The School of Greatness - The Science of Building Confidence & Self Esteem w/Harvard Psychologist Amy Cuddy EP 1198
Episode Date: December 6, 2021Today’s guest is Amy Cuddy. She’s a social psychologist, award-winning Harvard lecturer, expert on the behavioral science of power, presence, and prejudice and best-selling author of the book Pres...ence: Bringing Your Boldest Self to Your Biggest Challenges.In this episode we discuss what it means to have personal power and how to develop it, why it’s important to overcome trauma from the past, how to stop being afraid of going after your dreams, the science behind body posture and power posing and how it can affect your confidence, and so much more!For more go to - www.lewishowes.com/1198Read her book - https://www.amazon.com/Presence-Bringing-Boldest-Biggest-Challenges/dp/0316256587Check out her website - www.amycuddy.comMel Robbins: The “Secret” Mindset Habit to Building Confidence and Overcoming Scarcity: https://link.chtbl.com/970-podDr. Joe Dispenza on Healing the Body and Transforming the Mind: https://link.chtbl.com/826-podMaster Your Mind and Defy the Odds with David Goggins: https://link.chtbl.com/715-pod
Transcript
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This is episode number 1198 with Amy Cuddy.
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, my friend. I have been wanting to have today's guest on for many, many years,
and I'm so grateful that we got to spend some time together, and she did not disappoint.
Her name is Amy Cuddy. She is a social psychologist,
award-winning Harvard lecturer,
expert on the behavioral science of power,
presence, and prejudice,
and best-selling author of the book, Presence,
Bringing Your Boldest Self to Your Biggest Challenges.
In this episode, we dove in on what it means
to have personal power and how to develop it,
why it's important to overcome trauma from the past, how to stop being afraid of going after your dreams,
the science behind body posture and power posing, and how it can affect your confidence, and so much more.
This was so much fun for me. I hope you enjoy it.
Please spread this message of greatness to your friends, to your family.
You can text people, post it on social media.
Make sure to tag me and Amy Cuddy as well
if you're enjoying this.
And let me know your feedback on this.
I want to give a shout out to the fan of the week
who left a review over on Apple Podcast.
This is from Jen.
And Jen said,
I go to Lewis when I'm happy, sad,
needing guidance, or to just learn in general.
And I haven't been this entertained properly until I met the podcast and his guests.
He throws great questions out there, and the people he brings on are the best of the best.
I can always depend on him to help me grow.
So, Jen, thank you for being the fan of the week and sharing that.
We're always looking to bring amazing, inspiring leaders of the world on this show
to help us all grow, myself included. I'm here to learn just like you. And I'm so excited for
today's guest. So in just a moment, I bring you the one and only Amy Cuddy.
Welcome back, everyone in the School of Greatness. Very excited about our guest,
Amy Cuddy is in the house. It's so good to see you. Thank you, you too. We have so
many mutual friends and as I'm getting to know you more we have a lot of things
in common. Both former professional athletes. You both have family members
who are at Berklee School of Music. My brother was a professor there. He was a
professor of jazz. Taught jazz violin there. was a professor wow okay of jazz jazz violin there your
son is a student at burke school music for the guitar um both love psychology and human behavior
and are both trying to make an impact on the world so we both had surgeries recently this year
and we both love roller skating you do every sunday growing up my mom would take me and my
siblings to the roller skating rink and i fell in love with it we did it until i was probably like
13 oh i love the roller skating rink love roller skating fun did you have like slow dance nights
slow dance they would always do a few songs yeah going backwards was like the coolest thing to do
when you're nine you know i know i'm older than you it was like it was like j coolest thing to do when you're nine, you know? I know I'm older than you. It was like, it was like Jesse's girl,
like Rick Springfield.
We had like the greatest 80s girls.
Yeah, exactly, exactly.
But I'm excited you're here.
And you have, in the last, I guess, nine years
when your TED Talk came out, was it nine years ago?
10 years ago?
Nine years ago.
Nine years ago.
The second most watched TED Talk of all time.
It's third.
It goes back and forth, huh?
Yeah, it's third.
Who's keeping score?
But, you know, it's the time.
I feel like I don't, like when people introduce me and they say second, I'm like, it's third.
I just want to be accurate.
And then the next month it's third.
Yeah, yeah.
I think that's right.
