The School of Greatness - Rick Rubin: The Secret to Your Most Authentic Expression (Creativity Will Flow Like CRAZY!)
Episode Date: November 27, 2023What if the key to unlocking your greatest creative potential lies not in learning something new, but in rediscovering something ancient and deeply personal within you? Join us as Rick Rubin, a legend... in the world of music, reveals how tapping into your inner world can revolutionize not just your art, but your entire way of being.Rick Rubin is a nine-time GRAMMY-winning producer, named one of the 100 most influential people in the world by Time and the most successful producer in any genre by Rolling Stone. He has collaborated with artists from Tom Petty to Adele, Johnny Cash to the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Beastie Boys to Slayer, Kanye West to the Strokes, and System of a Down to Jay-Z. His book THE CREATIVE ACT is a #1 New York Times bestseller.Rick opens up about his personal journey of discovery, creativity, and the pursuit of authenticity. This conversation is not just about the music industry; it's a heartfelt exploration of how to live a life filled with passion, creativity, and genuine self-expression.In this episode you will learnStrategies to spark and harness inner creativity.The impact of tapping into creativity on a global scale.Ways to overcome creative blocks and embrace inspiration when it sparks.The importance of patience and presence in the creative process.Techniques to cultivate inner peace and create from a place of pure authenticity.For more information go to www.lewishowes.com/1536For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960More SOG episodes we think you’ll love:Rob Dial – https://link.chtbl.com/1516-podDr Joe Dispenza – https://link.chtbl.com/1494-podInky Johnson – https://link.chtbl.com/1483-pod
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I came to realize recently what great means, but I didn't know.
Most of my life I was aiming for great, but I didn't know what that was.
And I've come to realize that great means it's a devotional kind of greatness.
It's a gift to the universe. It's a gift to God.
Welcome to the School of Greatness.
My name is Lewis Howes, former pro athlete turned lifestyle entrepreneur.
And each week we bring you an inspiring person or message
to help you discover how to unlock your inner greatness.
Thanks for spending some time with me today.
Now let the class begin.
Welcome back everyone to the School of Greatness.
Very excited about our guest.
We have the inspiring Rick Rubin in the house.
Good to see you, sir.
And thank you for being here.
You have an incredible journey,
incredible story,
and you've done some amazing things.
You're a nine-time Grammy-winning producer,
named one of Time Magazine's
100 Most Influential People in the World.
You've got a number one
New York Times bestselling book,
which has just taken over the world in a powerful way. And I've got so many questions I want to ask
you about this. But you've also worked with some of the most influential artists of our generation,
which is really cool, just to sit and be with you to talk about some of this. Some of the people
like Red Hot Chili Peppers, Johnny Cash, Jay-Z, Tom Petty, Amadele Ray, so many Adele,
the Chicks, Kanye West, Lady Gaga, so many incredible influential artists of our time.
I watched part of your documentary series and I just am fascinated by the way you think
and by the way you move throughout space and time. I love that you're an avid meditator and that you walk around barefoot pretty much every single day.
I think you had to wear shoes here today just to enter the building.
But otherwise, 99% of your life is barefoot.
And something that I feel like a lot of people struggle with is tapping into their creativity.
And I think a lot of people are born
with an artistic expression inside of them,
but then it gets diminished over time.
A lot of people, not everyone.
And I'm curious, do you feel like,
when have you felt like you've been most insecure
in your creative endeavors?
Because you seem so confident
you have hit after hit everything you touch turns into gold seemingly but i'm also assuming that
not everything works out the way you envision do you ever feel insecure with your artistic
expression or are you always confident I'm confident with artistic expression because my only goal is to make something that I like.
And I know that I can keep working on it until I like it.
So in some ways, there's no pressure because the goal is to make the thing that I like.
I know what I like.
If I don't like it, I keep working.
And eventually, we get to a place where
we like it. Yeah. Do you ever face the inner critic of, well, what if other people don't
like this? No, I don't consider them at all. Really? Yeah. Something I say in the book is
that the audience comes last. And I believe um, I'm not making it for them.
I'm making it for me.
And it turns out that when you make something truly for yourself, you're doing the best
thing you possibly can for the audience.
So much of why, um, if you go to the movies, so many big movies, just not good.
It's because they're not being made by a person who cares about it.
They're being made by people who are trying to make something
that they think someone else is going to like.
And that's not how art works.
That's something else.
It's not art.
That's commerce.
So if we're making art, we're making,
it's, it's almost like, it's almost like a diary entry. So it can, some, could I be concerned that
someone else might not like my diary entry? It doesn't make sense. You know, it's, it has nothing
to do with them. My, my diary entry has nothing to do with anyone else. So everything
we make as artists are essentially diary entries. That's interesting. And it's also,
most people never want the world to see their diary, right? It's like you kind of keep it
closed off. You keep it to yourself. You almost feel embarrassed if someone found your diary,
if it's really personal, intimate, you know, fears or concerns
or hopes and dreams. So how does someone write or create something for themselves in their own
personal diary, but also want to share it with the world and not allow the criticisms to affect them?
That's where the, um, the courage of the artist comes in, which is,
this is who I am.
And in my case,
I'm less concerned with the result.
So I think that's a lot of it.
It's like,
I'm not making it for someone else to get their reaction.
I'm making it to have my experience.
And as soon as I decide to share it,
in my mind, it's success because I care about it enough. I like it enough for other people to see
it. If other people, they can like it or not, that's up to them. And that's their thing. That's
about them. That's not about me. Why do you think so many people struggle with the opinions of others when they're sharing their art to the world? I think it's a natural human thought. I don't know if it was always the case.
Because you don't have that at all. I don't have that at all. I don't have that at all.
But it seems like 99% of people have that. It seems like it. Maybe I'm wrong.
Yeah. I think the best artists tend not to have that or find a way to turn it off.
Really?
And a big part of my job with artists is helping them turn it off.
It's like we're not thinking about singles.
We're not thinking about chart position.
We're not thinking about anything but making the most beautiful, honest, true thing we can.
And when I say honest and true it could be fiction do you know
do you know what i'm saying it's not uh it's the thing that's touches us and excites us and
surprises us which is also interesting the fact that we can make something that surprises us
happens every day yeah you talk about magic a lot you I've seen that in your book, but also in the documentary series about the work you've done. And how does someone
tap into their own magic when they have such a critical mind, self-criticism, but also family,
critics, managers, all that other stuff, criticizing what's good and what's not good?
managers, all that other stuff, criticizing what's good and what's not good.
How do you coach someone to actually eliminate or diminish decades of conditioning within a week or two to make their art? it comes down to a,
like a personal reaction to something.
If I gave you two different foods and I asked you to taste them,
you wouldn't have a hard time telling me
which one you liked
if you really liked one and didn't like the other.
So if you had people around you saying,
no, but this other
one that you don't like, that's the good one. No one could convince you that the thing that
tastes bad to you tastes good to you. So it's a very simple, it's such a simple idea getting to
what do I actually like? No second guessing. No, it doesn't go past and, and it doesn't have to stand for
anything. It doesn't have to represent you. It's just, this is the thing that tastes good to me.
