The School of Greatness - The COMMUNICATION Expert: Do THIS To Connect DEEPLY with ANYONE! (Become MAGNETIC) | Charles Duhigg
Episode Date: February 26, 2024Today, we are joined by none other than Charles Duhigg, a Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter and the brilliant mind behind NYT bestsellers like "Smarter Faster Better" and "The Power of Habit." Charles h...as been a prominent voice in the fields of productivity and habit formation, sharing groundbreaking insights that have transformed countless lives. Charles is here to unveil his latest book, "Supercommunicators: How to Unlock the Secret Language of Connection." In this episode, we'll delve into the captivating world of communication, exploring the secrets to unlocking the power of connection that lies within all of us. Buy his new book, Supercommunicators: How to Unlock the Secret Language of Connection HardcoverIn this episode you will learnHow becoming a supercommunicator can reduce loneliness and improve overall health, as highlighted by the Surgeon General's study comparing the loneliness epidemic to life expectancy, depression, and anxiety.The reasons why people often struggle with building relationships, and how mastering supercommunication can alleviate these challenges.The concept of a supercommunicator and how embodying this trait enhances various aspects of our lives.The technique of 'looping for understanding' and its role in transforming individuals into supercommunicators.Whether supercommunicators are born with innate abilities or if they are developed through practice and experience.For more information go to www.lewishowes.com/1580For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960More SOG episodes on COMMUNICATION we think you’ll love:Gary John Bishop – https://link.chtbl.com/1535-podKevin Bacon – https://link.chtbl.com/1505-podJohn Maxwell – https://link.chtbl.com/1501-pod
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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 to the School of Greatness. Very excited about our guest. We have the inspiring Charles Duhigg of the house, who is a Pulitzer
Prize winning reporter, author of the number one New York Times bestseller, The Power of Habit,
which has now sold almost 10 million copies, and author of the new book, Super Communicators, How to Unlock the Secret
Language of Connection. I'm super excited to hear. And I wanted to start with a quote before we dive
in. Okay. I saw this quote about the current loneliness epidemic that's happening in the world,
but specifically in the US. And this was from the, I believe, the general surgeon who said,
the lack of social connection poses a significant risk for individual health and longevity.
Loneliness and social isolation increase the risk for premature death by 26% and 29%, respectively.
More broadly, lacking social connection can increase the risk for premature
death as much as smoking up to 15 cigarettes a day. Poor or insufficient social connection is
associated with increased risk of disease, including 29% increased risk of heart disease
and 32% increased risk of stroke. Furthermore, is associated with increased risk for anxiety,
depression, and dementia. And I wanted to start by asking you to reflect on that.
And I'm curious, how can the principles and super connectors, super communicators,
how can these principles really help put an end to the loneliness epidemic that we are seeing in the U S but also in the
world? It is a, it is a fantastic question and probably the most important question to be
thinking about right now. Right. Um, so, so there was this study that was done called the, they now
call it the Harvard adult happiness. You're probably from the longest, longest longitudinal
study that's ever been done. And it started over a hundred years ago is actually called the grant study at first.
Cause this guy didn't grant, gave money to start it.
And they started following all these people originally just students at Harvard, but then
people who lived in tenements in Boston and, and as everyone got married and had kids,
they started following them.
And they had this hypothesis, these hypotheses.
And what they wanted to figure out is what is the correlate with future success and
happiness and most importantly, longevity health. And they had these hypotheses. Again, this is like
the 1910s, 1920s. They were like, you know, um, the, if you have a two parent family, you're
probably going to live longer than if you have a one parent family. If you, if you, if you go to
Harvard, you're probably going to live longer than if you didn't go to Harvard. And they studied all this stuff, you know, what, how, what, what careers people have,
what they eat. And they found ultimately there was only one overwhelming thing that determined
whether people were happy and whether they lived long, a long time, longer than average,
how many connections they had to other people, particularly when they're 45.
So it's not, there's nothing magical about 45, except that they would look at people at 45 and
they found if you had twice as many friends, like people that you're actually engaged in
a relationship with. Like meaningful relationships. A meaningful relationship. Right. If you have twice
as many of those people in your life, on average, you will live up to 20 years long.
Wow.
And by the way, you'll end up being more financially successful.
So then the question becomes, okay, so if we know that loneliness is a killer, it's
equal to smoking 15 cigarettes a day, and we know that we need to have connections with
people, how do we form connections?
And part of it, as you know, we were talking about sports, you're an athlete.
Like part of it is you can go and do things with people you can be on a team together but the number one
way that we create relationships that we create connections is through conversation yes and and
what's interesting is you don't have to have a conversation every day one of my closest friends
is a guy i talk to every six to seven weeks but but every time we talk, we have a real discussion and
I feel as close to this person as anyone on earth.
Yeah.
And so then the question becomes, okay, so, so what is it?
And, and we're living through this golden age of understanding communication because
of advances in neuroimaging and data analytics.
And so now we know what has to happen in a conversation for people to feel
close to each other.
And that's the answer to the loneliness epidemic is powering people.
But why do people struggle so much with, I guess,
building relationships is that they don't have the skills of communication is
they don't have the courage to communicate is they're afraid of rejection
or embarrassment or not being liked or loved by someone why are so many people isolating you think
more than ever i think i think there's two things first of all you know just the internet has made
it easy like you can stay in your house now right whereas before it was more boring yeah so so that's
part of it but i think the other thing is exactly what you just said which is
People don't know what the first step is, right? It used to be that you were in public school in America and they taught you how to have conversations
There was class a club debate club home ec, right?
They would send young women off to finishing schools where basically you learn to be a conversationalist
I'm not saying we should return to those days
But it was something that people saw as a virtue.
That's teaching social skills.
That's exactly right.
We don't really teach social skills unless as parents,
like you were talking about before we started,
creating those environments and exercises and experiments
or games for your children to put themselves out in public
at a restaurant or ask someone for a favor or just put themselves out in public at a restaurant or ask someone for
a favor or, you know, just put themselves out there. Yeah. Yeah. And it's, and so the thing
is that I think most of the people, they are scared and they are anxious and they are uncertain.
And the answer is that there's actually, so nobody's born a super communicator, right?
What is a super communicator? A super communicator is is the easiest way to say it is it's the person you call when you're having a bad day,
who, you know, will make you feel better. Right. Like for me, it's a guy named Greg. Like I give
him a phone call and like, I just know he's going to make me feel better. He's going to like, make
me feel listened to. He's going to make me feel happy. Another guy named Donnan. And you, do you
have someone like that? Like when I show Matt, okay, Matt. named Donnan. And you, do you have someone like that?
Like when I show Matt.
Okay, Matt.
Right.
Exactly.
And like, so, so for you, Matt is a super communicator and Matt is probably a super communicator for other people.
And you're a super communicator for other people.
That is not an inborn trait.
It's not like Matt was born under a different star or he has some special charisma.
It's probably that Matt has learned how to communicate oftentimes
by failing to communicate or oftentimes by feeling like he's left out and paying attention
to how other people behave and sort of just noticing a little bit more what's going on.
What we know is that anyone can become a super communicator because it's just a set of skills
that any of us can learn the same way we can learn to read.
But as a society, we have not said that's an important set of skills for a little while.
And, and I think that with the surgeon general and others coming out, we're, we're beginning
to say, right, actually this, this is critical.
Is there a difference between super communicators and super connectors?
So, so I think that there's some people,
the answer is yes,
depending on what you mean by super connector.
There's like, sometimes there's super connectors
who are like kind of transactional, right?
They're super service level, like, or transactional.
Or they just know everyone and you're like,
I need a favor.
And they're like, oh, this guy can help you out.
Now that being said, when we communicate,
and this is one of the things
that we've learned in the last 10 years, you and I having this conversation right now, we're totally unaware
of this, but our pupils are dilating at the same rate.
Our breath patterns are actually starting to match each other.
Most importantly, if I could see inside your brain and you could see inside mine, what
you would see is our brainwaves start matching each other.
This is what communication is.
Communication is I have a feeling or an idea,
I describe it to you,
and you experience to some degree that feeling or that idea.
And it's actually reflected in your brain.
Literally the neuroscience, the neurochemicals,
you feel what you're feeling.
That's exact.
It's called neural entrainment.
And it's the core of communication.
Really?
So when that happens, and again, evolution is hardwired this into our brain, when we're
neurally entrained, we feel closer to each other.
We feel connected.
We feel connected.
So you could be a super connector because Matt is a super connector because he's so
good at making you guys feel like you're in sync.
Right.
Interesting.
But the way he's able to do it is through communication.
Through communication.
Yeah.
That's interesting.
And it probably, you know,
the better you can learn to communicate
and someone feels understood
with your communication,
the stronger the connection
and the stronger ability
to create together
or to make things happen together as well.