But it really, it's been a cultural phenomenon.
I saw you in, mentioned in my favorite show, Ted Lasso.
Oh, God.
I love that scene.
You've been in Grey's Anatomy five different times.
You've been in all these different shows
with references to your message and your work
about really how to improve confidence
because a lot of people are feeling insecure.
They're feeling like imposters.
They're feeling like they don't belong,
which is a big part of your talk.
And I think we were talking beforehand
about how the last year and a half,
people have been more of a funk
and they feel like they really don't belong and they're not sure how to gain that confidence.
I'm curious, what have you learned in the last year and a half about getting back to like just being a confident human being in the world?
Not even like performing well, you know, in a sport or business, but just like how do you just walk around with confidence? I think, well, I think that in the first couple of months of the pandemic,
people were in this phase that psychologists call the emergency phase of a long-term crisis
where, you know, adrenaline's pumping basically and the threat is concrete
and people have shared goals and they're really working well.
It's sort of like in a war, it would
be like the first battle. And so people study combat soldiers and find that during battles,
they perform really well because they're on the same page. That's the threat. This is what we're
doing. Teams work well. Good leaders are great leaders. So that's how people were for the first
couple of months. They're like, I can do this. And then you deplete what psychologists call surge capacity,
which is this sort of network that keeps us going during acute threats.
And so we depleted that.
And then we all sort of went into this regression phase or, you know, I mean, at different times.
But it had a lot to do with the depleted nervous system, but also just the lack of control.
We just, we lost control of our lives.
I mean, there were external forces that we couldn't control.
And that lack of real power,
I think translated into a lack of the feeling of power,
of this more internal sense of agency and power.
And so people, you know, really started kind of shutting down.
So for me, I think as we kind of reemerge,
and it's not going to be like, this is the end day.
Let's go celebrate in the streets.
We know it's not going to, it's this,
we're in this constant flux right now, which is also draining.
But as the only way we're going to reemerge is if we regain that
sense of personal power. I mean, people have to feel that they have the ability to make change
in their lives, to do things. I know it seems so simple, but we talk a lot about well-being
and we're usually talking about happiness and you know good physical health
health and lack of stress right that's that's like high well-being but i think another component
that's really important is this feeling of power and i don't mean power over others personal power
right not power over others not zero-sum power but just personal power. How do we get to, what does that even look like?
What is personal power and how do we start to build it?
I think it is the feeling that you are entitled
to bring your best self to challenging situations,
but that also involves knowing who your best self is.
And that's difficult too.
But it's like, so it's,
I think often we don't even feel
that we sort of deserve to be there.
And so we can't fully show up.
So personal power is the feeling
of sort of being in control of our internal resources,
to bring our skills and abilities forward,
to be the most sort of generous, open-minded version of ourselves.
That's personal power.
But if we don't believe that we are deserving to have power,
how do we get there?
How do we change the belief to deserve it?
And then start to have that?
I mean, and let me say first, I don't think personal power is not a substitute for skills
and knowledge. And I think that sometimes people mishear me when I talk about this topic and think
that I'm saying you can just, you know, you can it you can't like that for me personal power is is is about it is
about revealing the skills that you already have but it also gives you it
gives you more bandwidth to build more skills right so it's self reinforcing as
well because there's a lot of people that already have developed skills but
they don't believe that they're deserving
or they don't know how to effectively
communicate those skills.
Interesting.
That's right.
There's so many people that I've heard from that say
they've had a dream for five, 10, 20 years,
and they have the skills to do it,
but they don't have the courage to put it out there.
So is personal power connected to courage as well? I think it absolutely is. And it's,
sometimes they say, sometimes we have to get out of the way of ourselves so that we can be
ourselves. Like we get in our own way. But, you know, I'm now writing about social bravery,
right? Not physical bravery, but social bravery, like standing up for people who are being abused,
who are being mistreated.
And it is hard, and it's harder in many ways
than physical bravery.
There's not a lot of glory that comes with it.
You're risking being kicked out of the tribe.
But think about it in terms of bystander intervention,
like the studies of when do bystanders intervene
in an emergency? The best predictor of, of adult adults intervening with another adult
as being bullied online is sense of power, right? So yes. So when people feel powerful,
they also feel more courageous. And so I think, you know, that's that, that, yes, I think these things are very, very similar.
