The School of Greatness - Robert Greene: How To Find Love & Master The Art of Seduction EP 1174

Episode Date: October 11, 2021

Today’s guest is Robert Greene! Robert Greene is the author of the New York Times bestsellers The 48 Laws of Power, The Art of Seduction, The 33 Strategies of War, The 50th Law, and Mastery. And he�...��s written a new book called The Daily Laws: 366 Meditations on Power, Seduction, Mastery, Strategy, and Human Nature. Robert is one of my favorite guests to have on, he was actually the very first guest on the podcast so many years ago as well coming on a few times since. We’ll link all the previous interviews if you want to check those out after!In this episode we discuss the biggest mistakes people make when trying to find love, how to maintain a thriving long term relationship, how to master the art of seduction, the 3 things to focus on after a breakup, and so much more!For more go to: www.lewishowes.com/1174Check out Robert's new book: The Daily LawsCheck out Robert's website: www.powerseductionandwar.comRobert's previous episodes: www.lewishowes.com/1, www.lewishowes.com/713, www.lewishowes.com1024Daymond John on How to Close any Deal and Achieve Any Outcome: https://link.chtbl.com/928-podSara Blakely on Writing Your Billion Dollar Story: https://link.chtbl.com/893-pod 

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is episode number 1174 with New York Times best-selling author Robert Greene. Welcome to the School of Greatness. My name is Lewis Howes, a former pro-athlete turned lifestyle entrepreneur, and each week we bring you an inspiring person or message to help you discover how to unlock your inner greatness. Thanks for spending some time with me today. Now let the class begin. Welcome back, everyone. Today's guest is the incredible Robert Greene.
Starting point is 00:00:34 And Robert is the author of the New York Times bestsellers, The 48 Laws of Power, The Art of Seduction, The 33 Strategies of War, The 50th Law, and Mastery. And he's written a new book called The Daily Laws, 366 Meditations on Power, Seduction, Mastery, Strategy, and Human Nature. And Robert is one of my favorite guests to have on. He was actually the very first guest on The School of Greatness so many years ago, as well as coming on a few times since then.
Starting point is 00:01:01 And we'll link the previous interviews I had with Robert in the description below this over on Apple Podcast or wherever you're listening to your podcast. And in this episode, we discuss the biggest mistakes people make when trying to find love, how to maintain a thriving long-term relationship, how to master the art of seduction, whether you're single or in a committed relationship, the three things to focus on after you go through a breakup, and so much more. I don't think I've ever heard Robert talk about these subjects so deeply, so I hope you enjoy them.
Starting point is 00:01:32 And please make sure to share this with someone that you think would be inspired by this message as well. And a quick reminder, if this is your first time here, then welcome. Please subscribe over on Apple Podcasts or Spotify. Leave us a rating and review of the part in this episode you enjoyed the most, as I'd love to hear your thoughts on what inspired you and moved you the most from Robert. And today, we want to share the fan of the week, who is Priti, and they left a review about episode 1167 with Derek Hough, and they said, this was one of my favorite conversations.
Starting point is 00:02:03 There are a lot of people out there that believe they will only find love because of their success and achievements because we think that's what people fall in love with, but it's not true. You alone are enough. This is truly a message many need to hear. So big thank you to Priti for sharing that review over on Apple Podcast and being the fan of the week. Okay, in just a moment, the one and only Robert Green. Welcome back, everyone, to the School of Greatness. We are honored today to have my first ever guest on the School of Greatness back on the show.
Starting point is 00:02:36 Robert Green is in the house. My friend, I appreciate you. Every time you're on, I think this is the fourth or fifth time, every time you're on, the audience just says, we want more. We love the message you have, the wisdom you share, and the way you share your knowledge. So we appreciate you coming back on. It's always nice to hear music to my ears.
Starting point is 00:02:56 Yes, exactly. We want more, not less. Exactly. You have so many masters of art that you've put it out into the world. So many great books that are incredible art for so many people that have helped so many people in different areas of their life around seduction, power, influence, mastery, and just understanding human psychology.
Starting point is 00:03:18 You've got a new book called The Daily Laws, 366 Meditations on Power, Seduction, Mastery, Strategy, and Human Nature. Before you even get to this, go get the book. It's going to change the game for you. I've already been diving into it. It's extremely powerful. Every day, a new message. Go get this right now.
Starting point is 00:03:36 And I want to break this up into a couple parts. First, talking about love, relationships, seduction, and money included in that because I haven't heard you talk about love and relationships that much. Obviously, your book on seduction that you have is very powerful. But I want to ask about the biggest mistake that you've seen in your research and maybe also your personal experience that people are making when it comes to finding love and using seduction within that discovery of finding love? Well, the greatest mistake people make is they judge simply on appearances. And of course, we all have sexual desire, we have physical desires, and often we're attracted to people and there's a sexual component
Starting point is 00:04:26 but the character of that person doesn't mesh with us, right? And so the physical stuff doesn't last that long. It can't go on forever, although it can go on fairly well if you connect on that level. But it kind of dies down at some point and then you're confronted with their psychology, their personality, their character. You have to think, can I talk to this person in five years and carry on an interesting conversation? Can I sit across from the table if you want a long-term relationship and find a stimulating conversation with them? Because that's really what it ends up boiling down to. And so, you really want to be able to also judge their character. And if you're able to look inside the other person a little bit and to see a kind of deeper connection between you, I believe that the sexual part, which is extremely important in any relationship,
Starting point is 00:05:22 will actually be intensified and heightened, right? As opposed to the immediate kind of animal attraction that we have to people. So if you deepen your connection to that person and love is involved, where you actually feel a vulnerability to them in this kind of back and forth electrical charge, I think the physical component, you know, the value of it increases. So that's the number one mistake people make, you know. Do people have sex too early? Well, I don't know what's going on necessarily with young people right now. I know the hookup culture is still pretty strong and, you know, guys are watching a lot of porn and so you know that's probably
Starting point is 00:06:05 a tendency and in the traditionally and things have changed it was the woman who had more to lose by becoming pregnant who tried to keep the sex at bay for at least several weeks or months or longer and that's kind of been lost but yeah i I think the fact that the falling in love process generally takes time, right? I mean, we do have love at first sight, and it is a real phenomenon, and I've had it myself. Really? Yeah. But the idea, so there's a famous French writer named Stendhal who wrote a great book called On Love, one of the greatest books written about love. It was in the early 19th century. And he compared to falling in love to what he called crystallization.
Starting point is 00:06:55 And it's based on this thing where you would throw a piece of wood into this mine in Germany somewhere at Salzburg. And then you would pull it out like a week later and it would be filled with all of these brilliant crystals. And he compared that to the process of falling in love. The person is just who they are, they're like a trunk of a tree, but your mind kind of puts all these qualities on them, crystallizes them into some kind of ideal figure, right?