Oh, absolutely. And the more surface level of the communication, I'm assuming, stronger ability to create together or to make things happen together as well oh absolutely the
more surface level the communication i'm assuming or the less alignment that you have with one
another um the more unlikely you will create something unique or special or powerful to get
that's exactly and and so let's talk about what super communicators do like when you're talking
to man let me ask you a couple questions about matt and is he like a friend who lives here oh yeah okay okay col the company best
friend okay yeah so college football together yeah so when you talk to matt does he laugh a lot
do you guys laugh together laugh a lot we play a lot i'm playing more with him you know i'm more
jokey but yeah but he laughs with me yeah but is he the funniest guy like if you were like who's
gonna be a stand-up comedian he's not that he's not the funniest guy right he's the middle child so he's kind of like
always learning to navigate both sides you know okay so here's another question i'm certain if
you ask him advice he gives you good advice but if you were like is he your most genius friend
is he the guy who like he knows a lot about it he knows a lot about everything like a little about a
lot right right right but he's probably not the smartest person i know but he's the most rational he knows a lot about it. He knows a lot about everything. Like a little about a lot.
Right.
Right?
Right.
But he's probably not the smartest person I know.
But he's the most rational person I know.
Which is, that is key.
And my guess is, and tell me if I'm getting this wrong,
I'll bet you if I watched you guys talking,
what I would see Matt doing to you and you doing back to him
is that when you say something to Matt,
he proves to you that he's heard you.
He's proved to you that you're listening.
Yeah, for sure. And there's this thing called looping for understanding. That's actually
like a formalized way of doing it. Looping for understanding.
Looping for understanding. What does that mean?
So looping for understanding has these three steps and particularly, it's particularly useful
if we're in a conversation where we're in conflict with each other. So they teach it
in the Harvard negotiation program and in law schools. And what you do is if you want to prove to someone that
you're hearing them, which is critical if you, if you have a, if you are in conflict,
is first of all, ask a question. And there's specific kinds of questions that are powerful
that we can talk about. Okay. Number, step number two is repeat back what that person said in your
own words.
Not what they said exactly, but how you interpreted it.
How I'm hearing you, what I'm hearing you say.
And then step number three, and this is the one we always forget.
Ask if you got it right.
Interesting.
Now I'm guessing, and tell me if I'm wrong, that if I was watching you and Matt, that you say something to Matt kind of meaningful and Matt is like, you know, man, like I totally hear you because it sounds like you're feeling down and it's been a tough day and and that you need you need to make it through this.
Like, did I get that right?
Like, is that does he do stuff like that?
Yeah.
I mean, I guess when you're that close, you don't need to know that you got it right.
Exactly.
You just get it right.
Right.
You're just so in sync that if he didn't get it right, I'd be like, no, that's not how I feel. That's it right. Exactly. You just get it right. Right. You're just so in sync that if he didn't get it right,
I'd be like,
no,
that's not how I feel.
That's exactly right.
I would correct them because we have that type of relationship,
but that makes sense.
And I think that's what a lot of therapists do too.
Yeah.
It's almost like they'll ask a deeper question.
Let me understand deeper.
When I'm hearing you say is this,
does that sound about right to you?
And I know that you've spent some time in therapy.
How does it feel when that therapist does this?
It feels incredible.
It feels magical. It feels magical.
You feel heard.
You feel like someone finally understands you.
Yeah.
And being understood allows you to feel, it's a safer feeling.
Now, my friend Jay Shetty says that learning to be misunderstood is like, has been a superpower
for him, not having people understand him.
Not everyone's going to understand you.
But I think when you have relationships where people do understand you or see where you're
coming from, it makes you feel safer with them.
Yeah.
That type of communication.
Evolution has developed a reward sensation from feeling understood and feeling connected
because that's what helped our species survive, right?
The early ancestors who said like, I want to take care of
my young because I feel a bond to them, or I want to pair off with this community and invest in this
community. They're the ones who made it. And so we have this inborn need and desire and sense of
reward when we feel understood. That being said, if I'm saying
something, even if you're listening closely, I might not pick up on it unless you tell me.
Repeat it back in your words and say, did I get this right?
Yeah. Or, or, and that's, that's kind of formal. Like it can be more casual like it is with Matt,
which is to say like, I hear what you're saying. Like, that's so interesting. It reminds me of
this thing. Like to show that I'm hearing you, which you're very good at like you i've i've watched the show a number of
times like you you do this almost automatically yeah yeah practicing what's also like you know
we were talking off camera a little bit about how if you i mean i speak for myself i grew up
feeling like i didn't have any friends right that was the feeling whether that was 100 true or if
it was the story i was telling myself it just felt like i didn't have friends friends right that was the feeling whether that was 100 true or if it was the story i
was telling myself it just felt like i didn't have friends for a long time until i was like 14 and i
started to get more athletically like confident and have like skills and you know add value to
teams like then i started to feel like i had friends it was almost like because i didn't have
this i wanted to to find any way for to feel okay, what's it going to take for this person to connect with me?
Yeah.
Oh, I heard that they're having a bad day.
Let me check and ask them what's going on and how can I help them?
Oh, this is what you're going through.
And then you see, oh, someone's listening to me.
So I became really good at listening.
That's interesting.
Because I didn't have a lot of friends.
And so I would just ask people questions.
listening that's interesting because I didn't have a lot of friends and so I would just ask people questions I also never felt confident being like the center of attention and having
all the funny stories or like knowing what to say or or knowing anything to say because I didn't
feel like I was intelligent so I would ask questions because that was the easiest way to
build relationship right not by having all the answers, but having the right questions
build the deepest relationships for me. Not by being the smartest, funniest, best looking or
whatever, but by being interested in other people made me more interesting to them. And, and just
being an attentive listener. Yeah. Like you said, this goes into looping for understanding.
I didn't know this was a thing.
I was just like, oh, it's working.
Let me ask more questions.
Let me get deeper.
The deeper I would ask the question,
I really rarely ever ask surface-level questions.
If it is, it's like I quickly go deep
just because I can't stay there.
It just doesn't feel right.
So the deeper I go into more questions, people feel like, wow, no one's really asked me these things.
Right. They must care in a different way. Yeah. They must be curious about me. Wow. That feels
good for someone to be interested in what I really think or feel about this situation.
Yeah. And I did it out of like necessity out of like, uh, you know,
survival mechanism essentially as a kid, but it ended up being a, a superpower as an interviewer
now and probably as a, as a human, right? Sure. Yeah. And by the way, the fact that you weren't
good at it is something you have in common with most other people who are consistent super
communicators. This is one of the reasons we know it's not an inborn characteristic
is because if you talk to people who are the best communicators and you say you know you have you
always been a great communicator they'll tell you no like like i like as a kid i felt lonely i felt
like i couldn't connect with people i felt like i didn't have friends or my first job they made me
a manager and i completely screwed up. The reason
they become a super communicator consistently is because they've just thought a little bit harder
about it. They usually, because they have to usually because they screwed up and they're like,
I don't want to screw up again. And it's just thinking a little bit more about how communication
works that allows us to really connect with other people.
So how does communication really work? Are there different styles of conversations?
Yeah. So this is one of the big insights. And then I want to get back to questions because I think it's really important. One of the big insights from the last decade is that we tend
to think of a discussion as being about one thing, right? We're talking about my book or we're
talking about whether we should send the kids to this school or that school or where we should go on vacation. But if you look at the conversation
that happens, the discussion, what you'll see is that there are multiple different kinds of
conversations in that same discussion and that same dialogue. And most of them fall into one
of three buckets. There's usually a practical conversation, which is a conversation where
we're trying to figure out actually what we want to talk about and how to talk about it. But also maybe we want to like fix a problem or make
a plan. It's practical. It's using the frontal cortex of our brain. There's a second kind of
conversation, which is an emotional conversation. And if I come into you and I'm telling you about
where I am emotionally and you suggest a solution to me, I'm going to be like, people don't like
that. You're a jerk. Because when you're in having an emotional conversation, you want to share how
you feel and hear how other people feel. You do not want to necessarily solve the problem.
This is where you hear all the, you know, the stereotypes of how men in married relationships
struggle to relate or connect to their
wives because they're more solution
oriented. Not everyone, but
that's what you hear. The stereotype is they're more
trying to fix the problem of
an emotional feeling that someone's
having versus
being comfortable sitting with the discomfort
and just saying, I'm here for you.
Yeah, saying, I hear you.
That's like solving the problem.
That's exactly.
If men understood that you just doing that is solving the problem and sitting in the
uncomfort of that.
But, uh, that's a hard skill to learn.
It's a hard skill to learn.
It's a hard skill to learn.