And I think that we are in a collective sense of powerlessness right now.
And so I just think it's everywhere.
And people seem like agitated at each other.
They turn on each other.
We are turning on each other.
I mean, you see it at the sort of group level, but also at the individual level.
And that's what happens when people feel powerless.
So what is the thing that we should be thinking of first?
Is it, let's focus on healing the wounds of our past that have made us feel powerless.
Let's work on developing new skills to make us feel more confident and competent let's
focus on knowledge uh i don't it's hard to say like what's first for for it's idiosyncratic to
the person so certainly for many people you know powerlessness comes from trauma and obviously you
know there are different parts of the dealing with trauma process, but part of it obviously is understanding what happened and where that came from and that that's not who you were born as, right?
And that you are allowed to undo this, right?
So there is that.
And I don't want to neglect that people who are suffering from post-traumatic stress,
they have to be able to deal with it.
What happens if we never undo or heal the traumas
of the past, whether it be little micro traumas
that just continue to build or bigger traumas, abuse,
accidents, big breakups, things like loss?
I mean, they just, they build on each other.
It's sort of that simple.
things like loss. I mean, they just, they build on each other.
It's sort of that simple.
Like, you know, it's, you know, traumatic events,
the idea of triggers, right, is that when,
when something reminds you of that traumatic event,
that sort of neural pathway gets activated
and all of the feelings that went with that trauma
that happened when you were 12
are now being activated when you're 40.
And they're not helpful to you now, right?
They make you more powerless.
Right, they might have helped you to kind of survive
when you were 12, but not now.
So, you know, I think that we,
I'm sensitive about this because
people have just endured enormous trauma.
Yes. And so I don't, some of it you just never get rid of.
Right.
But not addressing it, I think, only shuts us down more
and probably makes it harder for us to know ourselves in many other,
like we become afraid of ourselves. probably makes it harder for us to know ourselves and many others.
We become afraid of ourselves.
And that makes it, I think, harder for us
to be a good partner in a relationship,
a good member of society,
to be somebody who's helping others.
What do you think we can do to reveal ourselves
to ourself better so that we can fully accept who we are
or what we've been through or had done to us
or done to others or whatever it is,
the shame and guilt we're holding onto
so that we can have more personal power
in an authentic way moving forward in those relationships.
Well, I think one, I mean, this is just a simple exercise.
So there's this research on what we call self-affirmation.
And I don't mean like in,
I don't know if you remember the old Stuart Smalley skits
on Saturday Night Live.
He was like a motivational speaker and he'd say like,
I'm good enough, I'm smart enough,
and doggone it, people like me.
It was daily affirmations with Stuart Smalley.
And by the end, he'd be in a shame spiral. So he'd be trying to talk himself out of it by saying I'm great
I'm great I'm great right that doesn't really work if you don't believe it
exactly in fact then you're just lying to yourself and now you trust yourself
even less right so saying I'm great when you feel self-doubting in a way is the
worst thing you can do what's the best thing you can do. What's the best thing you can do? Well, here's one of my favorite tasks.
So actual, like the theory of self-affirmation
in psychology is not about saying I'm great
or, you know, I'm gonna win this event, whatever.
If you don't give it away, right.
It is about affirming to yourself
what your values are, who you really are.
What makes you you.
So the task is so simple,
and there's so much research on this,
that doing this simple task helps people perform better
in totally unrelated tasks.
So the task is to first list maybe the top three things
that you care most about, that really,
if I took them away, you would just no longer be yourself, right?
What would those be for you?
Couple things.
I have a kind of pathological optimism.
Like I think, I am upset when somebody does something
that hurts someone else in a way that some people
might think is naive, but I'm glad I feel that way.
I am so hurt that people behave badly.
I'm troubled by it.
And I'm glad that I'm troubled by it
because I'm gonna keep on trying to change that.
I think it's a kind of earnestness
that people find it irritating,
but I'm totally okay with earnestness.
And actually, this is one of the things that Amy Purdy and I have in common.
Like she is like this too.
You know, she's just like sad when people are mean.
She's got such a great heart.
Totally.
But she does stuff.
She's not just sitting there being sad.
Anyway, I would say that that is one of the things that makes me who I am.
And if somebody said, you're naive
and you really can't move forward in life
if you hold onto this belief that people can be good,
I'd be like, well, then I'm no longer who I am, right?