Starting point is 00:07:23 And so that mental process takes time, right? It requires also some distance and some fantasizing, you know, sort of basic elements of human psychology. So what do you mean by distance? Well, like don't spend all your time with the person in the first month. Yeah, and if you're having sex right away, it's too close, it's too intimate, it's too early to be able to go through that process, right? And often, you know, there's usually a letdown after that initial sexual encounter if you have it too early, right? other person begin to think about you and fantasize about you and in their mind sort of imagine some interesting qualities about you and fascinate them, which is what he calls this crystallization process. I mean, literally think of it that way, that you're having a, you're in their mind, they're kind of forming the sort of ideal crystal image of you, right?
Starting point is 00:08:26 And it takes time and it takes some absence. It takes the ability to say, you know, you're not in their face all the time. You disappear for a couple of days, a couple of weeks or whatever, not weeks, but a few days. You let them think about you and you let that kind of spell, because seduction and love is kind of a spell that you're casting, right? And there's an art to it. And so the mistake people have is they're in too much of a hurry, right? Too much of a hurry to what?
Starting point is 00:08:54 To have sex? To fall in love? Yeah, or to have like a really intimate relationship or to get married or whatever it is. In general, in our culture, people are too much of a hurry. They're too much of a hurry to make money, too much of a hurry to get married or whatever it is. In general, in our culture, people are too much of a hurry. They're too much of a hurry to make money, too much of a hurry to get attention. That also involves, you know, in romantic relationships. Right. Right. So what's the difference between seduction and love? Well, I maintain that the process of seducing is making the other person fall in love, right? The process of seducing is making the other person fall in love, right?
Starting point is 00:09:26 The process of seducing is getting the other person to fall in love. Huh. Could someone fall in love without being seduced? Without seducing them? No. Even in love at first sight, there could be like a moment of seduction
Starting point is 00:09:44 that turns into that, or how does that work? Well, even in love at first sight, which could be like a moment of seduction that turns into that, or how does that work? Well, even in love at first sight, which I say I've kind of maybe experienced, it doesn't necessarily lead to something, right? You still have to go through a process where the other person's character, that you start idealizing and romanticizing and thinking about them.
Starting point is 00:10:03 You know, even that immediate attraction, there is still the seduction process that has to go on. Sure, sure. Right. And so, you know, I try in The Art of Seduction, I make the point that political seduction, marketing seduction, social seductions, because in your office, you're continually seducing. It's the same process. And it's getting the other person to
Starting point is 00:10:26 think about you and getting them to fall in love with your product, with your idea, with your political platform or whatever it is. And that process of internalizing that other person, of having their presence, their spirit or whatever inside you, inhabit you, and you're thinking about them a lot, is a process of falling in love, right? So it doesn't mean that there aren't seductions where you're seducing the other person and then it's over after a month, right? It doesn't necessarily mean it's going to lead to a relationship. But I don't, so I separate seduction from just having sex.
Starting point is 00:11:10 So if you go to a bar and you pick up a woman in the bar and that night you go back to your place and you have sex, that's not seduction. Because we are psychological creatures. We're not animals. And the process of actually having our emotions engaged by the other person takes a lot deeper process. It can't happen quickly. It can't happen overnight. So seduction isn't like, you know, pickup artists don't really like the art of seduction so much. Why is that? Because it's not quick enough for them. I'm telling you, you have to go through these steps. I don't want to have to of seduction so much. Why is that? Because it's not quick enough for them.
Starting point is 00:11:46 I'm telling you, you have to go through these steps. I don't want to have to go through all these steps. I don't want to have to wait three weeks to sleep with her or a month. I don't have to surprise her and give her gifts. Or I'm talking about from the male point of view. Sure. Do all of these things that Robert talks about. You know, I want it quick.
Starting point is 00:12:00 You know, some of them aren't like that, but some of them are. And so there are plenty of books written out there about how to pick of women or guys in a bar, but seduction isn't about that. It's something else. It's something more elemental. And I talk in the art of seduction about how it goes back to our childhood, how we are incredibly vulnerable to the emotions of other people. It begins with our parents, right? And the sense of, you know, we internalize their presence. We're thinking about them. We have this kind of very deep emotional attachment to them.
Starting point is 00:12:33 We're seduced by our parents in some ways. It kind of sets a tone from early childhood, this need to feel vulnerable to other people, right? That's the thing as well is, you know, it's a lot of people mistake seduction, and that's the reason I wrote the book. They have really bad ideas about it. What do they think it is?
Starting point is 00:12:56 Well, they have an idea that it's this kind of cold process. Typically, it'll be a male seducer, but it can be a woman, and they're really conniving, and they're coming up with all kinds of tricks. Schemes. Schemes to get the woman or man to fall for them. And either they're after money or sex or something else, right? And actually, seduction is a matter of vulnerability.
Starting point is 00:13:23 It's making yourself vulnerable to the other person. Really? Yeah. And, you know, we live in times where people have a hard time being vulnerable. You know, if you're insecure, if you're filled with a lot of anxiety, you tend to close up inside of yourself. And to let another person in and to let them have some control over your emotions can be kind of a scary process but if you can't feel that vulnerability if you can't open yourself up to the power of that other person there won't be a seduction it'll be this kind of cold mechanical process right so how do we learn to open ourselves up and be vulnerable to allow for seduction to happen.
Starting point is 00:14:06 If so, we're really interested in someone. We're like, oh, we're really, we want to start dating this person. We're really excited about the potential, but we're also don't want to ruin it and mess up. Yeah. Well, you know, each relationship is different. Yeah. You know, I talk to a lot of people on this vulnerability issue, particularly women who've come to me for counseling.
Starting point is 00:14:30 They've had a bad experience, right? They dealt with maybe a man who was a kind of cold, calculating seducer type or an abusive relationship, right? And what happens is they get kind of bitter and hardened by it. And they don't want to open themselves up to another relationship. They're not aware of that's happening, but unconsciously, that's what's going on. And I try to tell them, if you let that happen, that means that that person, that abuser or whoever it was, they've defeated you, not only physically, but mentally.