What do you think? That's, that's our whole job is this tastes good to me. What do you think?
When an artist is, you mentioned commerce and you mentioned art. When an artist is struggling financially
and they're like,
I want to make things that I enjoy
that tastes really good for me,
but I've been doing that for five, seven, 10 years
and it doesn't taste good for anyone else.
How can I make a living around my art?
Or should I not think about my art as making a living,
but I should be thinking about commerce
separate from the art?
I think dividing them is a really healthy idea.
And then having a job that supports you so that you can be free in your art is ultimately
what's best for the art.
Really?
Yeah.
Now you can get a job related.
You know, you can get a job in the industry you're interested in.
You can get a job if you're a painter, you can get a job in the industry you're interested in you can get a job if you're a painter you can get a job in a gallery you can be around it um and then also when you do something like
that if you were to work in a recording studio you may decide this is not for me you know we
don't really know we we have ideas of what we want to try, but then when you try them, sometimes, yes, that works.
Sometimes you don't.
So many people get on a track when they're young.
I have a cousin who went to school to become a dentist, and he was a dentist for years.
And after 15 or 20 years, just like, I can't do this.
I don't want to do this.
It was a wrong choice.
So many people live an unhappy life
sticking to a program from when they were younger.
And we have to find like,
you are speaking to people now versus playing sports.
It's a big change.
Yeah.
But it seems like a really positive change for you. But it wasn't what you set out to do originally. sports. Same. It's a big change. Yeah. But it seems like a really positive change for you.
But it wasn't what you set out to do originally.
Right.
Yeah.
You've been doing this for how long now?
Producing music, 40 years?
Probably about 40 years.
Roughly 40 years.
Close to 40 years.
Have there ever been a time where you felt like it was stagnant for you?
Or you weren't creatively inspired?
Or you felt like it was dull?
It wasn't this awe or magic that you were wanting.
It's always magic.
It's always exciting.
I can't say that every moment of every project has been that,
but there are always these glimpses of wonder
that come through the creative process that are staggering. And they're very addictive,
you know, being in a room where something's not happening and all of a sudden it's happening and
you don't know why and you don't know what changed. It's a very exciting feeling.
How often do you experience that feeling?
All the time.
Really? All the time. Really?
All the time.
Now, when I say all the time, we may start a project that maybe doesn't happen for a few days, but then it starts happening.
What is that moment and what is the feeling that you have and what is it that you notice either in your mind or in the environment that is shifting for that feeling to occur?
It's an inner excitement.
It's like a leaning forward.
It's a curiosity of like, can we hear that again?
What was that?
What was that?
I've not heard that before.
That's interesting.
Really?
Absolutely.
So after four decades of doing this, you still get surprised by hearing new things.
All the time.
Really?
All the time.
Why does this work with this?
Who knows?
And if I were to tell you the idea or if someone were to tell me the idea, I would listen to their words and think that's a terrible idea.
And then we try it and it's remarkable.
Wow.
Can you give me an example of something that stands out for you
from maybe a a well-known artist that people know about or maybe someone completely unknown
i can say something happened the other day where we recorded a song in a particular way with a
particular instrument and it sounded really beautiful and then the artist said, well, let's try it. Uh, I'm imagining it. And they described,
uh, something so different and in the description, it sounded terrible.
The way they explained it.
The way they explained it or, or the references, they gave me references of, well, if we do it
like this band with this kind of a beat and the. And I tried to imagine the same song that we just recorded this different way, that way.
And in my imagination, it did not sound good.
And then I said, let's try it.
And then they played it.
And at first, it didn't sound good.
But very quickly, it got great.
And there's no way to know.
There's no way to know. There's no way to know. That's a
big part of it is I see artists who get into arguments, like a band who gets into an argument,
let's do it this way. No, let's do it this way. And I'll always say, well, let's just play it
both ways and listen, see. Let's see. Let's see what actually happens.
Right. And that might spark something completely new.
Absolutely. They both might suck. Absolutely. Let's try. Let's see what actually happens. Right. And that might spark something completely new. Absolutely.
They both might suck.
Absolutely.
Let's try another one.
Or they both might be great.
And sometimes when they're both great, it's like, oh, maybe this is better for the chorus
than this other thing actually can work as a bridge.
We weren't even looking for a bridge.
Yeah.
That's fascinating.
In this documentary series about you and your facility and kind of your life.
The Shangri-La documentary.
Shangri-La, yeah.
Powerful.
I'm not all the way through it.
I've done the first episode and a half.
Someone in the first episode says,
Rick helps people be the best version of you.
And I'm curious, who helps you become the best version of yourself?
Probably, I would say now my family, having a family, but also I have some really
hard driving friends. Like you met Laird Hamilton, someone like, if you have someone like Laird in
your life, being around people like him make you better at being a human being.
What's the biggest thing you struggle with today?
I think that there are a lot of fun things to try and finding time to do all of the things
possible, the exciting things that I want to try.
Right.
Because how do you pick and choose the projects you work on and the artists you work with? Is it a feeling? Is it relationships you have with their managers? Is it, yeah, I want to try this new thing and let's bring them in? Is it-
It usually starts with meeting the artist and just if there's a connection with the human. And that's usually how it starts. How often does that happen then?
Because I'm assuming a lot of people want to work with you.
So is it, you know, every Monday people will, you know, managers will send their artists
to you and they'll have an interview process with you for an hour or two, and then you'll
get a vibe and see if you want to work with them.
Is there a waiting list?
How does that work?
It honestly doesn't happen that often because I'm always in different parts of the world
and I'm not really part of the system.
So if you were to go to, if you got signed to a record company and they showed you a
list of all the producers to work with, I'm not on anybody's list.
So someone would have to seek me out outside of the normal system to find me.
And then it either would or wouldn't happen.
Interesting.
find me and then it either would or wouldn't happen interesting what do you see is the thing that holds people back the most from being their most creative and best self i think it's being
concerned what other people think and a feeling of that the people who make great things are somehow special and that they're not special.
And that's just not true. We're all, everyone has the capability to make great things
and none of us are special. It seems like a lot of people, they're focused on what other people
think, like you said, and it almost, it blocks them into this kind of rut feeling,
I guess, that they feel like they're stuck in a rut. I don't know if you've heard this before
with a lot of your artists, but with me as a writer and an author, I've heard so many people
come to me and say, I want to write a book. And I asked them, how long have you had this idea that
you wanted to write this book about this thing? And some people will say five, seven, 10 years,
but they've been worried about what people think
or they feel creatively stuck in a rut.
Do you ever feel stuck in a rut?
And if so, how do you personally get out of that?
I think taking action is a really great thing
and not setting up barriers of entry.
Like I can imagine a musician saying,
I can't play this song because I don't have the
right guitar or I don't have the right equipment to do it. And there are no barriers to entry.
