The School of Greatness - Secret Service Agent: REMOVE PEOPLE From Your Life if They Have THESE RED FLAGS! Evy Poumpouras
Episode Date: July 1, 2024Have you bought your tickets to Summit of Greatness 2024 yet?! Get them before they sell out at lewishowes.com/ticketsToday, Lewis welcomes back Evy Poumpouras, a former Secret Service agent and autho...r of "Becoming Bulletproof." Evy shares invaluable lessons learned from her 13-year career in the Secret Service, emphasizing the importance of one's inner circle, the distinction between identity and instrumental mindsets, and the value of humility. She provides practical advice on handling stress, being coachable, and navigating interpersonal relationships with a keen understanding of personality types. Evy's insights are grounded in her extensive experience and deep understanding of human behavior, making this episode a must-listen for anyone looking to enhance their resilience and leadership skills.In this episode you will learnThe significance of carefully selecting the people in your inner circle and the impact they have on your life.The difference between identity and instrumental mindsets and how to adopt a goal-focused approach.Strategies for managing stress effectively and building resilience.How to identify and understand different personality types to improve your interactions and relationships.The importance of humility and being coachable for personal and professional growth.For more information go to www.lewishowes.com/1635For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960More SOG episodes we think you’ll love:Lisa Bilyeu – https://link.chtbl.com/1265-podDr. Ramani Durvasula – https://link.chtbl.com/1196-podAnnie Särnblad – https://link.chtbl.com/1520-podVanessa Van Edwards – https://link.chtbl.com/1448-pod
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It's naive of us to think that people will not cause you harm,
because there are some people that will.
I know this as a former criminal investigator.
You can't live in La La Land.
That's reality.
But if I know this and I understand this,
I'm going to move through the world in the best way I can.
Former Secret Service agent.
Journalist.
Professor.
Interrogator.
The author of Becoming Bulletproof.
Please welcome Evie Pampouris.
The circle of people around you matter.
I look at it like this.
Like, you're the bouncer at the door.
And you decide who comes in and how long they stay.
And then you decide who you need to throw out.
If you have someone who has a lot of drama in their life,
that's a massive red flag,
because their drama is going to become your drama.
Right.
How can you really tell if someone is a narcissist,
a sociopath, or a psychopath?
When we look at true narcissism,
there's criteria you have to meet.
Some of the research that I had looked at said
one out of 25 people will be one of these.
Really? One out of 25?
The red flags are the behavior signals
that people give you.
Yes.
Don't label the person, label the behavior.
Hmm, that's interesting.
I went through September 11th.
I was in the World Trade Center.
I survived.
You were there during it?
I was.
I had colleagues who died, friends who died.
I'll tell you this, I can't heal from that.
I don't know how to heal from something like that.
Interesting.
But that was truly a moment where I thought,
I was like, I'm going to die.
Really?
You want to know where the best performers live.
They're instrumental.
Right.
My first day on The President's Detail,
I walk in, I sit down.
It's my first day at the White House.
He sits down and he says.
Welcome back, everyone, to the School of Greatness.
Very excited about our guest.
We have the inspiring Evie Pompouris back in the house for the third time on the show. I'm so
excited because your book, Becoming Bulletproof, Life Lessons from a Secret Service Agent,
has helped a lot of people understand the psychology of humanity and human beings in
front of them, from family members to friends to relationships to potential work environments. You were a Secret Service agent for 13 years,
and you saw a lot. You worked with a lot of the top politicians. You saw a lot. You interviewed
and investigated a lot of different individuals, different personality types. And I'm curious,
what do you think are the three biggest skills that
being a secret service agent gave you that you learned from the service? Three biggest skills
that you wish other individuals had those skills as well? You know, I'll tell you the one big one
that stands out. It taught me that the circle of people around you matter. And you need to be
very careful about who's in your
circle. I look at it like this, like you're the bouncer at the door, right? And you decide who
comes in and how long they stay. And then you decide who you need to throw out. So in the service,
I think what was done there is like, they did such a great job in the hiring process. I mean,
they spent
months and months interviewing you, investigating you, talking to your neighbors, figuring out who
you are, if you're going to fit into the culture, if you're a person of integrity. I used to go to
college overseas and one of the colleges I went to was in Italy. I lived in Rome. I did a semester
abroad, six months. They sent an agent to my college in Rome, in Rome to interview my professor
to find out what kind of student I was. That's the level of like assessment that they do. So
when they do that, they're plucking people out and selecting and putting them in this
group. And then you get put in there, I get put in there. And so now you're around this
caliber of people and you have to look at your circle. Who's around me? It's not about, this
isn't about niceness or kindness. I'm not saying that those things don't matter. They do. You want
people who treat you well and with respect, but you also have to look at what are these people doing to me? So for example,
if you have someone who has a lot of drama in their life, that's something, that's a massive
red flag because their drama is going to become your drama. So you may say, but I don't engage
in this stuff. I don't do this stuff. But what you don't realize is their life and their choices
bleed into yours. If
there's someone in your life that has a lot of chaos or conflict, that stuff is going to bleed
into you. And they'll tell you, oh, I don't like conflict. I don't like trauma. But then you will
always see that it's this repetitive thing. And what happens is, although they may say that,
you can get addicted to that. It gives you your adrenaline shots. It gives you your cortisol shots. It's a booster. And so the same people that say, I don't like it, don't listen.
Watch their behavior. And that's the one thing the service was excellent at showing me. They didn't, you know, it was interesting.
They didn't tell us this.
I just intuitively learned this.
So I was steady because I was around other very steady people.
I was grounded because the world around me was grounded.
I mean, things would happen even in the White House.
Every day there was some kind of a serious event in the world, something tragic, a tragedy.
So not just us, but also the core element of the White House, the staff, you would see people just
become grounded. Let's sit down. What's going on in the world? What just happened? Who got
bombed? Who got attacked? What shooting happened? And you'd see this kind of synergy of people
moving together to figure out what are the next steps, what's the solution.