Starting point is 00:15:06 They have conquered you. They have ruined one of the most important aspects of your life. They've made it impossible for you to feel vulnerable and open because you can't trust another person. And it's very difficult. So my process in there is telling them, making it clear to them that if that happens, then they have this power over you, and you don't want to let them have that power, right? And so we work on ways, first making it clear how important it is in life to feel vulnerable, not just to other people,
Starting point is 00:15:39 but to everything in the world. That's sort of the subject of my next book. But to feel vulnerable when you read a book, to open yourself to other people's ideas, to open yourself in general to people and to their spirit, and to let them in, and to let them have some influence over you and some power over you. You know? Why is that important? Because it allows you then to have a deeper understanding and a deeper connection with people. So, you know, we all kind of live in these castles where we're trying to protect ourselves, right? And we're all kind of defensive. And it's for good reason.
Starting point is 00:16:15 We live in a world that's very harsh. You know, a lot of information, a lot of things going on at the same time. So we kind of live in these castles. And you're not understanding people unless you can kind of open up to their spirit. I talk about in the Art of Seduction, enter the other person's spirit is one of the key chapters. Where you're able to kind of put yourself inside of the other person and feel what they might be thinking, right? Which is, I think, a problem that a lot of men have in dealing with women that they're interested in. Putting yourself in their position, trying to understand what makes them tick, what their psychology is about. To do that,
Starting point is 00:16:56 you have to kind of let go of yourself. You have to be willing to kind of float and let yourself go into them and open yourself up to their spirit and not assume that you know everything about them or that everything, all of your ideas are correct. So vulnerability is a very important element that we must have in this world in order to be able to have empathy and to be able to understand people. Is it, you know, you wrote a book about the laws of power, the 48 laws of power. Is this, you know, different than the laws of power, the, you know, the seduction strategies where you're being more vulnerable as opposed to, you know?
Starting point is 00:17:39 Well, believe it or not, I wrote The Art of Seduction as a kind of, not a sequel, or not, I wrote The Art of Seduction as a kind of, not a sequel, but it kind of played off the 48 laws. And there were a few chapters in the 48 laws that dealt with seduction, such as use absence to create honor and respect, you know, or make others come to you or create compelling spectacles. There were at least eight or ten of the 48 laws that were very sort of seduction-oriented. And the idea is we all want power in this world. I maintain that's sort of my key thesis that drives all of my books. And it's not power just in a political sense.
Starting point is 00:18:21 It's the idea that you have some control over your fate, control over destiny, right? And control and the ability to influence the people around you. Well, seduction is the ultimate form of that kind of power. That's what I, yeah, as I talk about that in the 48 Laws. It's a form of soft power. So people, if you seduce them, they're not even aware that you have gained this kind of power over them.
Starting point is 00:18:46 They've opened up to your influence. It's kind of hypnotizing in a sense, right? It's like this, you're not even aware. You're just being hypnotized by someone's message or their brand or their product or their political message as well, I guess, right? Yeah. You're just like, I like this. I don't even know why I like this person. Right. Interesting. well i guess right yeah yeah just like i like this i don't even know why i like this person right interesting yeah because if people sense that you're trying to get power over them if they sense that you're scheming that you've read robert's 48 laws of power whatever they get
Starting point is 00:19:16 defensive and they close themselves off to you and then you can't move them you can't get maneuver them in the right way i know um about 16 years ago when the pickup artist thing was really big and hot with the game and yeah everything neil's a friend of mine he's a great guy but um you know every woman in los angeles where i live had been approached by a pickup artist right they all knew the strategies the the negging, all that kind of, you know. Putting them down and this, yeah. Yeah, they knew all of it. And so it didn't work anymore.
Starting point is 00:19:52 It lost all its power because everyone had been exposed to it, right? They could see through the tricks. They could see a pickup artist coming from a mile away, you know. All the little tricks like cards or reading their palm or all this stuff. Oh, come on, man. I know you've read that book. So it doesn't work anymore. So if people sense that you're trying to manipulate them, they close off.
Starting point is 00:20:18 And that's why in advertising and marketing, they know that they have to make it seem like they're not advertising. That it's just kind of word of mouth. That it's just the average person on the street who's touting their products, etc. Because if your advertising is so clearly how you're manipulating, it doesn't work. So the trick in seduction is to have such a gentle touch that people don't even understand what's going on. And that's what a kind of a master seducer can do. And what I'm hearing you say, that's living from more of a vulnerable state.
Starting point is 00:20:53 Is that right? Being open to being vulnerable? Well, you know, there are people who are cold seducers and they seduce women. But I don't, you know, there's kind of are cold seducers and they seduce women. But I don't, you know, there's kind of a limit to it as well. It's not the kind that I'm interested in. Gotcha. So I've known a lot of really great seducers.
Starting point is 00:21:20 There was a person in Paris who was sort of the, to me, the greatest seducer I ever personally met. He was this Brazilian guy in Paris. Very tall, very handsome guy. But he was the most brilliant seducer I've ever seen, right? And I've known others as well. What did he do? Well, I say it was this kind of openness that he had. And you could call it a vulnerability.
Starting point is 00:21:40 It was a kind of a childish, boyish quality. So women felt comfortable in his presence. He might dump them in a week and go after someone else, but in that week, he was completely at their feet. He was inside their brain. He understood them deeply, and he was like a boy. He didn't seem threatening at all, right? And I know probably the greatest male seducer who ever lived is probably errol flynn the great american irish american actor i think he's irish actually and errol flynn supposedly
Starting point is 00:22:15 had slept with i don't know like 3 000 women and he died at the age of 51 i remember when i wrote the art of seduction i was kind of doing the math. That's crazy. And it was like Wilt Chamberlain or something. It had to be like a woman every other day or something. That's crazy. And then I wanted to understand what made him so powerful, right? Because he was one of the icons in The Art of Seduction. And finally, I found a book written by a woman, an actress who'd been seduced by him.
Starting point is 00:22:43 And she kind of revealed to it all of his secrets. And the key was, he made women feel so relaxed, right? She said, just being next to him was like drinking two martinis. I felt so calm and so relaxed. He had this kind of animal presence where he was very comfortable with himself. And that was the thing about that Brazilian man. He wasn't defensive at all. He was very, very comfortable with himself. He wasn't arrogant or grandiose, but he just felt comfortable in his own body and his physicality and in who he was. And I think the problem that a lot of people have is they bring their insecurities into the seduction realm,
Starting point is 00:23:30 and it's very anti-seductive. It kind of breaks the spell. Because when you're insecure and you're trying to pick up on a man or a woman, the other person can sense it, right? You're not saying anything, but they read it in your body language because we're animals that read a lot from nonverbal communication. And when another person is insecure like that, it means they're thinking about themselves, right?