And then the third.
So that's the second one, the emotional conversation.
So yeah, there's a practical emotional.
And then the third one is a social conversation.
And that's about how you and I see ourselves in respect to society, how we think society sees us, how we get along with other
people. And so one of the things that we've found is that exactly what you just said, that what's
known as the matching principle within psychology, that if I'm having an emotional conversation and
you're having a practical conversation, they're both legitimate conversations, but we won't hear
each other. Like I'm going to hear, I'm going to say something emotional to you.
You're going to try and fix my problem in a practical way. And I'm going to be like,
A, you don't hear me. And B, I don't hear you. Like I'm not paying attention to your solution.
It's going to create more miscommunication. So how do you know which one you're in?
So through deep questions and, and what super communicators do is they match the other person and they invite them to match back. And so how do we do that? These deep questions, which is exactly what you just said. A deep question is a question that asks me about my values, my beliefs, or my experiences.
And as you mentioned, like a deep question might not seem deep.
So if somebody says, what do you do for a living?
Oh, I'm a lawyer.
Oh, really?
Like, do you love practicing the law?
Like, did you always want to be a lawyer?
Like, what made you decide to go to law school?
Those are easy questions to ask, but all three of them are deep questions. Because what I'm asking you is I'm asking you, like, what are the experiences that led
you to where you are today?
you is I'm asking you like, what are the experiences that led you to where you are today?
What are your beliefs that motivate whether you, that motivate, you know, going into the law? What are, what are the values that your work means to you? And when you answer that question, you're
going to tell me so much about yourself. And then if I'm, if I'm prepared for this, I can listen.
Cause if someone says, Oh, you know, I went to law school cause like, it was really important
to me to have a steady job and I knew lawyers, there's always work for
lawyers. And so I, okay. So this person is in a practical mindset. And if somebody else says,
Oh, you know, I went to law school cause I saw my dad get arrested and I wanted to fight for
the underdog. Wow. That's emotional. That's emotional. Right. And so interesting. So just by, and by the way,
the same person might answer that question both ways, depending on what minds, how they're feeling
at that moment. But now I know like, oh, I can match this person emotionally, or I can match
this person practically. And there's, there's a kind of hear it. And you can sometimes just ask,
um, in schools, they teach teachers that when a student comes up and they're upset,
they should ask them, do you want to be heard? Do you want to be helped? Or do you want to be
hugged? And those are the three kinds of conversations. And it just feels, yeah.
What do you need? It's essentially, what do you need without saying, what do you need?
That's exactly.
If you can learn to listen and then ask a deeper question,
you'll understand what they need based on these three levels, I guess, of practical, emotional,
or social conversation. That's exactly right. And if you have trained yourself to understand
how to be a super communicator and practice it, you're going to feel like a hero to everyone you
connect with. You're going to feel like, wow, Charles really understands me and really gets it.
And he's just so easy to talk to.
Every time I talk to him, it's going to make you more likable.
Yeah.
More opportunities are probably going to flow your way.
You're going to be more top of mind for people in the future when something comes up in a
positive way.
They're going to come to you.
You know, all these different things are going to happen.
I guess you're going to have to learn how to create certain boundaries if they're, you
know, coming to you too much or using you or whatever it might be.
Yeah.
But those are good problems to have.
Yeah, exactly.
Everyone wants my attention.
I'm too popular.
Yeah, exactly.
And I find that it's also when somebody asks you what you want out of a conversation, it
feels really good.
Like I might come home and sometimes I come home and I'm like upset about work and I'm
complaining to my wife and she'll say, okay, do you want me to, do you want me to solve
this with you?
Or do you want me just to listen?
Right.
And invent or whatever.
Yeah.
And until that moment, I didn't know what I wanted.
But when she asked the question, I'm like, oh no, I want you to listen.
Like I don't want a solution.
Like suddenly now I know like, oh, the way I feel better is just by venting.
Right.
Yeah. Exactly.
I can be that way sometimes.
You say in the book that all conversations are negotiations.
Can you explain what that means?
So they're what's referred to, particularly at the beginning of a conversation.
We usually have what's called a quiet negotiation.
And it's important.
Oftentimes people hear a negotiation and they think of a negotiation negotiation. And it's important. Oftentimes people hear
negotiation and they think of a negotiation where the goal is to win. A quiet negotiation
is very, very different. The goal is not to win. The goal is simply to understand what the other
person wants. That is the win, I guess. Yeah, that's the win. I don't have to defeat you,
but we can win together. So when i came in today and i sat down with
you and we were kind of chatting about about you know how our lives are going we signaled to each
other a bunch of stuff like we signaled that we were casual with each other that we like each
other yeah we signaled that it was okay to interrupt each other we signaled that um that
we didn't have to be we didn't have to do looping for understanding. Like,
like you want,
you can hear that I'm listening to you and I can do the same.
There's all these small cues that we pick up on.
Now imagine if we had come in and I had sat down and you were like,
Hey man,
what's going on?
And I was like,
well,
it's good to see you today.
Like,
like,
Oh,
allow me to tell you about myself.
Right.
Yeah.
I mean,
and we've had that like people,
I had this last
week with someone who was here i won't say who it was but i was trying to be you know more playful
and open and you know flexible and uh they eventually got there but in the first 10 minutes
i like not intentionally interrupted but i just kind of added to something and you know followed
up with a question while they were still finishing something but it's kind of how i do a lot of things yeah and uh and he goes you know make sure you don't do that with the next
person he kind of like cued me like let me finish first right i was like okay well i'll make sure i
let him finish yeah before i add something yeah okay cool i know what the rules are now i know
the rule yeah he was kind of like hey you know it was like which we right
it was kind of playful but it was kind of like yeah okay like i don't know him so right okay
all right i want to make sure we get a good interview so i'm gonna play by your rules
well and and oftentimes what happens at the beginning of a conversation even without us
recognizing we're doing it is that we conduct experiments uh-huh right i might say something
casual to you and then i pay attention. Right. Do you
laugh back? I might interrupt you. And I, and if you say like, don't do that again, I'll notice.
Right. And the thing that to remember is that I don't think it was a, it was not a mistake that
you did that. It was not even a failure because the whole point of a conversation at the beginning
is to work out those rules. Experiment with it. experiment with it. And if some, and if every, like my wife is a scientist, if every experiment is a success, you're a terrible
scientist, right? You want to do experiments that fail and succeed. That's when you're learning.
And the fact that this guy told you that, it means that he actually told you something about how he
communicates. He likes, yeah. And, you know And as an interviewer, I don't know if you
do this when you're doing research or interviewing people as well. For me, I like to tell people when
they ask me about interviewing or podcasting, this is my 11th year now of doing this show.
Wow. It'll be 11 year anniversary, probably when this episode comes out. I always tell people that
the pre-show is the show. Us talking for 10 minutes before we turned on the camera
really determines a lot of how successful or unsuccessful the episode will go
or the energy or the flow is based on the connection
when someone enters the door,
the experience and the environment you create for them,
whether that's you or the actual
environment your ability to see them yeah before going on and if they feel heard and seen yeah
that is the show in vulnerability right 100 and and i think what so there's another idea that's
really critical in the book and that that is critical to what we've learned in the last decade which is known as emotional reciprocity that when i show you something vulnerable you
need to show me that you've heard it but if you share something vulnerable in return we will feel
closer really we really can't even we can't it's like hardware we can't not feel closer so one
person shares something vulnerable and the other one does not at least show empathy,
even if they don't share something vulnerable about them, but if they show some type of.
Well, so showing empathy is a form of vulnerability.
Okay.
Right.
So, so if you say like, you know, my, my dad passed away and I say, oh man, I totally
understand.
My, my aunt died 12 years ago.
Right.
That's not.
That's not empathy.
That's not empathy.
That's not, I'm trying to steal the spotlight from you.
I'm not trying to share it.
But if you said, you know, my dad passed away and I said, oh man, I like, I know how hard
that is.
I'm really sorry.
And then like, I've struggled with it.
I'm sure you are if you want to talk about it.
That's all it takes for me to reciprocate that vulnerability and to say to you, like,
I welcome your vulnerability.
I, I am trustworthy with it and more importantly like i'm willing to go there with you right that's when all of a sudden
we know the rule we know the rules of this conversation we know that and and when we were
talking before the show and you know i asked about martha and i asked about your life and like you're very open and
you're very you're very easy with your vulnerability and just hearing that like it tells me the rules
right that like you can be open yeah this is a conversation where we can be honest with where
we're honest and real and once you have that you're exactly right the rest of the conversation
so much easier absolutely yeah a lot of it is the first interactions you have with someone
and kind of experimenting so you can understand the rules,
the quiet negotiation,
what are the rules of this dialogue going to be.