No chaos, no drama. No fight or flight responses from people like, we need to do something now,
no reaction. I've never seen that. I've never seen that. So it's like a really great,
I don't want to say think tank, but it was just a place that you could go and they were expecting it. But you were also in a space where it was understood
things are going to go wrong and it is okay.
Interesting.
Where most people are not okay with that.
Most people design their lives so that nothing goes wrong.
They try to control their lives so things don't go wrong.
And when they go wrong, they freak out and they're right down.
Yes.
Because you're thinking, well, why is this
happening? Why is that happening? Rather than this stuff will happen. It will be going on.
Now I can mitigate it, right? But that stuff is going to come. That's what I like about Navy SEALs,
UFC fighters. They're training for worst case scenarios. They're kind of putting themselves in
uncomfortable situations situations physically,
mentally, emotionally, consistently, so that they know how to handle challenges. And I think a lot
of people just don't set themselves up for challenging times. They try to have comfortable
lives. And therefore, when there is an uncomfortable situation, they're a breakdown.
Yeah, because you think stress is bad. That's what everybody tells you. Relax,
go get a massage. Stress is bad. No, a certain level of stress is good. Here's the difference. Stress that is like, let's say we're doing this interview and we're uncomfortable or I'm uncomfortable. I come in and I'm comfortable. I don't like interviews. I don't like doing them.
sit down, doing the interview and overcoming that, that is good stress. That builds resilience.
The stress that is not good is chronic stress. So chronic stress is I have a relationship with someone. They are not healthy. The relationship is not healthy. So every day I'm dealing with
chronic stress. Am I going to get yelled at? Is this person going to do this to me?
That is not good for you. And that causes a deterioration in your self-esteem and your psyche
and all these different things. That's the difference. And even in training, the way they
worked training with all of the type of training, the first day they introduced stress levels to
you and then incrementally they increased the dosage. Really? Oh, yes. Oh, the stress you endure day one is very different than the stress
they're putting on you day 60. Why is that? Because they need to help you gradually get there.
It's not to say that you're not going to lose people in the beginning. In fact, I started with
the NYPD first. I went in as a recruit, and my class was 1,500 recruits in the NYPD. The first month, I think, ballpark, 300 people quit. 300 people quit. And this is NYPD. I actually thought it was quite tough. And they were putting stress on you. They're making you feel not welcomed. You're lucky to be here.
and it was just this chronic,
it was a stressor to see, can you handle it?
And they did want people who couldn't or who couldn't understand that,
you know, this isn't just about you.
And they would say to us,
if you can't handle the stress in here,
how are you going to handle the stress out on the street?
And they would say, well, people hate you
because so many people hate police.
It's like people hate you.
They're in your face.
They want to cause you harm.
So if you can't handle that out there, you know, then you can't be doing this.
Yeah. Interesting. Okay. So your circle matters is number one. What was the second thing that the service taught you that you wish everyone understood? is, let's look at it this way. There's two motivational mindsets, actually. It's called
sense-making. And the research shows one mindset is identity, one mindset is instrumental. An
identity person is very self-focused. Now, we move through these, by the way. But when I'm identity,
I'm using the word I a lot, I this, I feel this way, I'm in an emotional space, I'm very egocentric,
so I'm looking at the world as how it affects me. I'm not looking really for solutions or moving
forward. I'm really just looking to talk about me, maybe sometimes to talk about my problems,
to have somebody comfort me. It's a very emotional state of being. When you're there,
you're not being very productive. We all visit identity
land from time to time. I'm not saying we don't, but you're stuck. Instrumental is I'm mission
focused. I'm goal focused. I have a goal. This is what my goal is. And I'm looking how to get to
that place. So if I get feedback on something, right, I'm not going to take it personally.
So if I'm working on a project and the project manager says to me, Evie, this proposal you put together, I didn't like it.
Fix it.
Right.
If I'm instrumental, I will hear he didn't like what I put together.
I'm going to fix it because he wants me to make it better.
If I am identity, I'm going to hear he doesn't like me.
You'll take it personally.
Those are two different things.
So in this service, we were very instrumental.
Nobody wants to hear your problems.
Nobody cares.
Get it done.
Nobody cares why this went wrong, how it went wrong.
Fix it.
Just get to the solution.
So you're in a state of moving forward.
You're in a state of making progress, which was very important because if you don't
think like that, lives are on the line. Well, I mean, if someone's thinking,
but what if I'm working really hard and someone just keeps giving me feedback that they don't see
what I'm up to or they don't appreciate the value I'm creating or they're just constantly,
it feels like they're nitpicking at me as opposed to just seeing the value I bring.
How does someone overcome that identity-based sense-making and not make it a personal and
just focus on being instrumental and service-based? If the feedback you are getting is accurate and
correct and true, then you understand they're giving it to me because I have work to do. If
it's like you're hurting my feelings, then your identity. And that's fine. It just depends where you want to
live. So if you want to know where the best performers live, they're instrumental. My first
day on the president's detail, my supervisor, when I walked in now, I'm seven, eight years on already.
I'm senior. I walk in, I sit down. It's my first day at the White House getting ready to start on the president's detail. He sits down and he says, there's the door. He's like, anybody here not
want to be here? Anybody confused as to why they don't want to be here? There's the door.
You can walk through it anytime. Anybody? No one's forced to be here.
No one's forced to be here. No, no. Okay, good. Let's get started.
But that's why it was a machine that worked.
And that way we were able to problem solve.
And nobody's sitting there.
Also, you're not putting you ahead of the mission,
the goal, my feelings, how I feel.
I'm not saying feelings are a bad thing,
but you also have to know
when you're being driven by pure emotion
or mostly emotion.
And when you're being goal driven,
if you have a mission or
a focus or a project or whatever you're doing, then you're getting feedback and you have to have
an honest conversation with yourself. Is there truth to what I'm being told? If there is, then
this person is helping me trying to make it better. Or they're focusing on the goal and the mission,
not on you. Yes. And they want you to shift what you're're focusing on the goal and the mission, not on you.
Yes.
And they want you to shift what you're doing to accomplish the goal of the mission.
Yes.
And do you believe in what you're doing?
I did.
Yeah, yeah. I used to do the hiring process.