Starting point is 00:23:55 And it's a very off-putting sense. Like they're more worried about if they say the wrong thing or do the wrong thing. And it makes the other person tense and insecure. I don't know if you've ever had this experience, Louis, but if you've ever been around a very insecure person, it kind of makes you uncomfortable and awkward. Yeah, super uncomfortable. So probably the most important lesson I tell people in the realm of seduction is to be able to project a degree of confidence and calmness and comfort with yourself
Starting point is 00:24:27 are probably the most important qualities. What about when you're in a relationship and you want the relationship to work long term? You want to have, whether you're getting married and you want to, you know, you want to last and you don't want to just hang on to the marriage and be miserable, but you want it to be a happy, thriving existence, healthy, conscious, loving, to the best of your ability. Should we continue to seduce our partners in committed long-term relationships or is that not something you do once you're in a relationship? Well, I have a chapter in The Art of Seduction that deals with,
Starting point is 00:25:02 I think it's the last chapter. Well, I have a chapter in The Art of Seduction that deals with, I think it's the last chapter. And basically, I think a lot of people complain. It used to be women complained about it, but I think it transcends that. Where we've been in a relationship for a year. And all the things that I'm going and hearing the woman talk, because I've heard this before. Everything that he used to do, he doesn't do anymore. Right.
Starting point is 00:25:27 He doesn't take me special places. He doesn't make that extra effort. He doesn't buy me special gifts anymore. All the things that he did when he wanted to have sex, he was like going crazy and doing all these things. He was dressing really well. Now he kind of dresses like a slob. He kind of doesn't want to go out anymore. I hear that more
Starting point is 00:25:45 than I hear the opposite. Like, he keeps trying to seduce me and I'm getting tired of it. I don't hear that too much. But I hear that he's taking me for granted, right? So it's not like you're practicing the same things that you did when you were trying to get that other person to fall in love with you. That would be exhausting, right? And I don't think it would really work. But it's that you still do some of the effort, right? You still try to surprise the other person. You still have sides of your character that they don't know about. You do things that they've never seen before. You still take them to places. You still put effort into buying gifts, right? You buy that special gift. You still take effort to take them one night to a special restaurant or to a movie, something that
Starting point is 00:26:31 they hadn't. You know, like if you understand, if you listen deeply to that other person and they reveal their secret desires and what they're not getting from the world, just take that in and go, and what they're not getting from the world, just take that in and go, if I give her a gift or take her to a place that fills that very thing that she said she's not getting, man, that'll have such a powerful effect on that person. Even if you've been in a relationship for two or three years. And I've been in a relationship for decades, I'm afraid I have to admit.
Starting point is 00:27:03 And you still have to go through that process. Really? Yeah. What is the questions you can ask to find out someone's secret desires without saying what are your secret desires? You just have to listen. Okay, so the main thing is
Starting point is 00:27:19 get them to talk about their childhood. Really? Yeah. I mean, not obviously. Don't go, tell me about your father. Was he nice to you? What question can you ask in an organic, relaxed way that would open that up? Well, in the course of a context, you can say, I don't know, are you close to your parents? Do you see them?
Starting point is 00:27:42 Like, are you close to your parents? Do you see them? And then just without being too inquisitive, without making it clear that that's what you're doing, just get them to talk about their early life. Why is that important to figuring out people's secret desires as adults asking about their childhood? Because it's the key to everything. Really?
Starting point is 00:28:02 In The Loss of Human Nature nature i have a chapter about um i call it about gender about the mix of the masculine and feminine in us and there's a concept from the great psychologist jung called the anima and animus and he basically says that from a man from his mother if you're're straight, because things change, the man from his mother internalizes an image of women that it will haunt him for his entire life. Wow. Right? Because the relationship between a mother and son is very intense. It's not the same as between a mother and a daughter, right?
Starting point is 00:28:42 Because she's the opposite gender. You're cycling on her breast. She's the only person you know for the first couple of years it's very powerful power and unconsciously her image slips inside of you internalize a part of it and you're going to have this you're going to carry with this even if you don't like your mother and you come to not like her later on that image is still inside of you and you're still going to choose women that have some of those qualities that you would like, you wish your mother had or that she did have. So those early relationships, the woman with her father will tell you so much about her and about her weaknesses and her vulnerabilities. Really? And what she's missing. So what if the person...
Starting point is 00:29:29 That's one. Okay. You know, anything where the person gets excited, right? Then just take note of that. Yeah. And start what? If you touch upon a subject and you see that they get nervous or they laugh a lot, they're very excited, just put that in your little index there and go and return to it.
Starting point is 00:29:47 You've hit upon a chord, a subject that either excites them or gives them fear or whatever. There's something very powerful going on there, right? Right. And childhood is a very powerful one like that. is a very powerful one like that. So what should people be aware of when they're getting into a relationship? What do you think are a few questions
Starting point is 00:30:12 they should ask and get answers to to see if it's a potential for a good relationship or it's going to be completely off or they're just wasting their time trying to get into this? Are there any questions you can think of? Well, no, I can't think of questions. It's more like... Or should it be asking how is your parents' relationship and this and that? It's not that direct. It's not that verbal. It's not that intellectual. It's more of a kind of a spirit meshing between two people, right?
Starting point is 00:30:45 So there are plenty of examples of couples that have done extremely well where they kind of disagree on political issues, although that can be a problem as well. But there's a little bit of tension on that. But they connect on some deeper level. I refer people to that chapter I was just talking about in the laws of human nature, where there's a level where we connect to people that is not on the surface, that is kind of nonverbal. It has to do with our unconscious. It has to do with things that we've never been able
Starting point is 00:31:17 to get from our parents or whatever. And we've kind of have these ideals that have been unmet. And we kind of have these ideals that have been unmet. And connecting on that level, connecting on the level of spirit, where your emotions, it's more like your emotions mesh together well than your ideas. Like there's, you know? Yes. And because if that other person is incredibly dramatic and out there, and, you know, that's not something you can,
Starting point is 00:31:54 even though they have similar ideas to, it's going to grate on your nerves, you know? I saw a post recently, excuse me, about something like, I'm going to mess this up,
Starting point is 00:32:04 but something like, you don't you don't marry the person you marry the person's like trauma you marry their you know in-laws trauma you marry like what they haven't healed yet you marry their emotional yeah um you know the relationship to certain things you're you're marrying the emotions yeah of the person really yes exactly and being aware, just because they look great and just because you have fun together at certain times, you're really marrying all the other stuff along with it. Right, and you won't find that out right away.
Starting point is 00:32:34 Because they're good at hiding it. Yeah. They're good at, like, reserving that until six months, a year, two years later, right? Yeah. So it's making sure that your emotions mesh well over your ideals. Is that what I'm hearing? Over the intellectual part, over just the superficial fact that you both vote Democratic or Republican or that you both like this movie director. I mean, certain tastes that mesh are important.