Yeah.
Speaking of honesty and challenging conversations,
how can a super communicator
that might be avoiding hard conversations with someone that as a friend
or a business colleague or their partner, their intimate partner, how can a super communicator,
I guess, navigate conflict, disagreement, or challenging conversations? It's a, to create a
win-win. It's a great question. Right. And, and and there's a couple chapters on it and it is
sort of one of the biggest questions um and this is particularly in the last couple years as i
there's a chapter about um the story of what happened at netflix because there was an executive
at netflix a couple years ago in a meeting used the n-word um and very quite rightfully the rest
of the company was like,
this is totally unacceptable.
But it threatened to actually divide the company
because this was a popular executive.
Some people were like, look, he didn't mean it as a slur.
He was using it as an example.
And other people were like, this is unacceptable.
You can't like-
He's gotta be gone.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
And so, and it took four months for them to fire him.
But at that point,
the company was on the brink of civil war.
And so the culture wasn't good.
The culture was just tearing themselves, tearing them apart.
So they hired this woman, Renee Myers, who's an amazing woman to come in.
And the first thing that she did is she said, okay, look, instead of avoiding conversations
about race, we're going to have conversations about race, but here's how we're going to
do it.
We're going to start each conversation by acknowledging this is going to be awkward.
Like, and by the way, I'm going to make a mistake.
You're going to make a mistake.
We're going to say things that like, don't really come out the way we intended.
It's going to be hard.
And number two, everyone at this table deserves to be at this table.
So simply, you know, obviously someone who's black belongs to this table, but if you're
white, you also have a racial experience.
And like, we need to hear that experience.
You can testify, you can witness how your life has been as an expert and everybody at
the table has an equal right to talk about their own experiences.
And, and that worked at Netflix.
I mean, it actually worked really well.
It brought the company back together.
Now, when that tough conversation you were having with an intimate partner or with a business partner, where there's some conflict there.
Think about how differently it goes if you sit down and you say,
something serious I want to talk about.
Let me just acknowledge this is going to be like awkward
and I'm going to say,
I'm going to say some things
that like I don't,
they're going to come off dumber
than I mean them.
Yeah.
And I'm just going to ask
for your forgiveness in advance.
And my goal here is to like
really understand
where you're coming from
because you belong at this table as much as I do.
Send me that conversation.
There's like three things that happen there.
One is courage and vulnerability.
It's like, hey, I want to have a challenging conversation
with you.
So it's like you're being vulnerable
and you're being courageous.
Absolutely.
Talking about something challenging.
The second thing is really saying,
it's going to be hard,
and I'm going to make some mistakes.
I may not say everything,
so we're asking for forgiveness,
which is also vulnerability.
And then I guess really the third thing is like,
I really want us to come to a good place at the end.
I want there to be a win-win
from this challenging conversation.
I think Chris Voss talks about
a similar concept
around that. The former FBI negotiator, his book, I think, Never Split the Difference, where he's
like, the best way to negotiate something challenging is to say, this is going to be a
hard conversation. You're not going to like it. Starting with something around saying it as it is,
as opposed to skirting around the challenge is at least setting an expectation
and people would rather know what the expectation is going to be it's like when a doctor says
it's not going to hurt that much but then they pinch you and you're like ah that was really
painful right it's like uh i did a um i had to do like a an implant implant surgery with a fake tooth, right?
Oh, wow.
Because I had teeth removed when I was younger,
and so they put these teeth in me the last couple of years.
And I asked the doctor, I go, how painful is this going to be?
And he's like, it's going to hurt.
He was like, it's not going to be comfortable.
He's like, there's going to be pain.
As opposed, I really wanted him to say,
it's not going to be that bad. You're going to be fine. He goes, it's going to be uncomfortable. It's going to be pain. As opposed to, I really wanted him to say like, yeah, it's not going to be that bad.
You're going to be fine.
But he goes, it's going to be uncomfortable.
It's going to be painful.
And I was like, ah, this, I don't like knowing the anticipation of the pain.
But when the pain was happening, it wasn't as bad.
Yeah.
It was painful.
But the, I met the expectation because he communicated clearly.
Exactly.
And so it made me trust him more.
It made me feel safer because I knew what to expect.
And so when you're talking about this, like having this, I guess, directness of like, hey, this is going to be a hard conversation for me, maybe for you, but I want us to win at the end of this.
That's totally, and that's key.
maybe for you, but I want us to win at the end of this.
That's totally, and that's key.
I mean, you know, the last five years,
like there's been a lot of conversations about race, right?
And the difference between going in and saying,
I want to acknowledge up front that you as a black woman have had very different experiences than me as a white man,
and I want to really understand you,
versus having a conversation about race that
we've been forced into where we never acknowledge that actually we're talking about race that first
conversation goes so much better and the same is true of gender of religion of politics like it
you know when you sit down with your crazy uncle at the thanksgiving table like if you say to them
like my like we have a difference of opinion, but I really want to understand where you're coming from.
It changes the entire dialogue.
Yes.
When you were doing the research for Super Communicators, what was the thing that stood out to you the most?
That you either were doing well and it was a confirmation to what you were doing or something you realized, oh, I've had this whole thing wrong.
And a lot of people have this thing wrong. And if we just started doing more of this,
there would be a lot more harmony in relationships. I think the biggest thing, two things.
The first is listening for and engaging with people's emotional conversation.
So think about how frequently like you're at work
and you talk to someone and you're like,
how was the weekend?
And they were like, they're like, oh man,
my son graduated and I was just so proud of him.
Or, or actually it was a tough weekend.
Like I, it was like some stuff came up.
And our instinct is oftentimes to go straight
to the practical and be like, sorry to hear that.
Like, let's talk about next year's budget, right?
Let's get down to work.
But if you just take a beat and you you and you match that person and you say like ah
like tell me about your son like i can't wait like tell me like tell me what he's like or you say
like i'm i'm sorry that it was like a tough weekend like i've definitely had tough weekends
if you want to if you ever want to talk it over with me, I'm here for you. That engaging that emotional conversation, allowing yourself to recognize it and saying, like, this is actually an important part of communication.
That, I think, has been super powerful.
Yeah.
Just because I think I, in 2017, I was at the New York Times and they made me a manager.
How was that?
Well, I thought I would be great at it.
I was like, you know, I have an MBA.
I've had bosses before.
Yeah.
And I was okay at the logistics part of it.
I was a terrible manager.
I was so bad because of the communication part.
And usually what it came down to is-
But you're a writer.
You're a journalist.
I know.
You're the most award-winning expert at this.
Believe me. I like, it got me off guard too. down to you're a writer you're a journalist i know award-winning expert at this believe me i like it
got me off guard too uh and and the again and again the thing that happened was that somebody
would come and they would basically say i want to talk to you about something emotional and i would
treat it as something else you went right to practical or something or social or like problem
solving yeah and and if i had just slowed down and said, okay, look, just tell me how you're feeling. Like, I just want to like understand how you're feeling and hear it. It would have changed everything. I would have been such a better manager. thing that has really shaped how shaped how I communicate. The second thing is,
so we humans superpower is communication, right? The reason we survive as a species
is because we can communicate the reason why we've thrived and we have instincts on how to
communicate. And the other thing I've learned is to be a super communicator means learning
some stuff,
right?
Learning tools or skills.
But the goal of those tools or skills are actually just to remind us of what
our instincts are because our instincts are really,
really good.
Yeah.
And when we screw up,
it's usually because we don't listen to our instinct.
We don't listen to our gut. Yeah. Yeah. Instead yeah instead we're like we're like well you know i'm supposed to behave this way
i'm supposed to be a macho or i'm supposed to be x or y or z instead of like stopping and being
saying like what am i authentically experiencing right now because if you share that you're
probably going to connect with the other person yeah So I've tried to indulge that more.
Wow.
That's cool.
Yeah.
We've talked about looping for understanding.
We've talked about deep questions.
We've talked about the three different types of conversation.
Yeah.
I'm curious about how to have a conversation that turns into abundance of opportunities for you.
Is there a way to draw from your work in this book that people could say,
if I just started doing this thing, it would unlock a level of abundance,
financial abundance, better opportunities for me? Is there a certain style of conversation I should be having a way I should be
listening that unlocks abundance?
Is there anything from your research?
Yeah.
So,
so let me,
let me ask you a question.
Cause I know that this podcast started with you looking for mentors,
right?
You going out trying to learn.
Yes.
So when you approach someone before,
before you're a known
you're like a young guy you're reaching out to these like very successful folks
what do you do that gets them to take some time to tell you their insight you mentioned something
in this book that i that i think you're going to be referencing here in a second which is about
really creating relatability on different things from either the
past or whatever it might be. And so originally I would reach out to people through LinkedIn.