And when I would interview somebody, one of the questions I would ask when I say hiring process, I was a polygraph examiner.
Let me caveat that.
So to be an agent, you have to take a polygraph and pass it. So I would have to polygraph people. And I did the Northeastern
region area. And so when candidates would come in, I would ask them, why do you want to be a
special agent? And I typically got two types of answers. One answer was, I want to see what I'm
made of. I want to challenge myself. This is like the next level in my life. I want to see if I can
do this. Okay. The other answer I would typically get was, I want to serve my country. I want to be
part of a team. I want to help. I want to do good in the world. Who do you think passed the process?
The second one. Yes. Because the first guy was in it for himself. So the moment things got hard, I'm out.
He would give up.
It was all about him or her.
The second guy was there because they believed in something greater than themselves.
They were out for a bigger purpose.
So when we say instrumental and being mission focused, what is your end goal in life?
If it's just you,
it can be, it's going to be a bit of a struggle. Right. Can someone change their
sense-making from identity to instrumental in their 20s, 30s, or 40s? Or is this already
so conditioned in a human that it's so much harder to shift into, yes, give me feedback and I'm here
for the mission or the goal versus I'm working so hard and you're not acknowledging me and you're
not accepting the work I give. You want me to get better for the mission. Can someone shift that
personality trait or is that kind of ingrained in us? You can, you can. I did. I was like,
when I went in, I was super young. It was like it was like 19 20 21 like i went right out of
college i was just like i wasn't thinking clearly so i was a bit more identity and we all are when
we're younger right me me me me me yes so and you move between these two phases also because
there's moments in life where you might have be going through something and you feel very identity
or you may have a point where you're like, no, this person's not treating me well, and I'm going through this, and we may feel down on ourselves. That's okay. Recognize you're an
identity right now. I need to live here for a bit, but then I need to move out. I mean,
my husband does it to me. He's like, somebody's an identity a little longer than they should be.
Huh? That's okay. But you may also see that you may have a habit where one of them is much more prevalent in your life.
Yes.
It's being aware of it and acknowledging it, but also wanting to change it.
Some people don't want to change it.
They don't want to.
Some people like the narrative of, I just want it to be about me.
That's okay. It's just very limiting for you.
You're going to be very frustrated in life.
And you're going to hit a lot of walls. And you know what? You're going to be very frustrated in life and you're going to hit
a lot of walls and you know what? You're going to feel very bad about yourself because if you're
internalizing everything that's being said to you and done to you as an attack on you or a negative
on you, that also tells you, I have a habit of thinking that the world doesn't appreciate me,
doesn't see me, doesn't value me.
They're against me or whatever, yeah.
Yeah.
And it's going to be very hard to accelerate your career in life as well, in the workforce.
I mean, when I was playing sports and not a team, if you're taking it personally and
not just doing whatever it takes to serve the team, the mission of the team to win the
game or to win the championship or the season, whatever it is.
Like you were on the bench. It didn't matter how talented you were. If you had a bad attitude, if you didn't do what was needed or necessary, you're probably not going to play that much.
And you're going to be frustrated that you're not getting what you want. So you've got to shift it
to being service focused on whatever season of life you're in for that goal or that mission,
whether it's a career or relationship or team or something like that. So that's really interesting that you learned that.
And I think if people understood it, they'd have a lot more harmony in their life and feel more
fulfilled making about mission as opposed to self. Do you know what the thread that kind of ties
the Navy SEALs, Secret Service agents, and even athletes together,
we're all coachable because we've been trained to focus on the outcome, the team,
what's the collective goal. And so we are all willing to listen so that I can perform better
and do better so that the overall team performs better. We are much more coachable, and you'll see this
inherently. It's a massive trait amongst certain groups than others. Yeah. Coachability is huge.
I'm assuming you couldn't be in the speaker service without being coachable. I mean, the
hiring process was massively invasive. If you don't want anybody in your business, not the job for you.
I mean, they show up to your house. They show up to your school.
They show up everywhere.
I think people typically that come in want to serve, and you can see who that is.
That's pretty cool.
And that shows.
But you also want to make sure that when people come in that they're coming in for the bigger purpose,
and it's not for you because you watched CSI or SVU.
No offense to those shows,
great shows, or some FBI show. And you're like, yeah, I want to- SWAT.
I want to be that guy. I would just want to shoot everything up. And it's like, no,
no thank, we'll call you. No thank you.
That's interesting. And what was the third skill that you learned that you wish everyone else?
Humility.
Humility. Why humility in the Secret Service?
Because you're taught to put other things ahead of yourself. You're taught that you're not that
special. And I think in a world where everybody's told you're special, you're special. So if that's
true, then if I'm special, then everybody else isn't. Interesting. As know, as a, as a mom, how do you raise, you know, a child and
giving them confidence and courage to go after their dreams and their talents and
actualize their potential while also coaching someone to be humble? How do you do that?
Coaching someone to be humble.
How do you do that?
Wow.
All right.
There's a lot of layers to this one.
So my daughter is still very young.
She's 18 months now.
There's a couple of things I've been doing with her and I'm very conscious.
Like probably most parents, I don't like to see her cry or upset.
And I have to fight that instinct to help her, to pick her up, to take care of her.
So unless she's hurt, I leave her. Wow. You don't rescue her at every moment.
No. You don't give her candy or give her what she wants because she's throwing a fit.
No, no. That's the hardest thing for a mom probably to do.
No, I won't. I will let her. Well, I also want her to learn how to process her emotions. So if she's having a meltdown, let her have it
so she can work through it on her own. If I save her from it or if I give her something to stop it,
she's not learned to process it. Self-soothe. Yes. I also like, let's say she comes here and
she's trying to grab something and it's out of her reach, but I see she can do it. I will leave
her and let her struggle and figure it out. I will let her cry and I'll tell her, you can do it. I will leave her and let her struggle and figure it out. I will let her cry.
And, you know, I'll tell her, you can do it.
You know, I talk to her in Greek, actually.
I'm trying to.
Really?
That's cool.
I want her to learn.
I speak Greek, so I want her to learn another language.