So the task of self-affirmation
is you list like three of these things
and then you rank them.
And you may be only ranking them
based on how you feel today.
But then you take the top one,
you write a paragraph about why it matters to you,
and then you write another paragraph about a time
when you were able to express that value,
that belief, and what it felt like to do that.
That's it, that self-affirmation.
And so some people might say, being creative, like art is important to me or, you know, helping people in my community, whatever it is.
When people do that, they then are less at the beginning of the semester perform better on their
midterm exams and, you know, have lower levels of epinephrine than students who don't do that task.
So self-affirmation is basically you shoring yourself up. And what happens is that when you
go in to take, like, say, this calculus exam, you know that no matter what happens is that when you go in to take like, say, this calculus exam,
you know that no matter what happens during that exam, you will still be you when you leave.
Like no one's going to, this, how you do in that calculus exam is not going to change who you are.
Your value of who you are. I'm still going to be this person who wants people to be nice to each other.
So whether you win or get an A or get an F or you lose, either way, you still
have that value. Exactly. You're affirming the value that you love about yourself, not related
to the result or the outcome. Exactly. But if you said like, oh, I'm going to say that I love calculus
and then that would never work, right? Right. So it's about knowing who you are.
You can't be great at everything, sorry.
You can't be perfect at everything.
Right.
And that's okay.
Yeah.
Right?
You are allowed to be you.
Absolutely.
It's interesting.
It reminded me of, I had Kobe Bryant on the show. And he mentioned that earlier in his kind of basketball years when he was a teenager
he one summer he was like playing at a basketball camp and he didn't score one
point and he was like 13 or 14 I can't remember exactly but and then four years later he's in the
NBA right so he was like 12 or 13 he didn't score one point and his dad before he
went to this like kind of basketball camp said you know whether you do well
or not I'm gonna love you like your results that are not determined based on
like my love for you so like I want you to do well but just have fun and get
better just improve every day and work hard and your your value is not based on the
result yeah and he scored zero but he felt like okay I just want to go back
and keep playing because I love the game and I want to improve that's not because
I'm looking for approval from my father Wow and I think it's as friends partners
parents if we can continue to instill that value of the person not their results then I think that
it's going to help people want to get better results right so without feeling like they're
never good enough right what is what do you think like what would you list
so the thing of my values or the thing that I want to get rid of or what do you know sorry
no your values like if you were doing self-affirmation, I mean, what would you feel,
like what's the thing that, you know, makes you who you are?
I think that I really care about people, like having a big heart.
I really care about people.
I want people to feel good about themselves. I want people to have the confidence and the courage to go after
what they were uniquely built and designed for
and have, you know, the curiosity to explore what it could be yeah for me it's you know we were talking about this beforehand that
it's I wasn't the biggest fastest strongest but I had dreams and I pursued them to as far as I
could in sports yeah and I have no regrets where there's a lot of guys that I knew that I played
with were way more talented than me, that didn't have the courage.
And I felt like, man, but you kind of wasted this potential,
just like to see what could have happened.
Whether you failed or not, or succeeded,
doesn't matter for me.
But it's, what was I able to create in that process?
And I want the world to be able to do that
for whatever it is for them.
Whatever that dream is for them,
it can be, it doesn't have to be some grandiose dream
of being some top athlete, but whatever that is, you them, it can be, it doesn't have to be some grandiose dream of being some top athlete,
but whatever that is,
you're unique in this world.
Can you go and have the courage
to figure out what that is?
And it's scary.
Yeah.
So I care deeply about people
overcoming those challenges.
I love that.
And so,
but imagine how it would feel
if somebody was like,
I'm taking that characteristic away from you.
Like you no longer have that.
I would just be like, I don't know, egotistical.
But you know that you would be a shell.
Yeah, it'd be tough.
And so you know that.
So the great thing about self-affirmation
is it's kind of the flip side.
Well, I'm telling you that that's never gonna
be taken away from you.
Right.
You can always be that person.
You will always have that value. And so that helps you then to be taken away from you. Right. You can always be that person. Yeah. You will always have that value.
And so that helps you then to be more present and less anxious and to perform better in
other situations.
Why do you think people are so afraid of the pressure of not performing well or failing
or getting made fun of or embarrassed or laughed at or being told, said, I told you so.
You shouldn't do this.