This is in 2007, eight and nine for my other business that I had. And I would reach out to
them, uh, leaders in kind of like the local community in Columbus, Ohio, CEOs and executives.
And I would email people originally and just say, Hey,
I'm inspired by what you've done. Can you help me with some advice type of conversation? Yeah.
And I wouldn't give many responses, maybe a couple of like, Hey, I have no time for you or
not right now. And then I started just experimenting other things. And I started
really researching the person I was going to be messaging and emailing.
And on LinkedIn, you could see where they went to school, different clubs and associations.
They're part of awards, hobbies, interests, also different connections that they had with you,
second and third degree. So I started saying, well, let me try to find different things we
have in common. And in the first sentence or two, I would say, you know, Hey Charles, I see where we
both live in New York city, you know, whatever it is, any commonality at all. I see we, we,
we're both, uh, you know, we're both authors. I've written a book. Um, and I see that you like
running half marathons and I just ran my first marathon last year, whatever it would
be, I would try to find three levels of commonality. Yeah. And when I started to do that,
it was almost like every person was replying to me and everyone would give me an hour to either
jump on a phone, meet in person, like whatever I asked, they would give me time. Now, based on that
conversation of time and how i showed up and my
being genuine and asking the right questions that determined what was going to happen next but it
was got my foot in the door to at least have a conversation by creating that level of common
interest from shared experiences of past and the better i got at researching and understanding based on a profile and able to communicate our shared interests, the more people wanted to connect with me.
So here's what I hear you saying.
Yes.
And tell me if I'm getting this right.
Because if you email me and you're like, we both live in New York.
Yes.
We both run marathons.
I'd be like.
It's more direct to what.
Right.
Let's say it is more direct. Let's say like, like you know i see that you're on a softball league i
played softball that's actually not like there's no reason that i'm necessarily going to reply to
your email because we both love softball that's right what you're really saying is i'm proving
to you that i want to connect i'm making overture. I'm not just dropping you an email
because you're a famous person and you're like,
I said 30 of them today.
I actually spent some time,
I'm making what's known as a bid for connection.
So one of the things that super communicators do
is they make these bids a lot,
oftentimes without us realizing it.
When I asked if Matt laughed a lot,
one of the things we know is that super communicators
laugh much more.
I saw that in the book too. Yeah. But they don't laugh in response to things that are funny uh-huh they
laugh just because they want to show you that they want to connect interesting and when you laugh back
you're showing you want to connect back you had a i think you had some research in there or something
it was like i can't remember those percentages but most people just are laughing not because
there's something funny right 80 of the time we laugh, not in response to humor, but to show someone else that we
want to connect with them.
And when they laugh back, they show us that we want to connect.
The other thing about super communicators, and I love that you mentioned that when you
got together with them, you asked the right questions.
Super communicators tend to ask 10 to 20 times as many questions as the average person, but
it doesn't feel like an interrogation because a lot of the questions are things
like, oh, that's interesting.
Tell me about that.
Yeah.
Tell me more.
Yeah.
Tell me more.
How did that work like that?
Yeah.
What did you think about that?
Why did you do that?
There's questions that are so fast that we don't register them as questions, but what
they're doing is, again, they're proving that we want to connect.
Showing interest. Showing interest, showing listening, showing, showing that I am opening myself.
There is this thing about vulnerability that vulnerability tends to be the loudest expression
we can make.
If someone is saying something vulnerable, we cannot help but listen to them.
Wow.
Right.
All reality TV is based on this principle, right? Like our brain is hardwired so that when we see vulnerability,
we have to stop and listen.
Wow.
And when you say to someone,
I see that we both love softball and like,
can I have a couple of minutes?
You're exposing a vulnerability and they listen to it.
And it makes you seem trustworthy.
So that's the thing that I would
say is that the, the thing that creates abundance is to put those bids out there to, to make that
first offering and to, to laugh at, to, to laugh at someone's joke, to show them you want to
connect, to ask them a deep question, to say like, you know, like, I understand that you probably
don't want to talk to someone
like me but like i've done a little bit of research about you and and you just seem so
interesting to me like can i just ask you a couple questions right that vulnerability that that
authenticity we hear that yeah i i understand you're probably the busiest person you probably
have no time for someone like me right i would just love to be able to ask you like two or three
questions absolutely and by the way you're probably going to say no but you know i'm just and you probably have no time for someone like me. Right. I would just love to be able to ask you like two or three questions.
Absolutely.
And by the way, we both- You're probably going to say no, but you know, I'm just-
And by the way, we both went to this high school, right?
Right, it's just something.
By the way-
It's something.
It's something.
By the way, the fact that we both went to that high school
doesn't mean anything,
but the fact that I looked up what high school you went to
shows that I genuinely want to connect.
And it's fascinating.
I don't know if you're like, where did you go to college?
I went to Yale.
Yale.
Yeah.
I don't know if someone reached out to you who's like, I don't know if you're like, where did you go to college? I went to Yale. Yale. Yeah. I don't know if someone reached out to you who's like, I don't know, 24, who just graduated
Yale, who's like wrote at the Yale newspaper or whatever, and they reach out to you and
there's just like, you know, I know that you probably don't have time right now because
you've got all these things going on, but I'd love to have five minutes of your time.
You're probably, and we both went to Yale.
You're probably more likely to reply to that person than someone at Harvard who said the same
thing. Right. And it's not just because of the association and it's because they sought me out.
They, they know enough about me to know that we have this thing in common. The fact that I went
to Yale, I haven't been to Yale in 20 years, right? It doesn't really matter. It doesn't
matter. It's not part of my identity, But the fact that they did the research to figure out where I went to college.
So if they went to Harvard and they were like, or they went to University of New Mexico and
they say like, I saw that you went to Yale and I've always admired Yale and I'm just
wondering if I could ask you a couple of questions.
Literally someone did this three days ago and I got on the phone with them and I was
like, don't become a journalist. Like the industry's disappearing, but, but it is. And it's, it doesn't matter what you
say as much as it matters. What what's behind what you say, the message I'm sending the same
way that like, when I ask you a question and you respond vulnerable, vulnerably to me, and then I
reciprocate that vulnerability,
we're making an offer to each other. Yes. And we're seeing if that offer is accepted or not.
Right. And asking someone for advice is not an offer saying, I researched you and I admire you.
Can I just ask you a question? That's an offer. That's interesting. I'm curious about this
trials. You know, you 10 years ago, your life really kind of changed in a way with Power Habit, right?
Yeah.
Like, put you on a map in a different way.
You had a successful career, but it wasn't as big of a platform as when that book came out, correct?
Yeah, it was transformational. Before a lot of success comes your way, kind of when you're trying to figure out life or your career or developing yourself, skills and talents versus boom.
I want number one New York Times Pulitzer Prize winner, three years on the Times list, 10 million copies of the book, like boom, an explosion of this world success.
How does it differ to be a super communicator after and before?
So I think the thing that happened, I will say this. So that, so 2013 power of habit comes out
and that's the same year I won the Pulitzer prize for this work I was doing in the New York times
about Apple had nothing to do with, with habits. Um, and it was, it was definitely the hardest
and maybe one of the worst years of my life. Really?
Yeah. How is that possible?
And the reason why is because it went to my head and I stopped listening to my instincts.
Like, I just got, like, blocked from, like, leading up to that.
I, like, what I found was that, like, when people start telling you how smart you are, at some point you start believing them.
And that's always, like like the path to ruin.
Right.
Like, luckily I have a wife who like would tell me how dumb I was.
So that helped a lot.
But, but it was a really challenging time.
And I think what happened is that.
You had more success than ever before.
You had more money, more fame.
Yeah.
Opportunities.
And all that stuff was great.
I feel so lucky to have had that.
Like, I feel so fortunate that this happened.
It was the lowest time for you.
I like,
you couldn't pay me enough to go back to that year and relive it.
It was so hard.
I felt,
I felt like every single opportunity,
like I felt like,
I felt like I was on top of the,
like I had won the lottery and twice.
Yeah.
Twice,
twice.
And if I,
and the only future was downhill and by the way yeah if i don't
continue winning the lottery it's because my fault because i because like i'm i'm a dummy like i
i squandered this opportunity and so i got so inside my own head that i i actually stopped
i stopped being a super communicator to be honest.
I just, I talked a lot more than I listened.
Cause everyone wanted your advice or they thought you had all the answers or whatever.
Yeah.
Or cause they were giving me money to go stand on the stage.
And like, nobody ever says like, your idea is not a good idea when you're standing on
that stage.