That's incredible.
I'm glad you're doing that.
Yes.
It's a gift.
Are you going to do that if you have children?
Only in Spanish.
Only in Spanish, yeah.
Yes.
I mean, Martha will speak to her in Spanish, yeah.
You'll speak to her. So I speak to her in Greek. My mother in Greek, and my husband speaks to her in English.
And so she's learning both languages at the same time. But I let her struggle.
That's great.
And, you know, as soon as I can, I'm putting a gi on her, which is her jiu-jitsu outfit. She's going into jiu-jitsu.
I think she's too young at 18. I would put her in if I
could. I want her to struggle. I want her to learn at a young age to overcome. But then at the same
time, she also knows I'm there. So if she needs a hug, I give it to her. I don't deny her a hug.
If she needs, you know, a comfort, I don't deny that. So it's a balance. And I do, it's not,
there's no perfect formula, but I have this almost conversation in my head. So it's, it's a balance and I do, it's not, there's no perfect formula, but I have this
almost conversation in my head. What do we, what's happening here? But I, cause I also, I don't want
to create a monster that I can't control later on, you know, and I unleash her in the world.
And I mean, and I'm also, some people may not like this, but I, when I put her in any kind of sport,
I don't want to put her in a sport where she's going to get a trophy along with everybody else. What is that teaching kids if everyone gets a
trophy? I want her to learn how to fail and fail well. How do you fail well? By not getting pissed
off and having a temper tantrum and thinking the world owes you something and then saying,
why did I not get this trophy? How could I have done better? And how can I do better next time so that I can get it
and I can earn it? Because I'm not always going to be around for her. I'm not. It's just human
nature, right? Like the way the world is. Like she'll have me for a period of time in her life.
And after that, she'll be on her own. And I, I owe her as a parent to
make sure that she can handle herself when her mom's gone or her dad's gone. Right.
It's not that tough in my house. You're loving, you're loving. Yes. Those are great. Three,
those are three great things. Your circle matters. Be instrumental over identity-based of sense-making
and be humble. Have humility. Yeah. Right. I saw this quote in a Time Magazine article that was
about a study published in Nature Human Behavior. And it provides evidence for the existence of at least four
personality types. And I'm curious what you learned, but I just want to read this out.
Four different personality types, average, reserved, self-centered, and role model personality
type. Each one of them is based on the extent to which people display five different major character traits, including
neuroticism, extroversion, openness, agreeableness, and conscientiousness.
I'm curious. I'm not sure if that's the different personality types that you learned,
but how can someone understand what personality type is in front of them of a family
member or a friend, someone they're meeting for the first time? Is there any strategies or
techniques to learning a personality type of someone that you're meeting? Okay. So this is a
good question. I'm not familiar with this and I've not been taught this, but I've been taught another
one with four personality types. Okay. One of those. So we're going to give them animal names. So here's the thing. The researchers behind this are Dr. Emily Allison
and Lawrence Allison. And they actually do, let me see what I'm allowed to say, because I always
try to share stuff and not share too much, but they do a lot of research and they actually work
very closely with the intelligence communities to include where I came from. So I've done my training there.
So these are the four animal archetypes that they talk about. You can be lion, T-Rex, mouse,
or monkey. Now, somebody who is lion is a person who likes to be in control. They want to set the agenda.
Somebody who is T-Rex is someone who typically fights.
They're very kind of frank, forthright.
Sometimes they can come off a little bit blunt.
They're fighters, right?
Someone who is mouse is someone who will suppress themselves a bit more.
They're a little bit more submissive.
They can be patient and humble, but they can also become avoidant, right?
They can push themselves down to suppress themselves so they can fit in.
Maybe they want to be really liked or something like that.
And then the other personality type is monkey.
It's like, hey, everybody, I'm here. So
good to see you. Come here. This and that. They're all over the place. They're very warm. They're
social. They're engaging. Now, those are the animal archetypes. We move through these because
you're not one thing and you're different things with different people, by the way, because you
can be a very strong personality maybe at work. But when you go home let's say you have an abusive relationship or not healthy one you can go from being lion to being mouse so you want
to pay attention to that now there's also i feel like we're in class now there's also good lion
and good mouse so there's a good wheel and a bad wheel you can be both of the you can be this but
be the bad version of it so if i'm let, let's take, I'm T-Rex.
I know this.
I surrender to it.
I intuitively, I want to fight.
If somebody says something to me, I intuitively want to fight back.
But because I know this, I work very hard to keep it in check.
Interesting.
I'm aware of it.
So you're the good T-Rex most of
the time, except for with your husband. So if I'm a good T-Rex, I'm direct, frank, and forthright.
I'll tell you something, but I'm not afraid to tell you something. I'm not afraid to compete.
It's called being competing. So let's say you say to me, Lewis, Lewis, Evie, that research I told
you about, it's the best. This is what they should be teaching. It's bar none. It works for me. And
I said to you, you know, Lewis, I hear you. And I think it's probably, it's really good, but I
really, the one I use, I believe in this one and this is why. So I'm competing with you. That's
okay. A lot of people are so afraid of competing. They think it's ugly. It's conflict. It's
confrontation. Right, right, right. But if I were bad T-Rex, which I'm not saying I've never been,
Right, right, I can be mouse. And what you are, when you interview people, you actually flip you,
there's line and mouse. So when I speak, I'm lying. You sit back, you let me have the floor,
you let me speak and explain. Right. But you're humble, you're seeking guidance, you're asking questions, You're a good mouse. And hopefully most of your
people come here are a good lion. They're setting the agenda, they're helping give points,
they're talking, they're sharing with your viewers. Now, the bad version of that would be,
I'm a bully. I'm someone who bullies people. I'm a supervisor or someone who kind of
pushes people down. I'm in charge. I'm this, I'm that. I'm the boss. You listen to me.
That would be a bad version of lying.
And a bad version of a mouse would be someone who becomes very weak, submissive, almost
avoidant because they're just trying to keep that bully and that stuff off of them.
They're too afraid to speak.
So those are the four predominant personalities.
Which one do you think you are?
prominent personalities. Which one do you think you are?