There's always a way. I come from a punk rock background. So in punk rock,
it was a do-it-yourself mentality. And I started my first record company not knowing not knowing that was something you can
do it just really happened automatically i wanted to start making records i wanted people to hear
them i never knew that you could get signed to a label i just thought well if you want to make a
record you make a record so i made records and you know print up 500 copies of a seven inch single
for example so i think there's always
a way you don't have to wait for permission from someone else. Um, I think that's a big part.
People are waiting for permission to actually make their art, to make their art. Someone has to say,
you know, I'll hire you to do this or or I'll publish your book if you write a book or
set the stage to, to allow you to do it. But I don't think that's the way great things are made.
When you did those, when you printed those first 500 singles,
what was your dream or your vision? Was it, okay, now I'm going to, how do I sell these? How am I
going to give them away for free? What was the process for you? Combination of giving them away for free and selling enough to be able to make another
one.
That was always, any of the things I've made, it's always been about sustainability.
As long as I can make another one, it's a success.
But at this point, you're sustainable probably for life, I'm assuming, with the success you've
had.
So you don't have to make something to try to make your money back or get your time back or whatever.
So what is the vision now?
I still think in those terms that I want.
I feel like I want to make it where it's sustainable by itself.
There's something that feels good about that.
That you make something that can live on,
not because of an endowment.
Yeah.
That's interesting.
I know you're,
I don't know why,
I don't know why that is,
but that's just my,
and maybe it's just the way I was brought up.
May just be.
What does an artist need to be thinking and feeling at the same time to create
great art?
I would say thinking is the least part of it. It's much more about feeling
and, um, being true to themselves, whatever that is feeling, feeling their truths.
And how do you know when an artist is being truthful in front of you?
It's a feat. It's just a feeling.
I can feel it.
Yeah.
I think something that you said was, I have no skillset.
It's all intuitive.
It's not what's in my head.
It comes through me.
Yes.
So you're not analyzing or thinking about it.
You're saying, huh, something doesn't feel right.
It starts with a feeling always.
It starts with a feeling always.
It starts with a feeling.
The analysis comes in later to try to understand either the feeling, if there's a reason.
Like if I'm just feeling something, I can experience it and be fine.
If we have to act on the feeling, then it's like, okay, this feels like this.
Is there a way to figure out why?
Sometimes you can, sometimes you can't.
And if you can figure out why,
or if you think you know why,
then you can say, hmm, could it be this, this, or this?
Let's try those things, see what happens. Do you have a process when you're starting the first session
with an artist after you've been introduced
and you say, okay, let's do this, we're gonna work together.
Do you have a process where you set a personal intention that you don't tell them,
but then also you tell them what the intention is for your time working together?
I'll say when we're starting a new project, I always have anxiety.
Really?
Always. Always. Because I don't know what's going to happen. You know, there's a real question mark when we walk in to start.
And I know that it could go a lot of different ways.
And I don't have, I'm not interested in having a playbook in advance.
I'm interested in seeing where it's going to go.
And it's scary because it could not go good.
And sometimes there's an, you know,
some artists have an expectation that I'm going to do something.
I can't do anything, you know?
Right.
It's like, it's either going to happen or it's not going to happen. So, but then usually within, sometimes it's the first day,
sometimes it's the third day, sometimes it's the second week,
where something happens like, whoa, what was that?
How did that happen?
And then that might give us a clue.
It's like, oh, this is what it wants to be.
And that may change also.
That may be the first inclination.
It could start that way and then it makes a left turn, turns into something completely
different.
The work itself tells us where it wants to go.
So because we have, the reason it's so scary
is because we have so little control over it.
That's what's scary.
There's no control.
None.
And if an artist has a big expectation,
I need to put out a record that's going to do well,
I need to make money, I need to make the label happy,
whatever it is, my fans need to love this,
then that could feel like a lot of pressure.
But do you allow that pressure to affect you? No, because I know it's not in the interest of the work. It's like we're all on the same page.
Even the people we're ignoring, the record companies, the managers, the agents, the people
who are yelling, I need this, I need this now. Ultimately, for everyone involved, if the artist
makes the best possible work that they can, everybody wins.
It's just that no one involved in the process understands what it takes for that thing to happen.
I had a conversation with a basketball player, a member of the Golden State Warriors, who told me there's all this pressure now to do a lot of stuff on social media.
And he said, and it's getting in the way of our playing.
Interesting.
And I said, well, if you tell the people who are asking you to do the social media stuff,
don't you want us to win?
So if you want us to win, let us focus on winning.
And he said, they don't seem to care.
They want us to do the social media stuff. They want us to distract ourselves
from the work of the game. From the flow, from the practice, putting in the reps,
showing up. And then I say, well, if then it's up to you, what's more important to please them or to win. Man, this is fascinating.
What was the experience for you where the artist or the band came in and it was the fastest, best flowing process you've ever experienced? Everything was lining up.
Authenticity, truth, raw realness was happening every day.
And it was also, it was a great success for them personally to have the art be real and honest,
but it also landed commercially and took off.
The first thing that comes to mind would be Johnny Cash because he had gone, you know, 25 years of not having success and he had been dropped from two labels.
And when I signed him,
he didn't,
he didn't even know why I was interested.
That really was a conversation.
It's like,
what,
what,
what do you fit?
Why do you think working with you is going to be any different than working
with anyone else?
Like he had given up.
Um, and to, working with you is going to be any different than working with anyone else. Like he had given up. And for him to get into it, we recorded in my living room and he would just play me songs on
an acoustic guitar. And there was an honesty in what was happening there. We didn't know that we
were making a record at that time. We were just looking for songs. So he was playing me songs. It was almost like a way for us to musically meet each other.
He would play me the songs he loved, either from childhood or songs that he thinks he'd like to
sing or a song he wrote. And it was just a very honest experience. And then we went into the studio.
We picked some of those songs.
We went through hundreds of songs and then picked a handful to try to record.
And when we went into the studio with the band, it didn't have what the living room recordings had.
There was some intimate honesty.
And we'd never heard Johnny Cash that way before.
So that led to the first album, which was a solo acoustic album. Again, we didn't set out to make a solo acoustic album, but it revealed itself as that's the most interesting thing to do.
And that ended up being very successful and very successful with
young people which he had not experienced since the 1950s so that was
a and after that after the success of that album we made five more albums
together and he had confidence right based on the experience of the first one
which he'd expected nobody to care about really uh took to cold with people and then on i think
it was on our fourth or fifth album um he did a cover of hurt the nine inch nail song and that
ended up being probably the biggest you know maybe the biggest hit of his life,
certainly of his later life.
Wow.
And that was a real revelation.
How important is confidence for an artist in your mind to have?
Because I've been around some of the greatest athletes that are freaks of nature athletically,
that are gifted beyond anything physically who can do
anything in practice but then they lacked the confidence in a game and they looked like an
average player yeah does that is that the same thing with with artists singers guitar players
you know musicians where there's they could be so gifted but if there's a time when the pressure is
on to record they don't have the confidence. Does that hold people
back? Have you seen that? I'll say it's, it's not as simple as that because there's a,
there's a vulnerability required for the artist that if you're confident to the point that it disguises your vulnerability, that doesn't work.