It's, it's when you're in a newsroom or when you're with your friends or when you're with
your spouse, they're the ones who are like, that's a dumb idea. Like,
like you aren't thinking clearly. And so a lot of, a lot of, so the reason I wrote super
communicators was because I had these experiences where I felt like I'm a professional communicator
in, and I'm doing something wrong
and actually one night i wrote i sat down and i wrote out over the past year all the places where
i felt like i had failed to communicate so like fight with my wife that we could have avoided um
manager at work and not doing a good job not doing right by my my team, uh, my kids coming to me and like, you know,
clearly wanting to like connect.
And I'm like caught up in like some article I'm writing or something too busy or whatever.
Yeah.
And it's not like I was a monster.
Like I wasn't doing this all the time, but as I looked at it, there was like once every
two weeks, once every three weeks, there was something.
And I thought to myself, like, if I was, if I'm so smart, like, why, why am I failing at this? And so the way the book started was me calling experts and just saying, like, I have this friend who's bad at communication. Right. Right. But I would say like, look, like, you know, this is a fight I had with my wife explained to me, like, like what I did wrong. And that's when they started saying, actually, there's a science behind this. You can learn this science. You can get better at this.
And so a lot of recovering from that success was learning to re-listen to these instincts that were there that the success had sort of made harder to hear.
Even the words you just shared there, recovering from the success.
There's so many people that want to be successful.
They want to make more money.
They want to have their work or their message be a bestseller.
They want to get acknowledged for their work, their efforts.
They want to win awards.
They want bigger followings.
But when you got those things initially, you had to recover from them.
It was the most challenging year of your life.
Yeah.
What is it about fame, money, and success
you wish everyone knew about?
Yeah, and a lot of people,
I mean, you've spoken about this eloquently.
Tim Ferriss has written about this.
The problem is that when you're chasing something,
and the chase is glorious, right?
The chase is pure.
It feels so good.
Like, you know what to do every morning when you wake up.
You start to think that the point of it is the thing at the end of the chase rather than the
chase itself like you're so focused i was so focused on winning a pulitzer prize like i like
wanted it so bad and and the letdown was i mean i won it. It's, I feel like it's a real honor,
but like once, once that was gone as a North star, I was like, what do I write about for the
New York times now? And so I think what happens is that was there a big hangover, emotional hangover
for you? Like how long did the, the joy last when you won the Pulitzer prize? I don't know,
30 or 40 minutes. Like, really?
Yeah, because then I started stressing about, like,
what am I going to say in the speech?
I got to think, this guy, like, how do I navigate?
Like, yeah, like, because this is the thing.
The people, like, everyone who's listening,
they're listening because they want to become better,
not because they want to be best.
Once you're best, like, that's less fun than improving yourself.
Right?
I mean, frankly, they're already best.
Everyone who's listening to this is probably a huge success at what they do.
They, they, they are successful.
And the reason they're successful though, and the reason they're happy is because they
wake up every day and they know I can get a little bit better.
And if what you're saying is here's the mountaintop once you reach it you don't know what
to do next it feels like then you need to look for a new mountain and and the real answer is just to
recognize actually the mountain is life like the mountain is like i have a great relationship with
my wife but how much better can I be as a husband?
And like, I love my kids and I'm close to them, but like, how can I know more about their lives?
Like, how can I, how can I help them more?
Like once you stop saying there is a goal I'm moving towards, then you start to recognize
like the goal is actually what you do every day.
And that's so much more rewarding.
Do you think, do you think that's so much more rewarding wow do you think and you think that's right yeah i'm
i'm curious about right before maybe the year leading up to that moment
if you could assess yourself on an inner dialogue or an inner feeling uh between one and ten call
it the self-love inner peace scale yeah 10 being you had lots of love and acceptance and
peace and joy inside of you one being you know you're miserable where were you that year leading
up to that success and where were you you know the year or years afterwards so leading up to it i
would say i was like an eight wow it felt great like i was like i was operating on all cylinders
i felt like i was doing good work.
And then I have the, and then I have the success and I feel, I just, I felt like I felt anticipatory
regret.
Like I felt like I'm going to make a mistake and I'm going to feel like the stupidest person
ever for not taking advantage of this opportunity.
Really?
And it took a couple of years for me to get back to being an eight.
And the thing that happened was I wrote another book that did not do very well.
So I wrote a book called Smarter, Faster, Better, which I think is actually, I loved
writing it.
It was a, I think it's a good book.
I mean, it was a, it was a good book to write.
It's a, it's not a good book.
It's not designed as a book. It's, it's not a good book it's not designed okay as a book it's it's too random
okay and i wrote it because i thought that it's what readers wanted from me rather than something
that i was really you wanted to create that i wanted to create and and it did fine it sold
over a million copies but it was nowhere near like the power of habit nobody talks about copies
is massive success it was great it was great yeah yeah and power of habit. Nobody talks about it. It's a massive success. It was great. It was great.
Yeah.
And people,
but,
but afterwards I thought to myself,
like the next book I write,
it has to come from a question I actually want to answer for myself.
Right.
Like,
again,
like the journey is more important than the destination.
Yes.
Like,
because the destination is one day and the journey is years leading up to it.
Like you've got to be excited about it.
Interested in it.
You got to be excited.
You got to be interested.
You're going to spend so much more time in the journey than you are in the destination.
Yeah.
So if you're only thinking about that destination, you're, you're missing a lot that's happening
around you.
Wow.
Can I ask you, because I know that your athletic career, your football career was cut short by an injury. When that happened, what was that like afterwards?
It's pretty depressing for about a year and a half. Sadness. Well, I had a surgery, so I was in a cast for six months in this position. We were in a full arm cast where I couldn't straighten my arm couldn't turn it or straighten it for six months except for every six weeks they take it off to replace it and i was
like oh my gosh you know uh six months like this living on my sister's couch making no money
and this was in 2007 and 8 when the economy crashed yeah housing market crashed so people
weren't hiring you know i didn't have a college degree yet i left early to
go put chase the dream of football right i had five credits left but i was like i didn't have
i didn't study in school though so i didn't have confidence from school to get me a job or something
so i just felt like what i'm going to do the rest of my life so what pulled you out of that like
what's the turning moment that like well i i felt i had a lot of time alone and I felt I was listening to my inner voice that's saying that was meant for more.
Like there was something more that I was supposed to do.
I didn't know what, but I knew I needed to just take action on something and course correct along the way.
So I didn't know what direction.
And I started with a list of my fears.
And I said, I don't want to be in fear anymore.
I don't want to be afraid of my insecurities.
So I started writing down a list of my fears.
Public speaking was at the top of it.
Salsa dancing was one as well.
Learning the musical instrument instrument like all these different
things that i was like i'm just not good at these things right and the downside of getting injured
is i couldn't practice my sport anymore the upside is i had all this time yeah I had unlimited time essentially to attack all my fears. And that year after that,
I went to Toastmasters every single week for a year. I found my kind of a coach mentor that helped
get me into Toastmasters that recommended it. Um, and would give me feedback on my little five
minute speeches that were horrible. And I would study every single week. I
would practice, I would rehearse, I would film myself and get better at that. I went salsa
dancing three times a week. I was like obsessing about salsa dancing at night to go to the clubs.
I did, uh, group lessons, private lessons, like anything I could do. I'm begging people to teach
me. I was listening on CD to like
a CD of all salsa music and just practicing in my mind throughout the whole day, then practicing at
night physically. Going to Toastmasters, I was being a super communicator and connector. I was
on LinkedIn all day reaching out to people, trying to connect with people to find opportunities.
So I was building relationship skills. All these things that I was insecure about, I started to apply them. And it gave me
an incredible gifts. It gave me more skills. It gave me connections. And one connection led to
the next opportunity. And so I just tried a lot of things, which I might've been distracted,
but it was a season of trying and experimenting.
And that led me to my first kind of money-making opportunity and online marketing company that I created. And I did that for many years until I transitioned into the podcast. So it was kind
of like, all right, let me just try a lot of stuff and then see where something takes me.
And what I love about that story is that it was the things that you were bad at
you studied and you became not just good at but really good at this and that's why i say so many
of these super communicators they are people who have these periods where they were bad at
communication so they felt like they had to pay more attention to it. They had to study how it works. Like, I,
I mean,
I say this confidently and with humility at the same time that I can go
anywhere in the world to any salsa club in the world and walk in randomly
and look for the best female salsa dancer and ask her to dance and have an
incredible dance with this
person that's amazing anyone in the world because i've done it right literally traveled the world
doing this to give myself these experiments i go what if i do this in argentina in mexico
in ireland in france in australia in new zealand i went i went around the world
because i was afraid to do it yeah Yeah. And I was afraid of rejection.
So I was like, I need to put myself in situations to be rejected.
And it would be an experiment.
I'm going to go in, I'm going to look for the best female dancer,
and I'm going to ask her to dance with me,
even if I don't speak the language.