I guess I could be a little bit of all of them in different scenarios as well,
but I think the main one would be the lion, I think. But I could also be a monkey. I can be a monkey because I'm very social and warm and engaging and just try to do a little bit of
everything. I think you're probably a good line.
Good line.
Okay.
There you go.
Is monkey bad?
No, monkey's good.
Monkey's monkey.
Well, we were monkeys.
We were monkeys outside when we first met.
Hey, how are you doing?
How are you?
So that's social.
So when you're a good monkey, I'm social, warm.
I'm respectful.
Bad monkey is, and you probably for sure get this, hey, you know,
I really want to come on your show. Hey, you know, here's my book. Or hey, here's this guy. Or hey,
do you, can you get me tickets to this? Or hey, I saw you in Success Magazine and I really wanted,
can I talk to the editor there? You know, I really, that's bad monkey. Like people can go
into bad monkey. That's a little bit of a trying too hard to sell, like car salesman. Sure, sure. Like people can go into bad monkey. Gotcha. That's a little bit of trying too hard to sell.
Like car salesman, again, sorry to the car salesman.
Sure, sure.
But that's when the person feels like, okay, please like come off of me a little bit.
Like it's a little too pleading.
So how can you decipher which personality type you're in front of if you're just meeting them for the first time?
They'll show you.
Just pay attention to their behavior.
I always say this, shut up. The first day when I went to polygraph training, the instructor got up there and they
said, you want to be king or queen in reading people? Shut up. Give people space to reveal
themselves. Stop talking. They'll show you. First of all, people love to speak up, talk about
themselves. So let
them, let them go. And then you can ask questions. I do this. I actually hate talking about myself.
I'll do it on a platform like this because I understand why we're here. But in real life,
I don't like talking about myself. I'm just, I'm more introvert. And I'll say, no, you know,
people ask me, oh, Evie, what project are you on? I was like, I'm talking to this production
company. We'll see where it goes. What are you on? I was like, I'm talking to this production company.
We'll see where it goes.
What are you doing lately?
Oh, wow, really?
You're in accounting?
That's amazing.
What kind of accounting do you do?
Tell me about that.
And then I listen.
So you'll pick up that person's mannerisms.
You'll hear the language that they use, how they speak.
And now you have a better idea who's in front of you.
I call it, it's 80-20.
80% of the time, they speak.
20% of the time, you speak.
What if both of you are like that and you want to speak less?
And so you'd both just ask, I'll tell you very little and popping the question back to the other person.
So you bring good monkey out, warm, social, respectful, but you can ask questions.
Tell me about that or see what they like to talk about.
See what they want to talk about, not what you want to talk about.
What if both individuals are that personality where they're both like, I just want to know what you think.
You tell me more about you.
No, you tell me more about you.
No, you tell me more about you.
If you're that, that's actually you're both mouse.
This is kind of like, so here's the thing.
That's more mouse.
So mouse is me saying, hey, Luis, where do you want to eat later?
Oh, I don't know, Evie.
Where do you want to eat later?
Well, I don't know.
Where do you want to eat later?
We're never going to eat.
We're never going to eat because neither one of us is making a decision.
So actually in that scenario, we're both being mouse.
So when you're mouse, if one both being mouse. So when you're
mouse, if one person is mouse, then to help the relationship progress, then one person has to
become lion. So at that point I'd say, you know what, Louis, let's do sushi. I love sushi. Let's
go do that. You go with sushi. And at that point you would chime in. So yes, you would want to move,
but these animal archetypes, we move between them.
We may be one version more so than another one.
So I know I'm a bit more T-Rex.
I have to work on it.
I believe you're probably more line just because of all the things you do.
You're trying to control everything, control your relationships, your business deals.
And so that the ship doesn't leave without you.
I could see you being like, from what I know of you, like, hey, no, let me slow down.
Let me look at this.
Yeah, that's interesting.
There's so many different you're in the TV world, you know, you host and you commentate on a lot of different things in the TV world, the news.
Obviously, we're talking about your book, Becoming Bulletproof Life Lessons from a Secret Service Agent.
If you guys haven't checked this out yet, make sure you check it out. But it seems to me like the more I
open up the news, social media, Netflix, there's just extreme personality type documentaries or
docu-series of serial killers or personality types that did horrible things. And that seems to be
what's being featured a lot lately. I think people are just fascinated by these horrible stories that
happen or murders or things like that. Sociopaths, all that different stuff.
I'm curious, you know, narcissism, sociopath, psychopath, these personality types are thrown
out a lot of these kind of words are thrown out a lot and people use them freely you know that's a narcissist that's a sociopath that's a
how can you really tell if someone is a narcissist a sociopath or a psychopath like how can you tell
if they have nuances of it or if they are one is there a strategy in finding that out you know i'm
totally on board with you with this because
everybody's calling everybody a narcissist. It's like the thing. You don't agree with me,
you're a narcissist. You said this to me, you're a narcissist. It's like, pull out the DSM-5,
which is actually the book that has all the disorders in there. I have a master's in forensic
psychology. And you not agreeing with someone or rather someone not agreeing with you doesn't mean
you label them as a narcissist.
And the fact that we label everybody all these things, just in and of itself, you labeling somebody else a narcissist is narcissistic of you.
So when we look at true narcissism, there's criteria you have to meet.
And there's certain criteria.
Lack of empathy is one.
They don't feel bad.
Lack of remorse. Now, when you look at serial killers or people
who commit certain types of crime, that falls under antisocial disorder. When people think of
antisocial disorder, they think of someone who doesn't like to socialize and doesn't like to be
monkey, right? As we talked about it before, they don't want to be warm and engaging. They kind of
are then to themselves. That's not that. Antisocial disorder essentially is a person who lacks empathy, and that's where sociopath
or psychopath fall in, although they've moved away from using these terms in actual psychology.
The chances of you coming across someone like that, some of the research that I had looked
at said one out of 25 people will be one of these.
So one out of 25 people will have this tendency, meet this criteria.
Of a narcissist or sociopath or psychopath?
Sociopath, psychopath.