Starting point is 00:32:59 But I don't think there has to be kind of a charge between you, a kind of something that goes on underneath the surface that has nothing to do with just words or kind of superficial things, you know, something deep. Spiritual. Yeah. Because sometimes people will think, oh, we have all these things in common. We have this connection. This is a great match.
Starting point is 00:33:23 But then they don't experience the emotional or spiritual level right and then that comes out later and you're like well we are from the same city and we went to the same school and we voted whatever yeah and we have similar friends and we like to go to baseball games yeah but if there's not that spiritual or emotional meshing probably you just you hit your idea is very is very apt you are marrying the other person's emotions, right? And so that's not something that you see right away. And you could love the same movies. You can have all these other things. But if that part isn't connecting on the right way,
Starting point is 00:33:54 if they're revealing something that's going to really drive you crazy after several months or years, it doesn't matter about how well your ideas are similar. What if your ideas are amazing together? The sexual connection is incredible, but the emotional level is not in sync. Well, you know, it's hard to generalize. You know, have a relationship. It'll probably last just a few weeks or a couple months, you know, it'll be hard to build a relationship where you don't connect on this kind of deeper level.
Starting point is 00:34:28 But that's not to say that it doesn't happen. And it doesn't to say that people can't change, right? So, you know, you might discover after five years that this person has qualities that kind of get on your nerves a little bit. You wish you had seen them earlier. But by then you've fallen in love with them. Right.
Starting point is 00:34:50 And you go, you know, I can appreciate their weaknesses. I can love their weaknesses. I can get over it. It still kind of irritates them. It still irritates me. But there's something deeper. I actually really love this person. And even their flaws are lovable
Starting point is 00:35:06 and that happens right so it's hard to generalize about everything and you can't change you can like see that maybe I'm overreacting maybe I'm too cold and rational and they're too dramatic and maybe I can learn from her or him and become more like them. People change. And that's the great thing about a great relationship is the ability for the other person to change you as well. To influence you, yeah. How long have you been in your relationship now? It's over 20 years. Over 20 years.
Starting point is 00:35:38 What do you wish you knew about being in a long-term relationship like this 20 years ago? Is there anything you would have done differently on your end or anything that you wish you would have known to, I don't know, it seems like it's been a happy, healthy relationship to last that long. But is there anything you wish you would have knew earlier, Robert, at that point before getting into the relationship? You mean and not have the relationship or what?
Starting point is 00:36:05 No, and being in the relationship, like things that you could have, I don't know, things you could have eliminated or things that you could have done differently yourself to make it even greater or wish you would have solved things before challenges came up for you, if they did come up? Well, it's... Or have you just been like the king of relationships? No, no, no, no no no no no no not at all
Starting point is 00:36:26 as i as i've made very clear i have got my own problems my own flaws you know um no i mean um being more forgiving would have probably helped you know um i'm i can be kind of rigid and kind of stubborn, thinking I know the right way all the time. And I felt like, you know, she had certain flaws that were really too strong. And if I could just like, you know, go with them and say that I have flaws as well and be a little more humble and be more forgiving of her.
Starting point is 00:37:06 I think that would have helped. Yeah. You know, and that's not easy all the time. How important is it, do you think, being in a healing process before entering a new relationship? As opposed to just jumping into a relationship without the process of reflection, self-awareness, looking at what pain has caused you in your past that you haven't forgiven or healed. It's very, very important. Because oftentimes your choices with a partner occur for reasons that you're not aware of.
Starting point is 00:37:37 Really? And I talked about an example in the laws of human nature that's sort of a classic case in therapy, human nature that's sort of a classic case in therapy where this man had come to a therapist and he had a series of like 10 very powerful emotional relationships and each time he broke it off and he out he would say you know she did she betrayed me here she did i found out that this was happening and and i and i her, on and on and on. The therapist started to go into his early childhood and he discovered that he had a mother, this man, who was very cold, wasn't very loving to him. And he had a sense, and this is what happens to children, it happens to boys, when the mother is like that, you feel abandoned. You don't feel like it's your is like that you feel abandoned you don't feel like it's your fault i'm sorry you don't feel like it's their fault you feel like something's wrong with you and they have chosen to abandon you it's it scars you
Starting point is 00:38:35 scars that three-year-old in a way that he'll never get over and so what his pattern was each time he got in a relationship before the woman could begin to maybe hurt him and abandon him. He was the one doing the abandoning. It gave him a sense of power and control. It was like he was redoing the mother relationship where he was the one abandoning and not being abandoned. He was not aware of this at all.
Starting point is 00:39:01 He'd gone through 35 years of his life and all of these relationships, aware of this at all. He'd gone through 35 years of his life and all of these relationships, probably choosing women that would, that kind of mirrored that early relationship as well, but that he could then have abandoned them so he could have this feeling of power. Now, you might not be having something so dramatic going on in your life, but you will have patterns like that. And I know I've had patterns like that and I've analyzed them and I've become aware of them and so if you've been in a very bruising kind of damaging relationship which we've all had if you've been alive for enough years right it is absolutely essential that you step back and analyze it because kind of negative relationships and traumas like that will reveal a lot of truths about yourself. You will tend to blame the other person for everything, but you need to look at
Starting point is 00:39:53 yourself and see the patterns that are making you fall for people like that. Right. You're getting into those relationships over and over again. Yeah. So what would it look like when you start the healing process or the awareness process of, okay, I'm the one who's responsible for this pattern. I'm the common denominator of all these relationships. So there's partially me to be responsible for. What would it feel like to start the healing process? And what would that next relationship look like when you make a commitment? Would it just feel different? Would it feel like, oh, this is very healthy? How would that look, do you think?
Starting point is 00:40:33 Well, there's a lot of problems. It's not easy. And the main problem, Louis, is, believe it or not, some of those early dysfunctional relationships with your parents are charged with this kind of sexual energy. Really? Yeah. And so you'll find yourself attracted to the very man or woman who's going to hurt you. Whereas the man or woman who's good for you, there's no kind of sexual charge.
Starting point is 00:41:03 Because this isn't everybody. This is maybe a third. I don't know what the percentage is. Don't quote me on that. But you are actually more attracted to the person that has these damaged qualities. Why is that? Because you get to relive some of those early traumas, right? And so the problem that will happen, and I can see this in my own life as well, that the person who is good for you, that's actually caring, that will mesh with you, that physical charge maybe isn't as strong, right? And that's a problem, right? Because you want to have that element. But you need to be aware of this. You need to be aware of the fact that some of the people that you're most
Starting point is 00:41:41 attracted to, you're not attracted to just because of their sexy body or whatever it is. There's also some kind of issues you haven't worked out from your early childhood that are at play in that relationship and that are going to cause you a lot of pain. Why does that turn us on sexually, do you think? Why is the human brain turned on by drama and, you know, unhealthy relationships? Like, why is that? Well, you know, I would be a multi-billionaire by now if I could answer those questions. I'd be the ultimate doctor of love.