And I would get rejected a lot.
And I was like, oh, that doesn't feel good,
but let me just keep going.
And I would make it a game.
I was like, how can I get them to come up to me
by the end of the night to dance with me? Cause they see how good you are.
It's just like experiments and games, right? And the public speaking thing, you know, I'm going to
Mexico next week to get a big paycheck to speak. And I would have never been able to do this had I
not had that time to practice every single week. Well, and, and so what I love about that is that
you've changed the definition of success. And I think that gets back to why that year after power
of habit came out was so hard for me is that oftentimes when we go into a conversation,
we think that the point of a conversation, the definition of success is to like convince the
other person of something, right. Or to like win the conversation or to prove that I'm right
or to feel smart, to look smart.
And the real point of a conversation
is simply to understand the other person.
It's not to agree with each other.
If you and I differ on gun control
or fortune or something like that,
we're not going to convince each other.
But if I understand what you're saying
and you feel listened to,
and if you understand what I'm saying
and I feel listened to,
then that conversation is a success. Wow.
The same way that going into a club
and trying to learn to salsa dance,
the definition of success is not that the best dancer
in that place says yes right away.
The definition of success is that you asked
seven different people and six of them turned you down
and you persisted.
Yeah, I kept going. Exactly, or that like after writing a book that you asked seven different people and six of them turned you down and you persisted. Yeah.
Right.
I kept going.
Yeah.
Exactly.
Or that like after writing a book and winning this prize that my definition of success was
doing work I'm proud of every day, regardless of whether it's going to win a prize or anyone's
going to read it, doing work that feels meaningful to me.
Right.
When we, when we find the right definition of success, it's not hard to align how to
achieve it.
It's just that oftentimes we haven't thought more deeply enough about what success actually
means for us. Right. If someone's in a, you mentioned kind of winning a conversation or
trying to look right in a conversation, what's the best way super communicators can navigate or influence or resolve the conflict
if it's just not going well maybe at a family you know holiday thing or a relationship or whatever
might be where it's just oh this is not going well there is this power move and and before i
describe it let me just say not every conversation not every situation has to be a conversation
like it's fine. If your
uncle is spouting off about some crazy lizard, people are going to take over the world.
Just walk away.
Yeah. Or just be like, Oh, that's interesting. And then just don't engage. Right. Like you don't
have to have a conversation with everyone. When I say to my kids, I want to talk about your room.
I'm not looking for a conversation. I'm looking to tell them like it's time to do. Yeah. But let's
say you do want to have a conversation.
So what's the number one thing you can do if someone has said something to you that's
aggressive or crazy or offensive to you is to ask a deep question.
And the easiest question, ask the deep question is tell me like, I, you're clearly passionate
about this.
Like, why is this so important to you?
Like,
what is it about this?
That's so important to you?
Why?
And,
and at that point,
I'm not judging.
I'm not offering any judgment.
Right.
And what that person is going to tell you is they're going to tell you not
about that topic.
They're going to tell you about who they are,
their values,
their beliefs,
their experiences. That's exactly right. Like, like if, if you're saying something, you know,
you like the Eagles and I hate the Eagles. Right. And I say to you, like, why are like,
why are the Eagles so important to you? Where you can tell me about it's like me and my dad used to
go and it's so meaningful, this relationship and these moments. Yeah. And I know what it's like to have meaningful relationships with a dad.
Right.
Like I had those moments, like that's something where we can connect.
And the fact that I think that you're an idiot for liking the Eagles, which let me just say,
I love the Eagles, but as an example, but like suddenly we're not talking about this
thing that's a source of conflict.
We're talking about who we are.
And the truth is you are an expert
on who you are. Like I can't take, I can't even question your expertise on your values,
your beliefs, your experiences. So once you, once I put you in a position where you can confidently
talk about who you are, you're just much more relaxed and you're willing to listen to me.
That's cool. What if you know the person's wrong like you're like oh man this person's just so
emotionally irrational that they're not listening to me also my side like what if you just know like
now they're wrong yeah maybe they're not but you just feel gosh whatever they're saying they're
just belief is just not the right belief so there there's been a, there's been a ton of research on this because of COVID. So, so when, um, when the COVID vaccine
rolled out, there was a lot of people who were anti-vaccine vaccine. Um, and the CDC basically
said, we tried lecturing at them and that didn't work clearly. So now we need to understand how to
communicate with folks, not to try and necessarily
force them to get the vaccine, but just to understand why they're saying no to us and
understanding if there's another way to presenting this information. And so they did a ton of
research and ton of experiments. And what they found was that the most effective technique is
something called motivational interviewing, where I ask you that why question. So if someone comes
in and they say, I'm opposed to, I'm opposed to vaccines and I'm a doctor, it'd be really easy for me to say,
like, let me show you all the evidence about why vaccines are great. Right. Let me show you.
But a better way to is to say, tell, tell me why, like a, why you've anti-vaccine, but B,
tell me why this is important to you. Like, like there's a lot of things you could have told me.
The fact that you're telling me this means that it's meaningful to you.
So they answer that question. And then I hear something that they say that indicates a value
of belief or an experience. They say, look, I'm really worried about my kids. I've heard rumors
that this vaccine can hurt kids. You know, it'd be fine for old people, but for my kids, I'm really
worried about it. Then you can say, again, you're an expert in you and I'm an expert in me. You can
say, I totally hear what you're saying. I, I have kids too. I am really worried about the safety of
my kids. The thing that's hard for me is that I see kids come in every day who are unvaccinated
and they're sick and I can't help them. Right.
And that's, that really like, it's just hard for me to see that.
Now I'm not telling you you're wrong.
I'm not telling you you're dumb.
I'm not telling you you don't know what you're talking about.
I'm telling you about my experience because we have something in common.
We both care about our kids.
It's good. And what's amazing is I've talked to dozens of doctors who have been taught how to do motivational interviewing. They say that again and again, what happens is that person starts the conversation by saying, I'm against vaccines. I'm never going to get vaccinated. They feel listened to. They feel like the doctors heard what they said, reaffirmed what they said, shared their own experiences. And at the end of it, they're like, you know, like, I'm willing to try it.
Like, I trust you, so I'm willing to try the vaccine.
And this technique of motivational interviewing,
there's been a lot of experiments in politics
around using this technique.
And what they find is that around gay marriage
was kind of the platform that was used
to try and study this.
The most effective way to get someone to support gay marriage who has said that they do not support gay marriage is to ask them what they think about marriage.
Don't argue with them.
Don't disagree.
And then say, you know, I think marriage is really important too.
And I have a friend, James, who's gay and he loves his boyfriend
and what do you think we should do
to let them experience,
like to, marriage is really important.
You and I, like we both, like,
like tell, like what do you think we should do
to help me under,
help me understand where you're coming from?
That actually is what. That worked.
It worked overwhelming.
Wow.
It worked.
It actually, it was like a 6% change in the, the electorate, in the, in the people who are polled, which in politics, you don't change 6% of minds on anything.
Wow.
And it was because they, they didn't argue.
They just listen.
Didn't say you're wrong.
You're right.
Or whatever it is.
Yeah.
What's a better solution?
How can we make this work?
And like,
we both,
we both believe in this thing.
Like we both think that marriage is so important.
And like,
I love this guy,
James.
And you know,
maybe,
you know,
someone who's gay and like,
if they came to you and they,
they said,
I love this person and I want to show my love for them.
And like,
you just told me how important marriage is.
Like,
how do we give that to them?
Yeah.
Then suddenly it's, it's, we're on the same side of the table we're solving you're agreeing with something yes we're solving this question together interesting instead of at odds
with each other right they say like marriage conflict or relationship conflict that it's never
you versus the person it's you both versus the problem. That's exactly right.
It's approaching it.
Okay.
The problem is this.
How can we solve the problem together?
Yeah.
Not you did this thing that I did or I did this thing or whatever.
Here's the thing.
Let's find a solution.
And when we're in conflict, particularly in a marriage, we have this instinct to try and
control things because like we feel conflict scary, right? You want to control. And the easiest thing to do
is try and control the other person. You're wrong. You should believe this. If you say that I'm going
to leave the room. But what researchers have found is that the way that you say, like, we're going to
focus on the problem is instead of trying to control each other, you try and control things
together, like controlling when this argument takes place, like instead of doing to control each other you try and control things together like controlling when this argument takes place like instead of doing it at two o'clock in the morning when you're both
exhausted yeah we're gonna wait till 10 a.m when we like have some time or trying to control the
boundaries of the fight right like instead of where we're going to spend new years and your
mother-in-law drives me crazy we don't have enough money like both of you sitting down and saying
okay the thing we're going to talk about is where are we spending new years not about mothers not about like money like let's control the boundaries
of this discussion together suddenly you're on the same side of the table and you might not agree
with each other right away but you feel like you are working together absolutely that's powerful
this is inspiring stuff i want people to get the book,
Super Communicators, How to Unlock the Secret Language of Connection. I truly believe that
the power, the quality of our life is related to the quality of our relationships. And the quality
of our relationships is directly related to what you're talking about in this book, which is how to communicate more eloquently, more intentionally,
and with better ease with other people and really understanding where people are coming from. So
if you want to have a higher quality life, make sure you get this book and understand
this process. And again, this is a powerful stuff, especially now when loneliness epidemic is at, it seems like an
all-time high in the US and something that we really need to think about over the next decade
of life. Are we going to get lonelier? Are we going to have less skills and tools for communication?