So it's like a dance between being wildly open and vulnerable
and commitment to do whatever it takes to get your work through.
That combination, which is a difficult combination.
It's almost like what I'm hearing you say, this is really interesting point.
It's almost like you just have to have courage
to be vulnerable, which is not really confidence.
It's more of like, you just gotta,
if you're unwilling to be courageous
with your vulnerability,
you just won't be able to share your art.
That's true.
There's, I'll say though,
to get up in front of people and sing
takes a certain amount of confidence. Yes. It's just part of the it's a hard thing to do
I couldn't imagine doing it. That's true. My friend of mine just
Rachel Platten she just
She wrote a song called fight song that was you know, really popular over the last six or seven years
But she had a you know, she started a family over the last six or seven years but she had uh you know she started a family over
the last five years so she's got two two young kids and she just played at the the troubadour
a couple nights ago and um i'd seen her play in the past where she was uber confident but she
hadn't played in a while and so she came out and she's like guys i'm actually really nervous
and this is my first time playing you know kind of with a man with these new songs and a while, and I'm revealing myself
of these new songs. You know, you could sense this, you know, vulnerability, which was actually
beautiful. It was like, we're rooting for her. You know, she, she messed up a few times,
but she kept going and she was like, Hey, I'm going to restart this. And thank you guys. You
know, but it was like, wow. and it made moments of like awe and magic
happen yes it was so cool yes and and it's not about perfection that's the thing it's like
humanity breathes in the mistakes you know in the it's what it's what's not ordinary if it was
if it was machine like perfect it's not so interesting. It's cookie cutter. It's all the same. So it's the
edges, it's the frayed edges that make it interesting.
You talk about transcendence, you talk about manifestation
in the universe. I know you're a big meditator. How long have you been meditating for?
I learned when I was 14 and um it's been a big
part of my life the whole time i can't say i've done it continually but i go through phases of
five years on two years off or something might replace it that's another kind of a meditation
like i may go from a tm sitting meditation to learning Tai Chi and Tai
Chi will be, will fill the slot of my TM time. Right. Transcendental meditation. Yeah. Um,
and I also read that you really never been into drugs or alcohol. Is that correct? I've never
been drunk or high in my life. Wow. And, um, you know, as an athlete playing football, college football and professional football,
it was kind of shocking when people would hear that from me because the stereotype is,
you know, the dumb jock that just drinks and does a cake stance.
But I learned early on, I was telling you before that my brother went to prison when
I was eight.
And when you go to a prison, a visiting room every single weekend, then, and you realize quickly, you don't want to
go there. And a lot of, a lot of guys were in there for drugs or, you know, doing bad things.
And for me, I was just like, Oh, I don't even want to try some of this stuff because I don't
know where this might lead. So let me just eliminate this from my life. Now I've had
sips here and there, but I've never been drunk. How has cleansing your mind of drugs and alcohol of not really diving into it supported you
as an artist?
And do you think drugs and alcohol can make artists be great?
I can tell you that when I was going to high school, most of the kids that I knew would
come home from school and get high.
And the main reason was out of boredom and just trying to fill time.
And I never, I always feel like there's not enough time.
Like there's so much I want to learn.
There's so much I want to learn. There's so much I want to read. There's so much I want to try that I'm not trying to turn off time.
I'm interested in something different.
Now, the idea of a hallucinatory experience sounds interesting to me, but I've not done it.
You've never done psychedelics or anything?
I've never done that either.
I've always been, you know, I have a lot of friends that do it.
I'm sure you do as well.
Uh, and I don't know, for whatever reason,
it's never excited me to try.
Yeah.
Maybe in the future.
Yeah.
Same.
I feel like someday I, I will probably do it.
Right.
Um, so have you been drunk or high?
I got drunk one time as part of a school assignment.
School assignment.
Well, what school is this?
I went to Harvard for a summer between my junior and senior year of high school to start getting college credits.
And I took a logic class and a design class and they had a Harvard bartending class.
And I thought, that's really funny.
Even as someone who doesn't drink, the idea like having a degree in bartending from Harvard was funny
well I did it and I thought of it like chemistry the idea of mixing things is
interesting interesting it's only one time yeah we the final exam was you to
mix like 30 different drinks and then taste them to write what they taste like
and I got really drunk and it was terrible experience so you've never been drunk since then no you've been high or no i i went on my 40th birthday in kawaii um i prayed all day
and i did a ceremony where i smoked some marijuana the only time in my life and um and i would say it
had almost no effect no effect yeah almost So you might've felt a little buzz or
something, but nothing. I didn't feel a buzz. I would say that when I looked down into, uh,
the landscape, there was more clarity between the foreground and background.
That was one. And I remember we drove to dinner and I drove and driving felt more fun than usual,
like playing video games.
Sure, sure, sure. But you weren't really high or whatever. That's fascinating. So never really
drunk or high, except for a social experiment or a one-time trial thing. I don't think I've met
many people who's never been drunk or high like me. So that's pretty interesting. Maybe that's
the Pisces in us. Maybe. And Pisces have a tendency to go the other way of.
Everything else.
We are addictive people.
Yes.
Historically.
Yes.
Pisces.
That's why one of the things is I don't think if I would have gotten into alcohol or, or
some type of drug, I think I would have become addicted.
I would have been extreme with it.
Yeah.
So I've tried to be extreme and more healthier ways, I think for myself.
with it. Yeah. So I've tried to be extreme and more healthier ways, I think for myself.
Now the stereotype is, or the generalization is that a lot of artists smoke weed or do drugs or experiment with alcohol or do these different things. And they talk, you know, maybe this is
my own perception of it. They talk about it in their creative process, right? I was high when I did this and it gave me all these creative ideas.
How do you view that of when artists are working with you?
Are they smoking?
Are they drinking?
You know, when they're with you or do you try to help them eliminate that
to clear their mind?
I want people to do what they want to do.
I have no opinion.
If I see someone doing something
that's
interfering with their work, I'll talk about it. But if it's not interfering with their work,
that's their business. Have you ever seen an artist that you knew had a history of alcohol or
smoking marijuana or some type of drug that when they worked with you, they weren't, they were clear of all drugs and substances
and they were actually able to create something beautiful and magical.
Well, I saw the Chili Peppers go from a band that were very dysfunctional, um, on a lot of drugs,
which I didn't really know. I just knew that when I met them,
the feeling in the room was one I didn't want to be around.
And then I met them years later,
and they had gotten clean.
And I felt like it was a different group of people, and then we ended up making Blood Sugar Sex Magic,
which ended up being a very successful album for them.
And then I produced most of their albums since.
When they were clean and, you know, that's interesting.
Do you think that people overall make better work as artists when they are clear-minded
without substances?
I think over the long term, that's probably the case.
But there are many great artists who use something like marijuana as a...