You're not good.
There's a lot.
Like you kind of answered the question in the question because they are afraid of being told, said, I told you so, you shouldn't do this, you're not good. There's a lot of, like you kind of answered the question
in the question, because they are afraid of being told.
They're afraid of not doing well
because they're afraid of being ashamed,
like of being ridiculed, of being,
that I think, like it's mostly about
how others perceive them.
Like the fear of being rejected,
the fear of being kicked out of the tribe,
which is a terrible feeling, right?
Like people are more afraid of that
than they are of physical injury.
And it's sort of related to what we were talking about
before the camera started rolling,
which is that this idea of bumblers and pointers,
which a psychologist named Dan Gilbert
just casually talked about once on Twitter.
He said there are two kinds of people,
bumblers and pointers.
The bumblers are the ones just trying.
Even if they don't do it well, they're trying.
And the pointers are the ones making fun
of the people who are trying.
And so, and he said, I would rather be a bumbler.
I would definitely rather be a bumbler than a pointer. But people are afraid of the pointers, right?
Yeah, the critics that aren't actually bumbling.
Right, exactly.
Not only fumbling around in the world.
They're not bumbling because they're not doing anything.
Right, except for critiquing.
Exactly.
And I think it doesn't divide quite as easily as that.
Right, right, right.
But, you know, that's what we're afraid of.
But why are we so afraid of pointers?
People pointing at us when it's like,
why in general are people so afraid of,
like it's two people or one person
that's holding them back from a dream they've had for years?
It's, I mean, you know,
I mean, I can make an evolutionary argument
that we're attuned to that kind of rejection
because it would indicate
that you're at risk of being kicked out of the tribe.
And if you're kicked out of the tribe,
then you can't support yourself.
Fend for yourself or something?
Exactly.
But that's not true anymore in this world, right?
No, right.
So we still have like, you know,
some sort of primitive responses
that are no longer adaptive.
And, you know, we're not like, for example,
and I'm sort of moving away from the shame a bit to fear, you know, when we go into that fight, flee or faint mode, that is adaptive if you're being chased by a tiger.
But usually we're not being chased by a tiger.
Being pointed out by someone on the Internet is not that scary.
I mean, psychologically it is.
Well, it is.
Physically it's not. At the same time, I don't want to dismiss the emotional damage of actual abuse and bullying.
Yes.
But criticism.
Criticism.
Yeah.
Right?
Is not actually deadly.
Right.
But our bodies, our nervous systems feel like it's deadly.
our nervous systems feel like it's deadly. So is there a psychological strategy that you've seen
or research that's shown how to actually practically overcome this?
I mean, there are little, I'm very much about like the micro,
like one of the little things that you can do.
I mean, I'm not a clinical psychologist.
I'm a social psychologist, so I can't speak to therapy.
But I do think it's about the way we carry ourselves.
Like realizing that how we carry ourselves, you know, like physically how we move.
How do we interact with people?
Like how do we carry ourselves?
That shapes who we are.
Physical body language.
Physical body language and even just how we choose
to interact with say someone who's serving us a drink
at a restaurant.
Do we choose to look them in the eye and say thank you
and recognize them as human?
Or do we not have the time for that?
Carrying ourselves in a way that is sort of
both kind of powerful and also,
with grace, I think makes us more powerful.
Yes.
And makes us kinder people.
Yeah.
Sorry, I got onto a different sort of.
Sure, you're talking about the micro instances
on how to overcome this if we're feeling like
we've got something we wanna put out in the world
but we're afraid of one or two pointers, critics,
that aren't gonna physically beat us up
or kick us out of their lives, but how do we,
what's something we can do?
Let's take an actual, you know,
I often ask people, what is your biggest challenge?
Like, what is the situation that you approach with dread?
And that you execute with anxiety,
and that you leave with a sense of regret?
Oh, wow.
And so if you look at all, so dread,
that is you projecting yourself into a future
that's not gone well.
So you're borrowing trouble, basically.
Oh, wow.
You know, the anxiety in the moment
is you thinking more about what the other person
thinks of you than what they're actually just thinking.
You know, you're worried about what you said a minute ago
or what's gonna happen afterwards.
You're not able to be in the present.
And then regret is what we call post-event processing.
You're going over it wanting a do-over,
going, I didn't show, I wasn't seen.