What's that going to do to our health, our opportunities, our lack of abundance, our safety,
all these different things. Learning to communicate is
going to be the difference between having a miserable life with your friends and families
or being in conflict or having a beautiful life based on your ability to learn these skills.
So I'm really grateful that you decided to make this your last few years of curiosity and dive into this.
And I want to acknowledge you, Charles, for continuing to pursue wisdom when you don't have to.
You've made a ton of money.
You've won every award.
You've been on the top of every list.
You've sold almost 10 million copies of your books.
You don't have to keep being curious and keep adding value to people. You've done a lot.
And so I want to acknowledge you for taking your time to craft, create, and curate information that
can help all of us. Oh, thank you. And by putting this out there, and I want people to get a copy
of this book, how else can we support you right now? Where should we go to follow you or connect
with you? Well, and let me just start by saying thank you like thank you for like welcome having such an amazing conversation
with me thank you for like being so honest and and vulnerable and real and authentic um if people do
want to follow up if if they luckily my last name is doohig i'm like the only charles doohig on earth
if they google me they'll find my website they'll find the books most importantly
on my website and actually in the end notes of the book is my email address and every single
person who emails me every single reader who emails me i read and reply to their email way
yeah yeah it's over 28 000 so far holy cow and and the reason why is because like you got to live
what you preach right like like if someone takes the time to send
me a note because they put time and energy into you owe that a debt of honor right and so like
four hours a day just replying to people it it's it's you let them build up so they just
spend like a Saturday it's sort of like going through and like reading them, but it's, I'm Charles at charlesduhigg.com.
If anyone wants to reach out, um, I'll definitely see your email.
And, and I would love to hear people's stories about how they communicate, like what they've
found has helped them be a super communicator when it's cool when they've needed it.
Awesome.
I love it.
So they can follow you, get the book, email you, um, you're not, you're on social media a little bit, but you're not on there too much, right?
Yeah, not as much as I should be.
I see you're surfing and I see you travel.
We were both in Japan last year, I think.
Oh, yeah.
Were you in Japan at the same time?
I saw you with the arches.
I didn't post my photos, but I saw your photos there.
I was like, that's cool.
Very cool.
So people can do that.
How else can we be of support and serve you?
You know, honestly, the best thing that you can do is if you read the book or
you've heard an idea that you think is powerful, share that idea with someone
else, I mean, we were talking before, like if, if I can, if I can change one
or two people, if I can make one or two people a better communicator, it's
relatively modest, but if all of us make one or two people a better communicator, that loneliness epidemic goes away.
Absolutely. Right. If there's thousands of people saying, I'm willing to have a tough
conversation with you, I want to model for you how to do this. Like I have a, I have a friend
I haven't talked to in six months and it seems awkward to give them a call, but like, I'm just going to do it because they might be feeling lonely right
now.
That is the, the truest gift that I think someone can give me and themselves in the
world is just to reach out and to try and communicate.
That's cool.
That's cool.
Um, I asked you this the last time we had a conversation, but it was a while ago.
This is a question I ask everyone at the end
called the three truths.
So hypothetical scenario,
you get to live as long as you want to live,
but it's your last day on earth.
You've created everything you want to create
personally, professionally, hobbies.
You do it all from this moment until that day.
But you have to turn the lights off
and go to the next place.
And for whatever reason in this hypothetical question. You have to take all of your work
with you. So no one has access to this book, any book, articles, interviews, it's all gone.
Yeah. Hypothetical. But you get to leave behind three lessons that you know to be true
from your whole life's experience, everything you've learned, what would be those three truths for you
that you would leave behind?
So I think the first one is,
just pops into my mind immediately is,
the more you invest in your spouse and in your kids,
or whatever your relationship is,
that's the closest relationships you have,
every single ounce of that investment will be worth it.
And it will be returned to you in like 10 X.
And there are so many times, particularly when we're chasing success that we don't invest
in the people around us.
And whatever that prize is that you get, whatever those, that money is that you get it's it's nice it it's freeing
but it's not as nice as like a wife who loves you or kids who enjoy spending time with you
or a husband who like thinks the world of you or just having like a great friend you can call
anytime that's a beautiful one so that's number one number two is i don't think i've ever heard
that one oh really that's i don't think I can remember hearing investing in people like that and how it will return in your investments.
So that's really cool.
And the second one, I think, is it, when I went to business school, um, I graduated with my MBA and I
decided to become a journalist and I was the lowest paid member of my class for the next
four years.
Like I went to Harvard business school, everyone wanted to go make a ton of money.
I was making, I think $40,000 my first year after, and I had like 90 grand in student
loans.
And, but the thing is, I was like, look, I, I'm going to bet on myself.
Like, I think I can figure out how to make, how to make a career in this.
And everyone I know who succeeded it, they've succeeded because they bet on themselves,
not because they bet on the safe course, not because they bet on what the, the wisdom of
the masses it's because they bet on themselves.
So it's bet on what the the wisdom of the masses it's because they bet on themselves so bet on yourself and then the third one is that as soon as you get something you don't really enjoy
it until you start giving it away right like like i found i was lucky enough to make some money from
the power of habit and i have tried to give to charity and I've tried to,
to support my friends. And, and I have never felt as rich in my life as when I give a check to
someone who needs it. Like, otherwise, like having a lot of money is great. Cause it's freeze you up,
but it can also be a little stressful, right? You're like, you're not spending too much taxes,
X, Y, and Z. It's a good problem to have but it's a problem but then we started this scholarship
um for new writers that who work at bookstores and like when i sent over the check i was like
man this is like the richest i've ever felt my entire life so i and i think that's true not just
of money it's true of like influence and and kindness right like like as soon as you find
something it's when you give it away that you're like oh this is something i actually have wow
that's cool those are great lessons man i love that um so wait what are yours can i add like
what are do they change they've definitely evolved over time but i would say my three truths in this moment would be to live in gratitude
and to really have a perspective of life and look at the beauty and the gratitude of the
things that are happening as opposed to the negative sides of things.
Living in gratitude always makes me feel better.
It always puts me in a state of appreciation
and when you appreciate something it tends to appreciate in the value even emotionally
so living gratitude would be number one number two would be
to make your health a you know a high focus daily, physical, emotional, spiritual health. Yeah. When you're sick,
all you care about is being healthy, you know, and it's like, there's no other problem that
matters in the world when you're sick, except for that thing. When you're healthy, you can have lots
of problems, but it's like when you're sick, you've got one problem. Yeah. Getting healthy
again. So stay healthy. because I think that'll enrich your
view of life, your relationships, everything. You'll be able to move with more ease in the world
and have more energy. And the third would be to live in service.
You know, this is really living in service in relationships.
Being a great listener, a great communicator, I think is a service. I remember when I was starting
after football and starting to meet with these kind of mentors, I didn't know what value I could
add to people. I didn't have skills. I didn't have money. I didn't have talent. I was just like,
they're meeting me, but what can I do for them? And I started to realize that asking them the right questions
where they could reflect and remember stories and share was a great service to them. It opened them
up. It got them excited. It's like, they felt like they were empowering me by teaching. Like
I was adding a service to that and therefore developing in deeper relationships. And so living in service to the people around you
is how I'd say is my third truth.
Those are really beautiful.
Gratitude, health, and service.
I'm going to totally steal them.
I like yours though.
I like yours.
Final question for you, Charles.
What's your definition of greatness?
Honestly, my definition of greatness
is that when that day comes when we die
that people show up and they say you know what i just really liked knowing this people this person
my dad died about six years ago and and i we went to the funeral and all these people showed up so
many people and they just said like i like, your dad brought some joy into my life.
Wow, that's cool.
And he did lots of other stuff, right?
But, like, I don't know what could be greater than when you're no longer there for people to say, like, I'm so glad I knew that person.
Wow, that's cool.
Yeah. That is greatness. Yeah. Charles. Thanks, man.
Appreciate it.
Thank you.
I hope you enjoyed today's episode and it inspired you on your journey towards
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