Starting point is 00:42:17 But I can say this, that when you're a child, you're two or three years old, you know, we're talking about entering the spirit. Try and enter the spirit of the three-year-old Lewis Howes. You're very vulnerable, you're very weak, right? You're at the mercy of this person who's very powerful, your mother and also your father, it depends on what, you know, you're at their mercy, right? And you're open to them, you depend on them for so much. So the emotional energy that you are putting onto them is extremely powerful more powerful than any other relationship you'll have in your life
Starting point is 00:42:50 and you're not aware of it and so it's mesh it meshes with all these other kind of physical impulses and desires that you have because a child who's two or three years old is actually still having like sexual impulses very early on. It's kind of creating a pattern of attraction that you are very rarely aware of. It's not to say everybody is like that, but it's a pretty common denominator. That, you know, if you have, for instance, a very narcissistic mother, right, who was more interested in herself than in you, you're going to be attracted to narcissistic women. If you're a man. Yeah, gotcha. Wow.
Starting point is 00:43:32 Yeah. And you're not aware of it. And, you know, it creates this, a lot of pain for you, right? of pain for you, right? So you've got to go through a process. It's kind of like there's the ancient Greek play of Oedipus, right? I don't know if you were. He married his, he killed his father, and then he ended up marrying his mother. That's crazy. And then he ended up marrying his mother. Crazy. Yeah. So we get the Oedipus complex from, right? And he never realizes it until he's like in his late 30s and he's gone through his whole career as the king of Thebes. And then suddenly he's made aware of it through various things that happen, right? And it's like, oh, my God, really? I've done all that? This is what my life is? And he's so overwhelmed that he cuts his eyes out and he blinds himself as proof of how
Starting point is 00:44:34 blind he was. And so the Greeks are saying in that play that we're all kind of blind. Fate kind of pushes us around and we're not even aware of it. And the moment of feeling enlightened about becoming aware of some of these patterns in your childhood is actually a great moment. It's very painful, but it's very powerful.
Starting point is 00:44:59 Sorry, I didn't mean to take it. I didn't mean to take it to such a dark place. No, I love this. Let's say someone has been through a tough breakup. And maybe this is their first breakup they've gone through that was tough, a tough relationship. Or this is a pattern. This is their third or fifth relationship in 10 years that's been like, you know, what's wrong with me. What would you say would be the next three things they should focus on after the breakup on how to find that awareness and open their eyes on how to start, you know,
Starting point is 00:45:33 observing men or women in a different way before they get so committed and go all in and start fantasizing about how amazing they are? What would you say are three things they could do before entering another relationship? Well, first of all, to become acquainted with yourself and to see, know who you are and know the source of your own desires. So if it's your very first relationship, it's a little hard to see patterns, but you can begin to see patterns of the kind of person that you're attracted to after the third or fourth time and to analyze that and to be aware of it. Now, you know, some people will say, well, won't that kind of ruin the whole relationship game that I'm analyzing myself that seems so unseductive, et cetera.
Starting point is 00:46:19 And, you know, if you're in your 20s and you're healthy and you're young, maybe it doesn't matter so much. Right. You know, you're going to have some painful moments, but you're having a lot of fun. Okay, I'm not going to, you know, rain on that parade. But eventually, you're not going to be so. You're going to be in your late 20s. You're going to be in your early 30s. And the series of bad relationships, they're going to start wearing on you.
Starting point is 00:46:43 They're going to start creating trauma. And the series of bad relationships, they're going to start wearing on you. They're going to start creating trauma. And they'll start infecting you with this kind of defensiveness. Where every time you meet someone, you're worried that they're going to hurt you. And you can't open yourself up to them, right? So you've got to, as early as possible, understand your own patterns. Why am I attracted to this person? Just simply ask that question, right?
Starting point is 00:47:11 It's, you know, like, what was it about him or her that attracted me to that person? You know? Is there something I'm not thinking about? Could I have foreseen some of the darker side of this person earlier on? Yes, obviously. Could I have seen the fact that he could be someone who could be kind of cold and abusive? Yes. You know, oftentimes a man who is like that will love bomb the woman. He'll overwhelm them with emotion so they get confused and they're not aware of it. That also is a sign when a man overwhelms you in the first two days with so much attention that he's hiding something dark.
Starting point is 00:47:54 But don't look at it as if it's always the other person. See your own temptation, why you give in to someone like that, why you are attracted to people like that, right? Go through that process and then say, all right, what are the qualities that I really, really want? What is important for me that I'm not getting from this person? You know, the sex is great, but there are other things that are more important like validation,
Starting point is 00:48:23 like the other person cares about my work and about my career. They're not just interested in me as a physical presence, but they actually show interest in my future, right? What are these things that I need that are very important to me that I didn't get in that last relationship, right? Who am I, right? That's just the question, who am I? What are my deepest needs? And what are my dark patterns, right? And then to go through a process of, if I, we talked about this earlier,
Starting point is 00:48:56 if I now become all defensive and closed, and if I'm like always judging the person, you know, oh, he's not right for me, she's not, you know, da, not right for me she's not you know because you're afraid of being hurt again that last person has power over you yeah they defeated you they conquered your spirit wow so you can't be afraid to have some more of that pain again right you have to open yourself up a little bit here yeah and if you do that and you're hurt again, at least you can say
Starting point is 00:49:27 that that person who hurt me earlier on has no more power over me. I'm still able to fall in love. I'm still able to open myself up to another person. It's incredibly important to be able to feel vulnerable to another person.
Starting point is 00:49:44 It's a deep human need. It goes back to our childhood. It's part of our human nature. And if you close yourself off, it's not only going to affect your romantic relationships. It's going to affect you in work and everything. Yeah, so don't jump into another relationship if you're closed off is what I'm hearing you say. Be willing to heal that part or process it. And then one last thing. You asked for three. Those were two. I'm hearing you say. Like be willing to heal that part or process it. And then one last thing.
Starting point is 00:50:06 You asked for three. Those were two. I'll give you a third. The third is learn to judge people by their character. So true. Right? So not the superficial charm and smiles and all the great stuff that they're able to fake, but who they are deep inside, right?
Starting point is 00:50:23 You know? Do they have some of these strong character traits? Can they take criticism? Man, you have no idea that that is such an important quality in a relationship. Taking criticism? Yeah. If that other person cannot take any kind of criticism, how can you be in a relationship with them?