Really? One out of 25?
One out of 25. Maybe a little bit of narcissism, but one out of 25. I think narcissism is
going up in our culture right now. I think we are seeing a bit more of it.
And the reason why I think we're seeing that a lot is the United States predominantly,
I can't speak to other countries as much as a very identity culture. We're all me, me, me, me,
me. I feel like this. My feelings need to be validated. I need this. I need that.
And then with that, social media has made us more self-focused rather than outward focus.
So we are more identity. We also have, we lack more empathy as well. Social media has also done
that. In fact, I just literally on the way here, the news just hit me up, NBC, and like, hey, we want to do a story.
They're looking at college campuses.
Crime is going up on college campuses.
And they want to know why.
One of the reasons why is a lack of connection.
I'm an adjunct professor.
I teach criminal justice criminology.
I have a three-hour block that I do.
When I give my students breaks, because I give them, do you know not one person turns around and says, hey, how are you?
How are you doing today?
They all pull out their phones and they do this.
They don't even get up out of their chair to go on break.
I have to tell them, get up, go walk, go use the bathroom, get some water.
So why is that a problem?
The problem is I'm not building community.
I'm not getting to know you.
You're there and I'm here. And so when we don't feel connected to people, we have a lack of
empathy. We fear or don't like the other, and we are more likely to cause harm to the other.
All these things come into play. And social media, watching, I do the news, everything's negative.
It's true. They're not going to put, watching, I do the news, everything's negative. It's true.
They're not going to put anything positive because you, the viewer, don't want to see it.
You want to see the drama.
You want to see, they're called celebrity cases.
The cases, especially crime, they want to see those cases over and over again.
When you're also consuming this stuff on a repetitive basis, it's also not healthy for you.
I have a criminal basis, it's also not healthy for you. I have a criminal
background, right? I've never watched a crime show, ever. I help make them. But I don't,
it's too much. I need a break. I need something else. I will watch something that has nothing to
do with that. So you also have to think, what am I feeding my mind? But again, to go back to the
sociopathic question, the main thing that we see between sociopath, psychopath, or really
antisocial disorder and narcissism is a lack of empathy. I don't feel bad for what I do. It's my
inability to feel bad for causing you harm. So I don't feel bad for what I do to you or what
someone is doing to you? I do to you. Okay. I don't, I'm focused. And they're very identity,
by the way. They are very self-focused. It is me, me, me. So a couple of things to pay attention
to. When you hear somebody using the repeated use of I, I, I, I, a little bit of a red flag,
right? You can even see it in email.
I was trained to look at language and how you can know in language when somebody is very self-focused
or even depressed. If you see the repeated use of I, I this, I that, it's either self-focused
narcissism or depression. People also who are very depressed are very self-focused. I analyze myself. Another
thing that's causing harm, and I think people are coming out with this, is when you sit and you talk
about your problems all the time, when you dwell on them, when you analyze them, when you sit there
and you've had something bad happen to you and you are trying to dissect that thing to the nth degree to figure out why it happened, what you're doing is you're feeding your brain and, you know, even
spiritually, right? If we bring it to that level, only negative things. You are dwelling and retelling
and reliving the harm that's caused to you. And you know, one of the predominant places that happens
in is in the therapy room. Because most people,
when they go to therapy, what do you do? You talk about everything that's wrong in your life.
So you have to take a moment, because I've had people come to me, I need help with this. And when I speak to them, they'll be in years of therapy. And I'll ask them, what do you go for?
What do you do when you're in there? I talk about my problems. So if I sit and I always
talk about my problems, and I I sit and I always talk about
my problems and I relive them and I retell them and then I get emotionally upset, what kind of
headspace am I in? You know, the Hippocratic oath, I'm Greek, it's do no harm. So I think going to
therapy and getting help is a great thing. So long as you understand why am I going, what's my
purpose, and so long as you have a good doctor that says, we're done now.
You don't need me anymore.
Yes.
That's interesting.
You know, because growing up as a man in, I guess, the Western culture,
I was never acceptable to express feelings, right?
So it was kind of like an extreme of just don't acknowledge it,
don't talk about it, don't express it, don't let it out. Let it out through anger or sports or some other
strategy to kind of let out your emotions. And by suppressing it for so long and not just talking
about it at least a few times, it made me feel like a lot of pressure. It made me feel like
something was boiling inside of me. And as
I started talking about the things that were causing me emotional pain or frustration and
figuring out how to integrate the lessons of healing or release and move beyond it, I started
to feel better. But if I was constantly reliving a story and feeling emotionally heightened by it,
I could assume that wouldn't benefit me long-term. But on the flip side, not talking about it at all
might cause me stress or chronic stress or pain or something else. So I think it's a balance.
It's the balance.
Like learning how to communicate it and learning how to release it,
but getting a strategy to go beyond it.
Yes, you want to be in a state of moving forward.
But if I retell it and retell it and retell it
and retell it and relive it,
it's like eating McDonald's.
No offense to McDonald's.
But if I eat McDonald's every day,
I'm putting junk in my body,
my body's going to show.
If I'm retelling every bad event
and I'm feeding that to my mind and
into my soul on a consistent basis, I'm not going to feel good either. So you control the thoughts
that come into your mind. And if you sit and sometimes, Louis, bad things just happen.
And sometimes there is no, why did it happen? It happened. And sometimes there's no analyzing it and assessing it
to figure out what. And I say this, I went through September 11th. I was in the World Trade Center.
I survived. You were there during it? I was. I was there. I had colleagues who died,
friends who died. I was almost killed. If I sat and I retold that story and relived it, I would be a mess. How am I ever
going to move past it? Or at least let it just be. I'll tell you this, I can't heal from that.
I don't know how to heal from something like that, but I've allowed it to be part of what I
experienced. You've accepted it. Yes, but it also gave me a gift. It made me appreciate life.
You know, that day, it was truly, you know, I had probably, I've had a couple of close calls in my life because of my career.
But that was truly a moment where I thought I was like, I'm going to die.
Really?
When the first tower was coming down, I was by the street, by the base, and we had a triage.
We didn't know it was going to collapse.