Some people have told me that they can hear music in a different way. Again, I haven't
experienced it, so I can't say, but some people have told me that they hear music
in a different way when they smoke and they can access their creativity.
So I think you have to do your own testing.
Right, right. Do you think it's better to make, I don't know about better is the right word,
but do you think it's more impactful to make your art from a place of pain, anger, or sadness,
or from a place of love, peace, and harmony? I don't think it matters. I think, I think it's true to your experience. So if you're feeling
anger and sadness, a sad, angry song will probably be good. And if you're feeling love and peace,
then you're in the right frequency to create that kind of song. You can also, sometimes if you're in a real pain, you can write a yearning song for love that can be very deep.
You tap into things to, you're looking for, you're not satisfied in your condition.
So you're yearning for change. And sometimes the energy of yearning for change can lead to really beautiful music.
Right.
Wow.
Is there someone that you're able to talk about or share that spoke and created from
a place of yearning when they worked with you
that later said it was extremely healing process for them working with you for a few weeks on an
album and expressing their diary of Kesha and her,
she had gone through very difficult experience and she told me that it was a very healing
experience working on the album and different than any experience she'd had previously,
where it was much more about commerce before. What's the most painful thing you've been through
that you've had to heal and overcome?
Probably the biggest one was,
you know, I was overweight most of my life
and it was just,
I was not comfortable in my body
and I always felt like an outsider
and felt like it limited what I could do.
Really?
Yeah.
So I think probably
weight was my biggest issue what was the the root behind that you think i think it was mostly bad
information um although my mom was obese so i thought it's just genetic and I tried everything. I tried every type of diet, nothing worked. And then eventually
I found the correct balance. And I was a vegan for 23 years and I weighed 318 pounds as a vegan.
Wow. Yeah, you can be a sick vegan.
I was very sick as a vegan and i wasn't getting what i needed right
and it's a carb it's basically a carbohydrate diet yeah and you can have all the sugar you want being
a vegan but that doesn't mean it's healthy for you as well so it's like um what do you think was
you know it sounded like you tried a lot of different things for 20 years but it didn't work
but you found the right combination.
But was there something you needed to mend or heal emotionally that allowed you to shift internally? It was just information. I was always willing to do it. I would say
probably the biggest, maybe there is an aspect, which is I thought I knew what was best. So there was a sense of turning over control to someone else. That was a surrender.
Wow.
I saw a doctor at UCLA who a friend of mine recommended I go to. I knew it wasn't going
to work because I had done everything and nothing worked. And he put me on a particular diet. And I
remember thinking, it sounds terrible, and it's not going to work but i'll you know i'll do what you say that no belief and uh but i put my faith in
him or i i gave up faith i gave up but listened and uh and committed to the process and committed
to the process and the weight fell off really how long did it take was like a six month year
process 14 months and I lost 135 pounds.
Man, that's awesome.
Congrats on that.
Thank you very much.
Wow.
And when was this?
12 years ago, something like that.
12 years ago.
You look really healthy right now.
That suntan, you know, wherever you're at.
I spend a lot of time in the sun.
I'm a sun worshiper.
a lot of time in the sun yeah i'm i'm a sun worshiper now do you feel like um when you were able to i guess get that support see the changes physically to something transform inside of you
spiritually to be a better artist once that transformation started to happen? Or did you think you were
still making great art when you were a hundred pounds overweight? Would you say?
I think we were making great art the whole time. The differences between losing weight
and then meeting Laird and starting to train and get into my body because I was sedentary my whole
life.
And just sitting all day.
Sitting all day or laying down all day.
I liked laying down more than sitting.
This is the longest I've been in a chair since I've been on an airplane.
With Laird, when I showed up to Laird's the first time,
I couldn't do one pushup.
Come on.
Swear to you, could not do one pushup.
And with his support,
I worked up to being able to do 100 consecutive pushups,
which was mind-blowing.
So what changed between the weight loss and meeting Laird was
I now see anything as possible and that you could train for anything.
There's nothing you can't do. You can't be the best in the world at something,
but you can be a lot better than you are at anything you want to put the time into learning,
whatever it is, you could do anything. And that's a great, inspiring feeling.
And I feel like I bring that into the art where I already had great confidence.
But even more so, I now know anything is possible at any time.
Wow.
Just if you have to do the work.
So this was 12 years ago when this started to happen, right?
And so if I got my wrath right
are you 60 right now yeah i just turned 60 just turned 60 in march i just turned 40
if you could go back to your 40 year old self what would the the number one piece of advice be
for you at 40 if you can think about where you were then who you were working with the projects
you were working on the people in your life,
knowing what you went through the last 20 years,
what would you tell yourself then?
I would always say just have as much fun as possible
because I'm a workaholic by nature
and I love making things
and I love making good things
and a great deal of time and effort goes into that.
And I'm hard on myself in that way
in that I have high expectations.
And I think we can have fun too.
Yeah, of course, yeah.
What brings you the most joy?
I think probably quality time in nature with my family.
That's probably the best.
Being in a beautiful place, being close to my family,
breathing fresh air, walking on the beach,
laughing together, reading together,
watching movies together, you know, watching wrestling.
I like pro wrestling more than pro wrestling with my son.
It's fun.
That's great.
Are you more of a wrestling fan or are UFC now?
Always been pro wrestling.
UFC feels like they might hurt each other.
They do hurt each other.
That's why I like wrestling.
It's like it's more everybody's on the same side for it to be the best show.
They want it to be a win-win.
It's a win-win.
Yeah, you talked about that in this documentary series about,
I love the video of you being like the ultimate promoter
with the BC boys in a commercial,
like just being this hype man promoter.
How much has, I guess, pro wrestling influenced you as an artist?
A lot, a lot, because it's a,
it's a world where you never really know what's true.
It's a world of mystery and great skill is involved in what they're doing.
And there's a story and it's a story sometimes of people who seem to hate each other.
Do they hate each other? They might be best friends. You know, it's like, we don't know,
but sometimes they really do hate each other. And then the matches are different when they
really hate each other, but you never know when it is. So there's this, there's a sense of,
and I think it's more honest than any other form of any other sport or any other form of entertainment.
See, it's funny I say it's the only legitimate sport is pro wrestling.
For real.
Because it's the most like the world.
In the world, we don't really know what's true.
Everybody has a facade.
People put on, you know, airs or a performance.
A mask.
Yeah, or the politician talks and we don't really know who they are they say these things that are often written for them we don't know
um so there's this like performative aspect of the world that wrestling that's what the world's
really like we say that the you know wrestling is fake it's like the world's really like. We say that wrestling is fake.
It's like the world is fake and wrestling is real.
That's what it is.
I wanted to go back into what you talked about.
You mentioned transcendence, and I think you mentioned the universe having your back when you asked for an answer with this particular song with System of the Down.
What's your thoughts on manifesting and manifesting something you want and alchemizing it into the world?
Do you believe in manifesting?
Do you believe in artists should be thinking in that way?