They didn't see who I am.
You know that feeling like, oh, they didn't see who I am.
And you wanna go back in.
And like in a rom-com, you get to have a do-over.
Right, right.
In life, sometimes you don't.
So that sense of regret becomes like a piece of baggage
that you carry into the next similar situation.
And then you're worried,
because you don't want to do the same thing,
so you put more pressure on yourself.
What if we could approach with a sense of composure
and execute it with a kind of calm and grounded confidence and leave feeling
satisfied. Even if we don't get the outcome that we want, we know that we did everything we could
to show up. They saw who I was and it wasn't the right fit or whatever. And I can accept that
outcome. So you can both accept the outcome and not have that extra piece of baggage i was watching a
tiktok recently about um a mom like asking her daughter to go and i can't remember do something
by herself in a store and this was like an 18 or 20 year old i think she was going to like rent a
car or buy a car or something like that she was an older you know teen or early 20s and she was frantic and she was like I cannot
go in there alone will you come in there and do this for me will you come help me I can't do this
alone the sense of like social social interactions online but the inability to actually be in front
of someone and be rejected or looked at funny or learning how to navigate in person social interactions.
Do you feel like people are going to be struggling
with overcoming these fears more
because of the internet and social media?
Or how can they continue to navigate
that fear of like the tribe in person, not just online?
I don't even know where to begin.
It's because there are also
first of all like if i make any statement about where i stand on that
i'll there will be a million people telling me i'm absolutely wrong but got it but that's like
and and the truth is is complicated right like and and in some ways social media like so you know my son's on tick tock and i can't believe the the courage he
has now to just put a video out there and you know sometimes it goes and sometimes he does it doesn't
and he's not he's fine if it doesn't if it doesn't go if it doesn't move so i think that that's
actually been really good for him um it's he doesn't feel rejected. He just feels like, well, sometimes it works
and sometimes it doesn't, but I'm never gonna know
if I don't put myself out there.
So I think in some ways, young people have become
more courageous at trying things.
I mean, yes, I would like them to spend less time on it.
And I like that he's doing music.
He's like putting out, my kid's doing quality content.
Yeah, exactly, yeah.
But I think that in some ways it's actually given young people an opportunity to be braver.
To express themselves in certain ways.
Yeah, exactly, and to sort of be rejected and see that they've survived, right?
Yes.
But rejection, the rejection that I'm talking about is a video, a TikTok video not going viral.
It's not that it's, which is not the same as nasty comments,
like being rejected and trolled.
That's a different kind of rejection, right?
And that's not good.
Yeah, yeah.
What about the, just the anxiety of putting yourself
out there, whether it be going into a store
and just interacting with people, whether it be going into a store and just interacting with people
whether it be going giving a speech online putting up you know something human interaction in person
and feeling embarrassed or rejected or made fun of yeah how do we learn to overcome that anxiety or
stress about it is it is it as simple as just you got to practice it and just know that you're alive? I hate to say something so simple, but yes.
Like I am just not afraid to embarrass myself.
That's good.
And I have to sometimes like hold on to that.
Like because I think it was really important
for my son to see that like
to me modeling that was really important not being embarrassed yeah being like you know making
mistakes being goofy like doing something goofy in the grocery store and being okay with it yeah
another one is is it's being okay with like chatting with a stranger and maybe they don't want to chat and that's fine,
then you move on, but why not try?
I think doing those things,
first of all, I think it's great to model that for kids,
but I also think it's good to do it just to see that you've survived.
You're fine.
No one cares.
No one even cares.
They're not remembering this for the rest of their life. You might have made're fine. No one cares. Exactly, no one even cares. And in fact, you might have made somebody smile.
I'm all about creating social challenges for yourself.
Like if you're terrified of-
I think that's a good one.
I mean like chat with someone on the train
or, and I know it's hard right now.
Right, right.
But do something consistently.
Yeah, or like ask someone ask you know if you're if you're I don't know why grocery stores seem like places
where lots of silly things can happen um you know if if someone's like checking out checking you
what are you checking you out checking you out but that sounds funny checking you out. But that sounds funny, checking you out. You know what I mean? Like checking out your groceries. And they are looking down and they seem grumpy.
Instead of deciding they're not friendly,
consider the possibility that they're having a bad day
and literally like pause and say, how are you?