So you were in the base of the buildings. Yes. Well, I worked in the World Trade Center. Our offices were there.
The U.S. Secret Service field office was New York and we were out of there. So I was there from the
first plane to the second, to the collapse of both towers. But you were on the ground,
you weren't in the building. I, no, I didn't. We were in seven and that's when the first plane
hit. So it was the, that building
collapsed after the towers. In fact, when the towers fell, they fell on seven and then seven
eventually burned and collapsed. You weren't in the towers. I was not in the tower itself.
But when the first plane hit, we went to go help. And then as we were going into the towers,
we're trying to go in the second plane hit. hit. And then the debris came out and it just landed on top of all of us. It's like, it was literally just, you know, luck. Either you
got hit by something or you didn't. And so I remember the entrance was blocked. So then we
went around and just people started piling out. And then at that point, we just started triaging
people who needed to go into an ambulance, who was just in shock maybe and just
needed to kind of be pushed out of the vicinity. But as we were doing that, I mean, nobody knew.
I didn't know the building was going to fall. Right. They just thought it was going to be
burning. Let's get people out. Yes. But then you heard the steel. And even then, I remember hearing
it thinking, all right, the roof's going to slide off. Because I remember the one plane hit the
I remember hearing it thinking, all right, the roof's going to slide off. Because I remember the one plane hit the top part. So I just thought, because debris kept falling the whole time up
until that point. But then as the tower began collapsing, I remember I hunkered down. I was
by myself. I just found the corner and I just sat there on the street. And I was like, oh,
I'm going to die. Like I really thought, oh yeah. You know? And so I sat there and I remember
thinking, I was like, wow, I haven't lived my life. I was like, what have I, and you, at least
for me, I mean, I want to say my life flashed before my eyes, but it, it did. And thought,
I thought about like all the things I didn't get to do. And I remember thinking to myself, you know,
not yet, not, not ready to go, but I didn't have a choice.
And I just let it be. I was like, you know, I began to pray. That's intuitively, that's where
I went. I began to pray. I'm like, well, if it's my time, it's my time. But the gift in that was
it taught me to appreciate my life. And so now every day, if something happens, and even petty things that happen, right?
I go bad T-Rex. I pause. I'm like, what am I pissed about? So it gave me a new license on life.
But take that trauma. It's trauma, it's tragedy, whatever you want to call it. And if I go to
therapy, and all I do is talk about that on a consistent basis, how well do you think I'm going
to do? How well am I going to recover? How well do you think I'm going to do?
How well am I going to recover?
I'm not because I'm going to relive all those people that died,
all those people I couldn't save, how I almost died,
how my friends died, how my colleagues died.
Why did this happen?
Why did they do this?
Why, why, why, why, why?
Even to this point, I go for screening.
It's the World Trade Center Health Monitoring Program.
Because of the exposure to all that stuff, so many people have died from cancer and all that.
I go every year for my screening. Really? In fact, I'm due. I'm due because the chances of
me getting cancer, and there's an aggravated version of cancer you get, people are getting
from that exposure. It's just more, I guess, ferocious and vicious
than a typical, not that, you know, my dad died of cancer, but I guess this cancer is a very
vicious type of cancer. But even then, so I guess I understood that and I learned that I must let go
and I'll never go to whoever he was before, but I don't want to go to who she was before.
I want to take what I experienced and bring that experience into my life. And now I appreciate my
life. And I'll tell you this, Louis, if I'm ready to, I'm ready to go now. Tomorrow, something
happens. Tonight, something happens. I'm okay. Because I've lived my life the best I could.
And I've done the things that I could.
I tried to find and make meaning in my life.
I'm okay.
Right.
I'm hearing an ambulance go outside as this is happening.
This is pretty intense. really appreciate how you say reliving past painful events and speaking about them and
causing yourself more emotional, heightened emotions and stress doesn't really serve you
past a certain point. Yes. That's all I'm saying. Right. For me, I'm a big fan of,
I call therapy coaching because I try not to live in the past. I try to say,
what can I prepare for
the future? What can I do to give me feedback on how to improve to prepare for future challenges
that might arise? And my therapist, I really call her coach, I'm saying, what are people in their
50s, 60s, and 70s struggling with that if they did at my age and I can prepare for now, I won't have
those struggles. So that's the
way I really try to think about it. Not like, oh, this happened to me when I was a kid. I've
already done that work. But knowing the traumas from the past and how it affects my personality
type now, how can I keep improving and working to overcome potential future challenges now?
That's the way I look at it. That's why it helps me.
But you find the positive in it. Yes. Yeah. It's more thinking of like,
how can I just keep improving my life? Yes. But also you know you.
Yeah, exactly. Best. And you know what works for you.
Right. And if that's helping you elevate,
but it's helping you move forward. Exactly. It's not keeping me stuck in
the past. Correct. It's saying, how can I make the most of today and the next day? Yes. And I
think that's differentiation. Does this going keep me stuck in the past? And now has my identity
become this past event that happened? 9-11 was one day. So you're going to tell me the rest of my life is going to be defined by this one day? What is that 0.01% of my overall life? But this one day is going to
define everything moving forward? Why do so many people let one day or one event define their
entire life? Because they go back to it and they keep going back to it and you try to make sense of it. I can't make sense of 9-11.
Somebody thought it was a good idea to do that. So I'm going to sit and hyperanalyze and why all
that loss of life. And that's just one example. And there's so many other examples like I've
endured, you've endured. In fact, I read this one study, 70% of people have been through some type
of trauma or tragedy in their lives. The majority of people have. So we take that and we figure out how to be better and move forward. You know, it's
interesting for me, my therapy after that, they actually forced me to go to therapy after that.
Secret Service made me go to therapy. They made me sit in this big group where we all told our
9-11 story. So we went around the room. It was like two days later. And I was told by my boss,
I had to go. Two days later? That's pretty recent. Yes, because we had to go back out and work.