What's your thoughts on it?
I believe in it a million percent.
or what's your thoughts on it?
I believe in it a million percent.
It's something that I've experienced before I knew what it was.
So when I say it's like,
I feel like it has to do with the purity
of the intention behind what you're doing.
If your intention is pure
and you're doing it if your intention is pure and you're
doing it for the right reasons, it seems like things tend to work out.
And that ends up being a manifestation mindset, but it didn't start for me that way.
It just was like, I really believe in what I'm doing.
I really care about it.
I want it to be the best it could be for me,
and I'm excited to share it.
And the results have shown me that you can manifest things.
It happens.
But I'll say when I do it, it's never based on the outcome.
Ooh, what do you mean?
I'm never asking for a result.
What are you asking for?
I'm asking to rise to the occasion, to make the best thing that I can,
for the thing that I make to be great.
Great is a vague word.
I don't know what great means.
I came to realize recently what great means, but I didn't know. Most of my life, I was aiming for great, but I didn't know what great means. I came to realize recently what great means, but I didn't know.
Most of my life I was aiming for great, but I didn't know what that was.
And I've come to realize that great means it's a devotional kind of greatness.
It's a gift to the universe.
It's a gift to God.
Wow.
If you're making a gift to God, there's no greater, you can't put more into it than that.
You know, you can't, what about the single?
What about what someone's going to say?
Who has anything to say if we're making a gift for God?
You're putting all of your purest intention into this thing for the universe.
Wow.
That's where it's at.
I didn't know that.
I came to realize that recently.
Again, my word was greatness.
Yeah.
Greatness.
That was the word of what I was shooting for.
But I've come to realize what it is.
Wow.
You have a whole section about greatness and success in the creative act, a way of being, which I loved your explanation there. That is fascinating. So greatness for you, what I'm hearing you say, is a pure gift of yours to God. It's like, this is the best I can do. This is my offering. This is what I have
to offer. If you think of a formula for manifesting as an artist, what would that formula be?
I don't think there's a formula. Is there an art to manifesting? I don't know. I think it sounds like a shortcut and I don't think
there are shortcuts. I think it's always a version of doing the work, of finding your way
into what it is that the universe wants you to do,
and then really dedicating yourself.
How do you know what the universe wants you to do
and when to do it?
The right timing, because you could be like,
I have this idea for this thing.
Maybe it's the right time now,
maybe it's five, 10 years away from now.
How do we really tap into that knowing?
I think it's situational.
And I think, again, if you're tapped into the universe, it tells you.
It directs you.
An example, I may have three different ideas that I'm excited about.
And I kind of get them all going.
And then one of them just seems to take off on its own.
And one of them, no matter how hard I work on it,
it never seems to come together. Can't find the right collaborators,
some obstacles in the way. When that happens, I feel like it's the universe saying now is not the time. Interesting. Because I love this and I also hear the other side of the, I guess, the coin where, I don't know if you know Ryan Holiday.
Yeah, I do.
The obstacle is the way is his kind of stoic philosophy of when the obstacle is there, it presents itself, and you also feel like this is something you want to do.
You've got to kind of go through that pain and then overcome it.
That is part of it.
I'm not saying to turn away from the obstacle.
But I'm saying when the obstacles become insurmountable consistently and there's another path that's going smoothly and you feel the same about both of them.
Go for the effortless way.
Well, pay attention.
See when is the universe giving you a push?
When is the wind hitting your sails the right way?
There's something to it.
I would never suggest not fighting through the work.
It's grueling no matter what.
It's grueling no matter what.
It's grueling no matter what.
It's grueling no matter what.
That said, sometimes it feels like now's not the time.
It's like everything you throw at it gets deflected.
Right.
But this other thing is guiding you.
Taking on its own life.
Earlier you asked about what I perceive to be a shortcut.
And a shortcut is how little can I get away with doing?
And I think that the real question is how much more can I give to the thing I'm making?
What else can I give to the thing I'm making? What else can I give to it?
And thinking in terms of how much more can we do,
not how much less can we do.
It's not about shortcuts.
It's not about getting it done.
It's not about a four-hour work week.
I loved it. I loved it, but that's not,
it's like whatever it takes for it to be all it could be, commitment and total commitment and dedicating your life to making the best things you can, whatever it is.
Yeah.
That's beautiful, man.
Yeah, that's beautiful, man. So you think that as artists, we should be thinking about manifesting, but not in the terms of doing less, but putting the maximum into making it great. If it, it doesn't have to make sense. Nothing has to make sense.
You know, it could be what I wear these purple socks.
I can write a better song.
Great.
Doesn't matter.
Don't question it.
Just do whatever works.
Do it.
Is it really art if you're making money off of it?
Absolutely. It doesn't, it doesn't matter. It's not about the outcome. That's what I'm saying. If you don't make money or if you do make money,
that has nothing to do with the art. Art is the art and then whatever happens after happens after.
If you make something that you love, I know if I make something I love,
I know if I make something I love, if more people like it, that's only a good thing.
Now, I wouldn't change a word of it for someone else to like it.
Do you know what I'm saying?
It's like I make the thing I love and then present it to the world.
And then if the world likes it, great.
And if more people like it than less better why not we're sharing something we love something we think is beautiful yeah so the
more people who embrace it but again i would never change it for anyone else because that's not what
it's about it's not about that right with the artists you've worked with that you knew before they were global successes or their art
their music or you know was known by many what did you see became their biggest challenge once
they became extremely successful because a lot of artists i would think want their art to be
liked and listened to by people they want to make a living and more people
like it. Typically that's a good thing, typically. But sometimes we see artists who have this
incredible rise of success and then seem to struggle with whatever, depression, anxiety,
maybe the pressure. Can I do this again? Will I be able to have these many hits again what is the
biggest challenge you see with artists becoming successful probably the biggest one is um
nobody prepares you for success and you may have a dream of what it's like
and you may think the success is gonna fill some hole you have in your soul.
And you work your whole life for the success that's going to fill the hole.
And finally, you get the success and the hole's the same.
And it creates hopelessness.
Wow.
Because you're working towards this goal
that's going to fix the problem,
but the goal doesn't fix the problem.
I would say, I can't say never,
but I would say almost never fixes the problem.
What fixes the problem for people?
It's something else.
It's something inside themselves.
It's something inside themselves.
So do you think success can almost hurt someone more than before they have it, after they have it?
It just depends on the person's
temperament and you know for some people being famous is the greatest thing it's all they ever
wanted and for some people they become famous and it's the worst nightmare that's not what they
wanted they miss their privacy they miss their anonymity they miss being able to go and do whatever they want and not be singled out or pointed to or talked to.
Or even if people are nice, like it's a different, it's different.
And no one teaches you how to do that.
Or you want to, you know, go do something with your family.
And then there are photographers there.
And it's very, uh, awkward.
What, uh, what advice do you have for people that want to be famous? You know, success is one thing,
but fame is another thing and they don't always happen together for someone that wants to be
famous. What advice would you have for them? I don't know. I would say I would look at why
that is. I would maybe see, you know, consider therapy.