Or like try to connect with them without being intrusive,
make eye contact with them, being intrusive make eye
contact with them thank them you know make eye contact maybe they'll just be
annoyed and not make eye contact back but I feel like that kind of thing is
really important to try and those are things that are create sort of social
benefits for others as well absolutely this is something you've been studying
for I guess decades now which is just mastering confidence, body language, overcoming these challenges. What's been the biggest challenge for you in the last 10 years that you've had to overcome, knowing the research and practicing these things and talking about these things yourself? What's been the challenge for you, whether career or personal or? I think the challenge for me has been adjusting to,
you know, being more well-known than the average academic, right?
Right, right, right.
And actually, you know, leaving academia, you know, I still teach, but I'm not,
you know, I'm not.
Full-time.
No, you know, I teach in executive education at Harvard, but I'm not a full-time. I teach in executive education at Harvard, but I'm not a professor.
I'm a lecturer when I lecture.
Leaving was hard.
Really?
So, I mean, it was a big leap to leave that security.
But it just was not the right world for me. But I think the biggest challenge really has been dealing with becoming higher profile and the kind of backlash that I endured as a result of that.
The criticism.
Which is not, yes.
Well, yeah, I mean, criticism's fine, but bullying is not.
And I know that this is common.
In fact, it happens to a lot of junior professors who give TED Talks.
Really?
Yeah.
It's funny.
Somebody just wrote to me yesterday.
She has a popular TED Talk.
And she, you know, she said that at her university, people started calling her TED Girl and like sort of talking down to her.
Even though it was a popular, well-respected TED Talk.
Well, because it was popular, right?
Like it's like if it had been,
if it had not really hit the radar,
it would have been okay.
Really?
But because she had some success.
Yeah.
So people had to sort of diminish her in a way,
you know, and I experienced a lot of the same stuff.
So what became hard for me was talking to colleagues,
right, like standing up for myself.
And you, you know, the truth is we need to stand up for each other, right?
When people are in an acute bullying situation,
they really can't stand up for themselves.
But I'm still figuring out how to engage
with other people in academia
who weren't necessarily bullies,
but might've been bystanders who didn't do anything.
And, but to be able to say,
I still deserve to be having this conversation.
I deserve to have the beliefs that I have.
I deserve to defend, you know,
this massive area of research on body-mind feedback,
of which, you know, like I contribute a tiny bit to, just because these
people don't like it doesn't mean I can't say, well, here's why I do believe it.
That's really hard for me.
That is the thing that I would approach with the most dread, I think.
Were you able to implement and integrate some of your own practices and teachings when those
things happened to you? When you were were getting whether it be criticism or bullying or
You know any of this stuff you were facing were you able to actually integrate the yeah body language for yourself?
I mean for me the thing that works the best is
I mean certainly I you know I do like I walk expansively like I you know
I like long strides before this kind of stressful thing,
I won't sit down with my hands in my lap.
Like even putting your hands behind your chair,
like this is a big thing.
Kind of opens you up a little bit.
But it forces you to open up just doing that.
But the thing that works the best for me is breathing.
And I know there is so much on breath work now
and I don't wanna to, you know,
I'm not an expert, but the relaxation response that's triggered by certain breathing patterns
is incredibly effective for me. And so basically it sends your nervous system into this rest and
digest state, which is the opposite of fight, flee, or faint. And so the one that I like best is called 4-7-8 breathing,
and we can do it right now.
Yes, do it.
So basically for four counts, you inhale.
For seven, you hold your breath.
And for eight, you exhale.
So I'm going to count and you do it.
Okay, four inhale.
Seven, hold it.
Eight, exhale.
Okay, cool.
One, two, three, four.
One, two, three, four, five, six, seven. One, two, three,
four, five, six, seven, eight. And then you repeat that a few times? Three times. Like
at one time you feel it. It will put me to sleep at night. If I'm relaxed, it makes me sleepy.
But if I'm anxious, it calms me down.
So that just, I mean, there's just so much research
on the relaxation response and breathing.
But what I think is interesting about it
is that that kind of breathing is expansive.
Just like what I talk about,
like expansive posture, that's expansive. You're
breathing deeply and slowly. You're taking up more temporal space. You're expanding your,
you know, like your physical body more. And when we expand, we tend to feel more confident,
more powerful, more calm. Should we always, not always, should we be frequently be in an
expansive postural state when we're, you know, kind of nine to five-ish out in the world
doing our activities?
