it was 39.
I was 38, 39.
But when I was 22, he had an accident.
He kind of died.
He was alive, but he emotionally wasn't available.
Yeah.
And when I'd see him, which was rare, it was, who are you again?
And where'd you go to school again?
Like, he could talk to you, but he didn't have the, it wasn't him.
I understand.
It's like a different human was in him.
I understand.
And it was a childlike version.
You lost him.
Lost him in a fatherly way.
Yes.
You still loved him and he still had full dignity, but he couldn't be on his own.
The dad, the dad thing was gone.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So it's been like 20-something years of not having a father.
And you think about him a lot.
Think about him more in the last few years.
Yeah, it's funny.
More than when I got married and have kids, I'm like, dang, he would have really love this.
Yeah.
Like he would have really...
Is your mom in the line?
She's alive, yeah.
Yeah.
You have relationship?
Yeah, yeah.
She's here.
Yeah, she is in L.A.
Yeah.
That's great.
But I'm like, he would really love this.
Like, and he would be really excited, you know.
He would love this.
Yeah.
And you know what?
He does.
He does.
He does.
He's proud of you.
Yeah, I know that.
That's proud of you.
But what do you, how often do you think of your dad?
Every day.
Really?
Every day.
Every day.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I love my dad.
Yeah.
I wish I knew him better.
What was the last time you had with him?
Do you remember?
Yeah.
The last time I had with him was when he was dying.
He was dying.
And he got sick.
He retired at 62 from his professorship.
He wasn't happy.
He wasn't happy.
62.
Yeah,
62.
Yeah, exactly.
When's your birthday?
May 21st.
I'll be 62.
So he died at this age?
No, no.
He retired at this age.
He got sick at 64.
Okay.
And the doctor gave him 15 to 20 years to live and died in two.
66.
And he was a biostatistician.
And so I said, oh, man, that's that's lousy.
And he says, yeah, but somebody's got to be on the left side of the curve.
Oh, my gosh.
No.
Biostat.
Biostat till the end.
Biosstatte till the end.
Gosh.
And I was living in Syracuse at the time.
I was teaching at Syracuse University at the time.
And I would go back every few weeks.
And I got closer to my brother during those years.
And my mom was really sick.
I mean, she was really sick.
and so she couldn't.
And we talked a lot during that period.
And it was funny because he had, I think,
a kind of a spiritual awakening during that time too.
He was a serious Christian guy,
but I think that he drew closer to God as well.
And he was worried.
He was worried about my mom.
He was worried, worried, who's going to take care of her?
He was going to take care of her.
And he knew my brother.
My brother's a good man.
My brother was going to take care of her the whole thing.
But by the end, he finally said,
I have to let go now.
I have to let go now.
Of his life,
with a worry of his wife?
All of it.
All of it.
And he died.
When you let go?
Really?
Like the next few days or next weeks or something?
Yeah.
Soon thereafter.
What was your biggest lesson of witnessing your father's death that taught you about life?
That's a good question.
It's a good question.
It's that it's that
in the act of actually, you know, he, and he wasn't holding on to the same stuff that I'm
holding on to. I mean, I have a different kind of life and a different kind of career. You know,
I'm doing a lot of stuff that he's never, he had never done before. But that I think
that it's pretty healthy to let go even earlier. You know, he was, he was an anxious person,
you know, and so am I. And you're an anxious guy too. I mean, we're all tightly wound, right? And,
And letting go was not a tragic act.
It was a natural thing to do.
And I think we could all...
It's exhausting, being anxious.
Oh, my gosh.
Quenching on and holding on.
It's like white knuckling your life.
It's awesome.
It's like on the wheel of the car.
There's no peace.
No.
And I think about that a lot.
I think about I can let go too more.
And so I've thought about that an awful lot.
I haven't succeeded, but I thought about that an awful lot.
And that really was a life lesson.
And he also, when my mom got sick, how old were you when he passed?
38.
Not young, but 38.