Right.
Have you ever done therapy yourself?
I've done, yeah, I've done all kinds of therapy.
What has been the biggest lesson you learned through therapy for you?
I learned how to express my feelings clearly.
Like when I, the first time I went to therapy, I didn't even know how to talk.
I didn't know how I felt about anything.
How old were you then?
Maybe 26. So you learned how to express your feelings then?
Yes. And to not only, yes, express them, but also to actually feel them in myself, to understand,
not just feel blocked off or frustrated or what's beneath it, what's actually going on.
And what is the biggest
lessons that meditation or meditation practices has provided for you it provides a quiet space
where the chatter you realize that your your thoughts are not you and that
are not you and that left to your own devices, there'll be a lot of voices in your head just going all the time and they're not you and they don't mean anything and they're really repetitious
and they're not working in your best interest. So if your thoughts aren't you, then what are you?
uh, working in your best interest. So if your thoughts aren't you, then what are you?
I suppose you are the unchanging part of yourself. That's always there from, I probably from the time you're born until the time you die and maybe before and after it's the, it's
what's really inside.
It's not, um, it's not changeable.
It's what you came with.
It's not the, it's not the, uh, the thinking mind.
It's almost being the observer of the thoughts.
The one who sees the thoughts. That sounds right. Yeah. Observing the thoughts. Thank you.
Yeah. That's what I was hearing you say. Um, when do you feel the most loved Rick?
I would say in general, I feel loved. It's an, it's a good feeling. Like I feel, um,
I feel spiritually connected and that's a, that gives me a great feeling of peace.
Where do you think you'd be in your life if you weren't a meditator?
And where do you think you'd be if you allowed yourself to play with drugs and alcohol?
Yeah, I can't really predict.
I would say meditation.
Without meditation, I don't know who I would be.
It's such a big part of who I am.
Informed so many, everything. My, my understanding of the world is based on
learning to meditate when I was young. So I don't know who I would be without that.
Do you think you would have as much internal harmony and peace and external success without
meditation? No, certainly not internal peace. I don't know about success.
I wanted to ask you a question about comparison. You mentioned the NBA basketball player needing
to post more on social media based on what their team or the coaches, or maybe not the coaches,
but maybe the general managers wanted them to do. With artists, I see a lot of people
with artists, I see a lot of people competing and being in comparison versus just sharing their truths in an authentic way. And sometimes on social media, people
are vulnerable because it gets attention and then they're over vulnerable and then that becomes a
game in itself. But in a world where everything is oversaturated seeming,
and there is a lot of competition for attention, how can an artist stay true to their inner voice
and not be in comparison, but be willing to collaborate and also see success in others
and be okay with it? Yeah. I Yeah, I think staying out of it,
you know, like not participating in that game,
that's someone else's game.
That's someone else's game.
I would suggest play your own game.
I can remember having a conversation with
one of the biggest artists in the world
who described an album that they were gonna make.
And I had just seen them play in a stadium full of people screaming and crying.
And it was not Paul McCartney.
And the album that they were describing was one that none of those 70,000 people screaming and crying wanted to hear. It was clear to me.
And I remember saying, that's not your hand.
When you're playing poker, you can't just play any cards. You play your hand based on the cards you've been dealt. So depending on the artist you are,
it'd be like there was a time, I think,
when Metallica felt like,
we don't really want to be a heavy metal band.
We want to be a pop band
because pop bands are what's popular.
And we have reached a ceiling being a heavy metal band.
That did not go well.
That was a bad idea.
They weren't playing their hand.
They weren't embracing Metallica.
And I think if you embrace your part,
it's your best chance being true to yourself,
not saying, oh, well, those people over there
are getting popular doing this other thing.
I don't really like it, but it's really working for them.
Maybe I could try that.
Recipe for disaster.
So don't chase something that's not your hand.
No.
But it sounds like, correct me if I'm wrong, you know, the example I'm thinking of is like
Lady Gaga came onto the scene doing, I guess, pop music and became very popular,
but then said, Hey, I want to do this more kind of jazzy bluesy, like Tony Bennett thing.
She was being true to herself.
And that's what I want to do. And I don't care if anyone likes it.
Perfect.
But it's what I want to do with this season of my life.
True to herself.
And it may lose money.
But she was not doing it because I think people like this right this is working over here so i'm
gonna try to catch their heat she was not doing that she probably knew people wouldn't like it
only a small audience didn't care yes she didn't care that was true to herself this is what she
wanted to do and she did it wow were you uh in touch with her at all during that that season or
i can't remember if we talked about that.
Yeah.
I'm curious.
But I'm curious if she's just said, hey, I'm going to do this and this is my thing.
For sure.
That's pretty cool.
Yeah.
No, I love it when an artist does something unexpected, whether it works or not.
It's like they're being true to themselves.
Right.
They get to be a better artist doing that.
Whereas the other example is someone, whether it's Metallica or whoever is like chasing a bigger audience or something now if that's true
to them that music then cool there's an audience there go for it yeah but it's also something about
staying true to yourself in terms of um if you come up making a certain kind of music and you get popular making that music
a feeling of well this is all anybody wants from me so even though i don't care about it anymore
i have to keep doing it that's a disaster as well right it that doesn't work who has been
the most musically gifted artist that you've been able to work with?
Or maybe a few people that you're just like, they were so musically talented and gifted.
It was just.
There've been a lot.
Yeah.
There've been a lot.
I can say the first time I was in the studio with Carlos Santana and he started playing
guitar, it felt like this is coming from another planet.
Or John Frusciante when he plays from the guitarist
in the Red Hot Chili Peppers, when he plays guitar,
it's a transcendent experience.
Spiritual.
Yeah.
And there's a drummer named Chris Dave,
who's the best drummer I've ever heard.
And no matter what he plays, anything he plays
is the greatest thing you've ever heard, the simplest thing.
He can make anything interesting just the way he plays. Anything he plays is the greatest thing you've ever heard. The simplest thing. He can make anything interesting just the way he plays it. Not the parts. It doesn't have to be
complicated. It doesn't have to be, look at me. Just the touch, the feel, the tone is miraculous.
Something you said before is the only goal is to be the best version of ourselves.
said before is the only goal is to be the best version of ourselves.
Is there anything blocking you from becoming the best version of your, yourself moving forward?
I don't think so. Yeah. I wouldn't say I'm there, but I'm always striving always. Oh,
anything I can do to get closer, I'll do. Yeah. You're, you're willing to learn something new.
You're willing to try something on or change anything. Right.
What do you think is the, uh, the best habits that an artist can have that maybe you have individually,
but also that you see in other artists?
I would say dedication to the craft, whatever,
whatever their craft is dedicating themselves to it,
taking it very seriously and being free to
play in it.
You know, like taking it seriously at the time when it warrants being taken seriously
and having fun and being free in a play way to allow the thing that's worthy of being
taken seriously to appear.
Right.