We had to process it and move on. It's like process, talk about your feelings,
and let's move forward. Go serve, yeah. I appreciate them even doing that. So we went
around the room and each person told their story. And I will tell you, by the time it came to me,
I didn't want to talk about it. It was just so hard to hear everybody. And I will tell you, by the time it came to me, I didn't want to talk about it. It was
just so hard to hear everybody. And I gave like such an abbreviated version. I was there, the
plane hit, the other plane hit, it collapsed. Then the other one collapsed. I'm okay. I'm good.
That's, and I just, but for me, it didn't work, but you know, what did work where my therapy was
after that, they asked for volunteers at Ground Zero. And I volunteered.
And I spent a couple of weeks down at Ground Zero helping other people who had lost a lot more than I had.
And just helping be part of a collective process.
That was my therapy.
Yes.
And I think maybe had I not had that, perhaps I would have struggled.
Interesting.
So therapy looks different for different people.
Man, that's so powerful.
I always feel some type of therapeutic release when I'm in service, when I'm helping someone that needs something, that is struggling or suffering or is challenged in some way.
When I can be of support and service, I feel like it is a therapeutic experience. And I think it's really hard to be depressed when
you're in service to someone else. It's really hard to be thinking about your own problems.
And you can, like you said, you can see, oh man, this person has it way worse than I do.
Let me be of service and not diminish what I've been through, but appreciate what I have.
And I think that's a powerful thing, too.
You can find meaning in everything.
Like, not meaning in that, why did it happen?
Yes.
Sometimes, why'd it happen?
Because it's just a messed up situation.
Because the world's messed up.
Because people do messed up things.
Because it's naive of us to think that people will not cause you harm.
Because there are some people that will.
I know this as a former criminal investigator. You can't live in La La Land. That's reality.
But if I know this, I understand this. I'm going to move through the world in the best way I can.
And I'm going to, I'm not going to be surprised when people cause me harm.
I'm aware of it. I'm not expecting it. But when it does happen, I have the understanding
that these people exist in the
world. They move through the world. And most people that cause you harm don't think they're
doing anything to you. They're not intentionally doing it. They will validate it. I have interviewed
countless people in the interview room. People committed horrible crimes against other people.
And they will sit down and they will validate or justify to me, I did this, but here's my reason. You can sell anything to yourself. We've all done it. You've
hurt people. I've hurt people. And when we did it, we sold it to ourselves a certain way. Well,
I'm doing this because of X, Y, and Z. So maybe you sell it to yourself like, well,
this is how it works for me. But in the end, you still end up hurting someone else. It happens. Now, there are varying degrees to that. But you can sell anything to yourself
and make it okay for you to cause harm to someone else. I would see it with all sorts of crime.
I remember working this big, it was a big enough case, but it was a bank case. It was an employee. A lot of the fraud that happens at banks, a lot of it does come internally from employees. So
there was one person who worked at the bank. And I guess this bank, we won't say what bank it is,
this bank would leave their money out. They didn't lock the safe. They would leave stockpiles of
money out. So this person, this employee would steal money. They stole a lot of money over time. And he knew where the cameras were. So there were blind spots where he would take
the money and they wouldn't see it. So very, actually it was a simple case. So this money's
disappearing. I sent the person down. Over the years, it turned out to be a lot of money.
And his justification was the way he sold it to himself was if that money was so important to
them, why didn't they lock it up?
Oh, my gosh.
It obviously wasn't, so I took it.
If they cared about their money, they'd lock it up.
Shame on them.
That's how he sold it.
You can sell anything to yourself if you want to.
Wow.
And that's how we sell to ourselves when we cause somebody harm.
Now, there are varying degrees of how much harm we cause.
somebody harm. Now, there are varying degrees of how much harm we cause. But you have to pause and say, am I causing true harm? Or is the harm I'm going to cause enough for me to feel okay because
I have to make a certain decision? You remind me of a story I went through where we had an
employee here a few years ago that we had a $100 bill out. And was gone one day and we, we confronted them and one of the
other employees and saw someone else take it. And we're like, did anyone take this or move this?
You know, we weren't thinking that anyone stole it, but they just were like, Hey, why is this,
where is this? And when we confronted the guy and he pointed at the other person,
we confronted him and he said, Hey, did you take this $100 bill that was out? And he goes,
oh, you mean this $100 bill? I go, yeah. He goes, oh, it was just out there. I just thought I could
take it. Just like this justification, right? It was like, well, it's not your $100 bill. Like,
why are you just taking the money? But that's what this person thought of the bank. Well,
it's just out there. So they didn't care about it. So I'll just take it.
Exactly. That's how he sold it to himself.
Interesting. But it didn't act like it was a big deal.
It was like, oh, it was here, so I'm just going to take it from the office.
Yes, because if you cared about it, you would have put it away.
It's still stealing.
Did you?
Oh, he was fired that day.
Okay.
Yeah, yeah, that day.
I was going to say, I was going to have a moment.
I'm like, what do we do?
He was fired that day.
Yeah, yeah.
There was a number of red flags before that anyways, but that was like, okay, you can't steal money.
Well, pause.
The red flags are the behavior signals that people give you.
Yes.
So you see these signals.
It's the behavior.
I think when you brought up narcissism before and all these labels, labeling people, don't label the person.
Label the behavior.
That's interesting.
Label what they show you.
What am I seeing in this moment?
What is the behavior I'm seeing?
That's what you label.
And that's what's going to show you what's going on. Because when you label the person,
the problem with labeling people is also they're people that we have emotional ties to often.
That's my this, that's my that. And so it becomes a little muddy and we can't see clearly.
But when you label the behavior, if you can just put aside who the person is and just label what they do, you will see clearly. That's why it's easier for you to give somebody else advice
about someone that you don't know, because you're hearing about what this person did to them.
You're hearing about the behavior and you're making a rational assessment based off of the
behavior of this other person. Yeah. Not the relationship or the chemicals of love or whatever might be there.
No, you're not introducing all those complexities.
All those complexities muddy the water, and that's why we make bad decisions sometimes.
Because we're like, well, it's this person.
Forget who the person is.
What did they do?
If you label the behavior, you'll make better choices. I hope you enjoyed today's
episode and it inspired you on your journey towards greatness. Make sure to check out the
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