Same age for me.
Yeah.
My dad, yeah.
And he loved my mom.
He loved her.
He was totally devoted to my mom.
And she was sick and she wasn't present because of cognitive decline.
And he loved my mom and he took care of my mom.
And that was a great lesson to me that I learned.
that I learned that this is it man this is it this is your life this is it this is your path
oh my gosh I don't want to stop this but I got I got to bring it to the end here because
there's a lot here that I think people can take on and we'll probably do another episode about
a lot of this stuff later I would love that the book is called the meaning of your life
finding purpose in an age of emptiness you guys can get it right now you also have a virtual
launch event for the meaning of your life.
You've also got a podcast.
This is really cool called Office Hours.
I'm glad you're doing this with Arthur Brooks.
So you guys check out and go everything is at Arthur Brooks.com.
Social media, Arthur Brooks as well.
There's a website for the book called The Meaning of Your Life, all one word.com.
And all the resources for the book are there.
Awesome.
But again, if someone, if you felt like any part of this has spoken to you,
if you're watching or listening right now, please share this with one friend.
Please get the book.
If you feel like something is lost inside of you, if you feel stuck, if you feel like you're not fulfilling your purpose, you're not clear on what that is, or you just feel like you're not getting the most out of your life.
Make sure you get a copy of the meaning of your life and get one for a friend that you know is struggling.
We all have friends that we're trying to coach through life throughout the day that are just really struggling in some area of life.
This will give them great stories, great science and great tools on how to start improving the quality of your life.
So make sure you guys get a few copies for friends as well.
I've got two final questions for you.
Before I ask them, Arthur, I want to acknowledge you for the service you have on people,
even though that you're still tied around an idol.
We all are in some ways.
Idols and idol, yeah.
But the fact that you care deeply about human beings getting out of suffering or understanding
their suffering to have more meaning with their suffering to find more peace is such a beautiful
gift.
Thank you.
So even though you do get to take an extra evening a day or a week to be with your wife and your guru and your kids and be more present in those ways, when you are out there being present with the rest of us, it really makes a difference.
Thank you.
So I acknowledge you for the gift that you are.
Thank you, Lewis.
Likewise.
This is a much love and admiration.
Thank you.
Thank you.
This is a question called the three truths.
Imagine hypothetical scenario.
You get to live as long as you want, but it's the last day on earth for you.
It can be 100, 200, 200, whatever it ages.
You get to live as long as you want, it's their last day.
And you get to accomplish all your wildest dreams.
And you do all the things that your future self envisions you doing.
And it's like good and faithful son, everything, you did it.
But for whatever reason, we don't get any access to your work anymore left in this world.
Your books, your content, everything has to go with you.
But you got to leave one final message with the world that was your three truths.
your biggest lessons in life. What would those three truths be for you? Number one, your life has
meaning. That meaning you have purpose in your life and God created you for a reason. Number two,
the world has a coherence to it. Things happen for a reason. Your job is to figure out what
they are. Number three, happiness is love. Your destiny is to love and be loved. It's the only job
that matters.
It puts in a perspective.
I hope that all of the, you know, you write a bunch of books, do a bunch of shows.
I hope it all kind of boils down to that.
Yeah.
I really hope it blows down to that.
Absolutely.
The three truths.
Beautiful question.
Thank you.
Final question.
What is your definition of greatness?
My definition of greatness comes from the answer to the last question, which is
heroically to love and be loved.
To love notwithstanding where the world tells me,
No, to love notwithstanding my feelings, to transcend myself, and to love notwithstanding all of those things.
That's true greatness.
That's the man that I want to be.
That's the greatness that I think that actually all of us have within ourselves.
And you've made it easier for me to do that today.
No, man.
Thanks for being here.
I appreciate it, Arthur.
Thank you, brother.
Amazing.
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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Share this with a friend on social media and leave us a review on Apple Podcasts as well.
Let me know what you enjoyed about this episode in that review.
I really 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 if 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.