Taking it seriously and also allow yourself to play in it as well.
Yeah.
The play always is where it starts.
It starts in this playful way where nothing is serious and there are no stakes.
And then through that, something appears.
And then in order to get that into condition to share, there's a grueling effort.
Yeah, take that seriously.
And sometimes you do a grueling effort
and then you realize,
oh, that thing that happened the first day,
that's the best version of it.
But you don't know that
until you've maybe banged your head against the wall
for six months working on it.
And then you realize, you know what?
That first five minutes was the best.
That was it.
You can't know that until you go past.
You have to work past it to see this was the one this is the best version
how often is it the first version is usually the best for you um i'll say the first version is
often if it's not the best it's very instructive and holds a magic in it that is to be retained no matter what else changes
you know a big part of it is just not screwing up what's good
not messing it up no there are all these stories of you know the demos being better than the album
it's easy to not know why something is good you know you make a demo and you think okay now when
i get the professional musicians to play it,
it's going to be great.
It's going to be that much better.
Maybe yes, maybe no.
We don't know.
We never know.
We never know what's going to happen when we do anything.
So to stay neutral and to keep every iteration along the way
and be willing to look back after you just spent months refining
something to then say, you know what? It was better three months ago. Throw that all away.
Wow. The Creative Act, A Way of Being. This is a powerful book. I think it's been on the
New York Times bestseller list for 42 plus weeks in a row, I believe right now.
This has been a game changer for so many different creatives, artists, and
also people that don't think they're artists who have been buying this and tapping into
their creativity, allowing themselves to express themselves more fully, more openly, more freely,
more honestly and vulnerably.
And, uh, I want to, I want to recommend this to anyone watching or listening to get a copy
or two and give one to a friend. Really think about
who in your life do you know has great talent, great artistry, or untapped talent that they
should be expressing that more and giving that gift to God and to the universe, as you say so
beautifully. Again, think about who in your life needs this book. There's so many great,
the thing I love about it is it's, you know, it's a bigger book, but every chapter is short,
you know, and for me, I like short bits of wisdom that I can just open up at any time
and read a few paragraphs and I've got something great. Open it randomly and read something. I see
what comes up. This was the, this is the first thing here. I don't even have this earmarked, but I've got a lot of it earmarked.
This says, in the end, the sum total of the essence of our individual works may serve as a reflection.
The closer we get to the true essence of each work, the sooner they will somehow at some point in time provide clues as to our own.
That was the first thing that opened up for me.
That's cool.
It's page 245.
So make sure you guys check that out.
But I love the whole section on, you've got sections on greatness.
You've got a success.
You've got about listening, inspiration.
You talk about inspiration, it appears in a moment.
you know, inspiration, you talk about inspiration, it appears in a moment.
Um, and what, what defines inspiration is the quality and quantity of the download at a speed. So instantaneous, it seems impossible to process. Inspiration is the rocket fuel
powering our work. It is a universal conversation we yearn to be a part of.
And I think that's really cool
because so many of us are chasing inspiration, but a lot of times it comes to us, right?
It comes. And it's almost like getting out of the way and allowing for it to come in. That's
why I love in the docuseries that you're a part of Shangri-La. It's like you have an intentional
energy of your environment. You create a space for it to come.
And I think that's really cool.
And a lot of people aren't, I think, thinking about their environment of spatial surroundings,
their environment of people's surroundings, their environment of what they consume of
music or visual content or what they're reading.
They're not intentional with it as
much as I think they could be, which you're extremely intentional to allow for inspiration
to come.
Isn't that right?
Yeah, we're all, um, all we are is made up of everything we take in.
So the places we're in, the people we're around, the media we consume. That's all we are. So
really curate what comes in for your highest good.
Yeah. And in the Shangri-La, the docu-series, in your recording studio and in your facility, it's all white,
you know, there's no TVs, there's no clocks, the floor is white, the walls are white. You have this
space that is kind of like this void, you know, and I think of meditation. I really try to think
about being no one, no thing, nowhere, no time, uh, so that inspiration can come to me as opposed to having the noise constantly
distracting me or influencing me to think something. And so you create a white blank
canvas for people to express and develop their art. And I think it's really beautiful. I mean,
you guys paint the floors like after someone comes in and does their work, you repaint the floor so that it's not dirty from the last artist of the past.
You create a blank canvas every time an artist comes in, which is just so cool to think about.
And I love the intentionality behind how you allow for space to be evolved for people to draw inspiration.
It's really, really cool. I want people to watch that docuseries called The Sharing Relaw, but also, again, get a copy of this book, The Creative Act, A Way of Being.
I've got three final questions for you, Rick. And again, I'm so grateful for your time here and for
showing up and just being an inspiration to so many people, and specifically in this interview
right now. This is a question I ask everyone
towards the end of our conversations. It's called the three truths. So it's a hypothetical question
and scenario. Imagine you get to, uh, you know, Laird and Gabby continue to keep you fit and
healthy and you get to extend your life as long as you want to be. Um, but eventually it's the
last day you can live as long as you want, but it's the last day for you in the future. And you get to create and learn and experience all the things you want
to experience from now at 60 to till that moment. Um, but for whatever reason, it's your last day
and you have to take everything with you, everything you've created, everything you've
worked on, everything you've written, everything you've spoken. We don't have access to it in this world anymore. Hypothetical scenario,
but you get to leave behind three lessons. And this is all we would have to remember your
information by. And I call it the three truths. What would be those three truths for you that
you would leave behind? I think it might just be one. It might just be, be true to yourself.
Know yourself as best as you can to be and to not be inflexible.
I love that.
I want to acknowledge you, Rick, for putting this out there.
I heard you talk about being kind of like a grueling process and some challenges here
and there, some friction, some obstacles to get it out there.
It wasn't like this effortless thing.
And I'm assuming it might have been harder than an album, putting an album out there. It wasn't like this effortless thing. And I'm assuming it might have been harder than an album,
putting an album out there.
I want to acknowledge you for sharing your gift
with the universe and with all of us,
sharing your greatness with so many people
because you have a lifetime of wisdom
and information and lessons.
And to put it together in this way
so that we can understand it, um, is really powerful. So I acknowledge you for creating this
work of art for coming on the show and talking so openly and honestly, the way you have been.
I've seen you on a lot of my friends shows as well. And, um, for being an inspiration to so
many people, uh, people value you, they many people. People value you.
They appreciate you.
They respect you.
And I hope you feel the love from so many people.
And I just wanted to acknowledge you personally for that.
This question, you kind of answered it already.
But I'm going to ask you again and see what comes up for you.
What is your definition of greatness? Greatness is what you make in a devotional act
for a higher power beyond any worldly ideas of success.
I hope today's episode inspired you
on your journey towards greatness.
Make sure to check out the show notes in the description for a rundown of today's show with all the important links. And
if you want weekly exclusive bonus episodes with me, as well as ad-free listening experience,
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And if no one has told you today, I want to remind you that you are loved, you are worthy,
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And now it's time to go out there and do something great.