Starting point is 00:50:42 And they'll make you, they find ways to make you pay for criticizing them. They get passive aggressive. They get cold. Oh, I'm never going to do that again. You can't be in a relationship. So judge someone like that. Can they take criticism? Can they deal with moments of stress? Can they get outside of themselves and think about me? You know, think about how they are in a conversation. Do they hear what you're saying? Do they come back with things that reveal the fact that they've been listening to you? That they picked up signals from you?
Starting point is 00:51:16 Get inside them. Get inside their character and be able to judge them on that basis as opposed to their sexy veneer that they have. So those would be the three things. Those are powerful. What's your thoughts on relationships and money? And should we be focusing on money as a factor in relationships? Because it seems to me like a lot of people end relationships with money problems.
Starting point is 00:51:41 It's one of the main factors. You mean there's an inequality between the two? Inequality or just like the value of money. If someone sees spending money in a certain way, another person sees it in a different way. It's just like the topic of money seems to mess with people. How do we develop seduction with money involved in a relationship? And how do we stay in a healthy relationship and not allow money to ruin the relationship well money isn't just money money is a sign money is something that has psychology has other things attached to it so let's just say it's a woman who is finding herself losing her attraction to a man because he's not making any money,
Starting point is 00:52:27 right? That could be because it's a sign that he doesn't have enough ambition, he doesn't have enough drive. Or it could be a sign that he's just finding himself and eventually he'll discover it. But you kind of turned off a lot of women, and I think, you know, yeah, it's mostly women, by the fact that this person doesn't have any drive, has no ambition. They're not trying to make something of their life, right? And so it's not about the money that they're in. It's the fact that there's something missing in them, right? That kind of masculine energy, such as masculine women have great drive to make money as well. I don't mean to put it that way but that kind of drive that energy that makes them want to get ahead can be
Starting point is 00:53:09 very seductive and very powerful that's powerful for women to see that in men yeah and to sense that he's just kind of a slacker okay maybe he's got good qualities maybe he's a wonderful person and that's fine. And then the money isn't a problem. You don't care. And maybe if you do care, it's because it reveals something about their character, right? The other thing is generosity in a relationship is very important, right? It's not just giving money, but it's also giving your energy, giving your time to the other person.
Starting point is 00:53:54 So a lot of classic turnoff that men will do is that they're not so generous with money, time, attention, et cetera. And it's a sign of something closed inside of them. So they don't want to pay for a meal. They don't want to pay for something. They don't want to spend money on a nice gift or whatever. It's not the money. It's the sign that someone isn't generous in their spirit, in their heart. They're not willing to take risks, right? That would be another thing that the lack of money will say. To start a business and fail would not be such a bad, I don't think would be such a
Starting point is 00:54:28 turnoff, as opposed to never starting a business, as to always talking about, oh, I could have been great, I could have done this, but never trying, because it reveals a lack of security about yourself, confidence, because confidence is a key quality. So I think money is often a sign of something else, another problem. It's revealing something about their character. I mean, it could be he or she isn't pulling in their weight, and that's an issue. Yeah, and I kind of resent that. But that's not about the money.
Starting point is 00:55:01 That's about the other person not caring enough to pull their weight or not thinking about the other person's needs. It's what's underneath the money. Yeah, I think so. You mentioned confidence for a second. How much does someone lacking confidence affect their ability to seduce and maintain a level of seduction in a long-term relationship? Well, confidence is extremely important. I mean, it can go off into grandiosity and arrogance and hubris, and that can be a turnoff.
Starting point is 00:55:36 But in general, most people, men and women, make the mistake by not having enough confidence. Really, not enough. By being insecure, yeah. It's better to rain someone's confidence down a little bit Make the mistake by not having enough confidence really enough secure. Yeah, it's right It's better to rain someone's confidence down a little bit then to have none at all, right? It's like it's better to have more of it. Yeah, and be like, okay your ego is getting out of control Let's take it down a little bit. Yeah, then like I have no confidence at all. Well The fact that you feel confident about yourself is very seductive
Starting point is 00:56:06 in itself. It has an attractive power. You know, I talk in the Art of Seduction of charisma. I have a whole chapter on the charismatic and the origin of charisma. And what I define charisma is, there's a person who has a kind of inner light inside of them. They're so confident that they kind of glow with that confidence, that their words are kind of revealing it, their eyes are glowing, their gestures are glowing, and they're very charismatic. It could be a Malcolm X, it could be a Marilyn Monroe, it could be a John F. Kennedy, it could be a Mick Jagger, whomever, right? We sense this incredible confidence in
Starting point is 00:56:46 this power. And it's like an inner lantern that just makes everything glow. And we are so attracted to that. That's what charisma is. Why are we attracted to it? Because we envy people who have that kind of confidence. We wish we could have that. And we find it very compelling. We want to know them. We think that some of it perhaps will rub off on us. I know in working with 50 Cent, I wrote a book with him. This guy is very charismatic. He's extremely seductive. He's one of those men that I mentioned earlier who's like in that pantheon of great seduces.
Starting point is 00:57:22 And I've seen him up front doing his seduction. So I know I speak from experience. And he has this incredible charisma, this insane confidence. It's not in what he says. It's not in his eloquence. It's just in how he carries himself, right? And it can be a little bit cocky sometimes if he's all seen from him. But, man, it is so seductive.
Starting point is 00:57:45 And women go crazy over things like that. And men will go crazy over that in women as well. So confidence is extremely important in the realm of seduction. You can almost not go wrong with it. Yes, you can border on being insane and grandiose. But the feeling of that person is comfortable and confident and has that kind of inner force, energy that's coming up from somewhere they don't know is very powerful and very compelling.
Starting point is 00:58:17 And the lack of confidence is extremely anti-seductive. It is very. It'll probably hurt the relationship. If your partner is always lacking confidence in themselves, it doesn't make you feel attracted to them, right? Right. So what would you say if someone's been through a breakup after breakup, or even just one bad breakup, and they feel heartbroken or closed off,
Starting point is 00:58:39 how can they reclaim that confidence? What would you say to that person if they've lost confidence on how to reclaim it themselves? And also, if your partner has lost confidence and you're in a long-term relationship, how can you help someone gain confidence in a relationship? So individually, how do you reclaim it? And then your partner is lacking it.
Starting point is 00:59:01 Well, there's several ways to answer that. I mean, you know, seduction is almost like a skill. It's almost like being able to hit a baseball and bat 300. Yes. So the best thing you can do after a bad relationship is go back in the game and try and meet other women and go back in. And if you fail, to have a kind of a light attitude and not care but closing yourself off will make it harder each time harder to get outside of yourself right i can
Starting point is 00:59:34 remember one time i was in new york i was young i was maybe 24. i was on the subway and I just received some great news about my career, about this thing that I had written. Right? 24. Yeah. And I was on the subway going somewhere in Manhattan. And all of a sudden these women were looking at me. And I'm not saying that never usually happens. Right, right.
Starting point is 01:00:03 I'm not bragging. Yes. What's going on here? Wow. This onegging. Yes. What's going on here? Wow. This is one really attractive woman. What's going on here? And then I can't forget that moment. It stuck out in my mind so strongly.
Starting point is 01:00:15 Like there's this energy that I had that they were picking up and they were sensing it and they were attracted to it. I didn't say anything. I just heard. It wasn't on. We didn't have a phone then. I just had heard it and I was really happy and in a great mood. But I'm certain that that was, that energy was kind of projecting itself onto other people. So seduction is a skill. And getting out there
Starting point is 01:00:37 and trying your hand at meeting other women and going through the process, you'll learn about yourself. You won't take things, don't try and take things so personally. Get back in the game by being defensive and going into your shell and saying, oh, I don't want to get hurt again. You're going to make it harder each time to get out of that shell. Yes. You know? So that other gender is kind of mysterious to us.
Starting point is 01:01:06 We don't really know them. Right. They have a different world, a different personality, right? But the more you interact with women or men, the more you can kind of get a sense of what drives them and what motivates them. You can't ever totally understand them. A man can never ever understand a woman. There's always a big mystery there eventually. Thank God there is. But to the degree that you interact
Starting point is 01:01:31 with women or men in any situation, you're kind of learning about them. You're getting more comfortable with them, right? Yes. So a lot of great male seducers had sisters. A lot of great male seducers had sisters. A lot of great female seductresses had brothers. Interesting. They grew very comfortable with that male or female presence. And they might have been around the sister's friends or the woman might have been around their brother's guy friends and been around that energy more. Right.
Starting point is 01:02:01 So if you had just brothers, you know, women seem kind of scary or weird what do they want and the opposite is true yeah so interacting getting outside yourself interacting with women you'll get to feel more confident you'll learn more and you'll be more comfortable in their presence so don't go into a shell that's the main thing that's the key and what about did you have something else That's the key. And what about, did you have something else? No, you had a second part. What about if you're a partner, you're in a relationship for 10 years and whatever reason your partner and a woman is
Starting point is 01:02:34 lacking confidence, they're insecure, they're doubting themselves over and over, what could the other partner do to help them reclaim their confidence or is that not something you can do no you can do that um you can find what it is that they need validation about and you can you know give them pep talks and make it clear to them this is the most important thing lewis make it clear to them that you still have confidence in them. You haven't lost it. Because the sense that that other person is losing faith in you and your abilities is deadly.
Starting point is 01:03:14 That's big. So if you care about that person and you don't want to see them go down the drain with their insecurities, make it clear that you haven't lost faith in them and show it to them in certain ways. You know, whatever it is that they're worried about, show them that you still believe that they can accomplish something. You know, the relationship I've been in, it predates the 48 laws of power just barely, right? And before the 48 laws of power, I was a nobody. I had no money.
Starting point is 01:03:45 I had no success. I was very frustrated. I was depressed. I was very depressed, even bordering on suicidal. Wow. I was 37. I hadn't gone. It didn't bother her.
Starting point is 01:03:56 She had faith in me. She had confidence in me, right? She saw that something probably would happen. And then it did with the 48 laws. But I could sense that. She could sense that there was something I could do, right? So she kept boosting me about my writing and about my career. So what is it that that person is insecure about?
Starting point is 01:04:19 Boost them up. Make them feel like you haven't lost faith in them. And that will be almost enough in itself. Robert, like always, I've got one final question for you. But like always, I want to acknowledge you for being my first ever guest on the School of Greatness, for always showing up and being consistent in your life since I've known you in serving people. You're using your uniqueness, your talent, your gifts, your energy to create beautiful pieces of art that serve and help people. And I think it's incredible that you continue to show up and do this. You don't have to anymore, but you keep doing it. Even when you have your own personal
Starting point is 01:04:59 challenges that you're facing, you continue to show up to serve. So I acknowledge you for always being the example, even during challenging times for yourself. It's a beautiful thing to see. And I appreciate your friendship. Thank you, Lewis. Of course. Likewise. Of course. I have very fond memories of that first time you came. First time in your house. Your little recording device. You didn't know really what you were doing. Zero idea. You gave me an opportunity. You said, hey, I'll interview you. I liked you. I liked your energy. Exactly.
Starting point is 01:05:27 And I could see that something was going to come from this. Yeah. Yeah. And sometimes when you don't know what's going to happen sometimes, but you have an enthusiasm and an appreciation and a gratitude and you have an energy, hopefully good things can happen. So I appreciate you being the first one. But I think I also was like,
Starting point is 01:05:47 hey, listen, I want to sell a bunch of books of yours and we're going to do this thing. And I was excited about selling books for you. And I think it's always important to create a win-win experience. But I appreciate you taking the chance on me launching the podcast with you as a first-year. Oh, no, no, no. It's very memorable.
Starting point is 01:06:04 Yes, yes. My final question is, what's your definition of greatness? My definition of greatness is kind of what I've talked about before. It's realizing your potential to some degree. So we may not realize 100% of our potential. I certainly haven't realized 100% of my potential. There are things I probably could have done more of. But if your potential is to raise a great family
Starting point is 01:06:37 and to raise really great kids and you've done it, that's greatness. If your potential is to just build something, however small it is, and you realized it and you realized 50%, 60% of your potential, that is greatness. And then you can go to bed at night feeling good and proud of yourself, right? So a lot of it is it's not the the money that matters it's not the attention that matters it's the inner feeling you have that you have accomplished something is you have fulfilled
Starting point is 01:07:12 your potential that you have accomplished some of the dreams that you had as a child for yourself right and to have that sense that i have done that, that I have wrote this book, that I created this business, that I started this podcast, that's greatness to me. Of course, there are levels of greatness, right? But that's enough for me as well. The sense that I was born with this potential and I worked and I realized some of my gifts. I think that's an amazing thing. That's greatness for me. Robert Green, thank you so much.
Starting point is 01:07:52 Appreciate it, sir. Thank you so much for listening. 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 show with all the important links. And also make sure to share this with a friend. Leave us a review over on Apple Podcasts and subscribe over on Apple Podcasts as well. I really love hearing feedback from you guys. So share a review over on Apple and let me know what part of this episode resonated with you the most.
Starting point is 01:08:20 And if no one's told you lately, I want to remind you that you are loved, you are worthy, and you matter. And now it's time to go out there and do something great.

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