What we should be in is having good neutral posture.
So before stressful events,
that's when I say find a private space.
I think I said in the TED Talk, find a bathroom stall,
which I honestly think just like I thought of at the moment,
but I can't tell you how many emails I get
from people who are like, I was in a bathroom.
Or like people who see somebody in a bathroom
with their arms up in the air,
they're like, are you power posing in there?
I think Ted Lasso is saying,
she goes to the bathroom and does that, right?
Oh, I know, I loved it so much.
That's so good.
You can't imagine, like I love that show
and I had no idea.
You had no idea it was coming.
I was like sobbing. I love that show, and I had no idea. You had no idea it was coming. I was sobbing.
I was like, oh my God.
It's so cool that you, Brene Brown, and Esther Perel, who I've had both of them on as well,
were all featured in there.
And I'm just like, that's amazing.
I know.
And I think all of us were absolutely beyond thrilled.
I mean, to have that.
And I know I was telling Brene this, but the first time I saw that show, at the end of the first episode, I turned to my husband and I said, I love Ted Lasso.
And he goes, that's because you are Ted Lasso.
And I was like, well, I guess I had good self-esteem then.
But I am Ted Lasso, and so are you.
Yes, exactly.
It's funny because Brene says that she's Roy Kent.
Yeah, I guess.
She's Roy Kent. You, I guess. She's Roy Kent.
You can see a little bit.
But anyway, yeah.
So before these stressful situations, the ones that you approach with dread, that's when you find some space and really make yourself big.
Expansive.
Like whatever feels comfortable to you, expand.
You know, in front of other people, it comes across as really aggressive and domineering and off-putting but if you're in you know the privacy of your
own bathroom stall or office or whatever you can do whatever you want you don't
to worry about cultural norms or you know putting people off in your our
everyday lives we spend so much time like this, you know, with our phones.
And that is really bad.
First, it's bad for us, just our posture.
And it's creating this sort of fixed thoracic stoop.
But, you know, physiotherapists used to only see in like elderly people.
And now they're seeing it in like 15-year-old boys from, you know, gaming, things like that.
And that's something, like you can't just be like,
oh, I'm gonna sit up straight.
You have to work that out.
For years working it out, yeah, and align your body.
Totally, but so it's not only hurting our posture,
but I believe that it is affecting our mood.
And so even just set up your workspace
so that you can be more expansive.
But we neglect our body language when we're alone
because it's language.
And if we're alone, we're not talking to anyone.
We're talking to ourselves though.
But we're talking to ourselves, right?
So it's really important, I think,
for us to be minding our posture.
Also, there have been a couple of meta-analyses recently, which basically
are just studies that look at all of the studies on a topic and come up with a sort of an average
effect size. Like they say, yes, this is a real effect, and this is how big the effect is, right?
So studies that have looked at meta-analyses of power
opposing studies show really clearly that it affects the way we feel. Like so, so exp,
you know, expensive. By shrinking our body.
Shrinking versus expanding. Affects the way, whether in a positive or.
More expansive, more confident, more powerful, psychologically, you know, shrinking, less powerful, less confident. But what's interesting
is that there are two meta-analyses. One of them shows that more of the effect is driven by the
difference between neutral and expansive. The other one shows that more of the effect is driven by the difference between, you know, contractive and neutral.
So I'm not, we still, in short, there's evidence that both of those things matter.
But certainly neutral is better than contractive.
Shrinking, yeah, yeah, contracting.
Exactly, exactly.
And it's probably, you know, even if you were doing a meditative breathing technique,
if you're closing your body off and breathing, you're still probably limiting yourself.
So you can be breathing and trying to relax the nervous system, but you're closing your body off.
It's hard to feel more alive and confident and calm, I'm assuming, right?
Absolutely.
It's funny.
This woman wrote to me.
She said, I teach people public speaking, and I had this student who was really stressed out, this man.
And so I got into power pose for a minute,
and he said it made him feel worse.
Really?
And she said, but then I watched, we watched the video.
She said, I videotaped him, and we watched the video,
and I was like, were you breathing?
He said, no, I didn't breathe.
I held my breath the whole time.
Oh, my gosh.
He's like, well, that's not going to work. Yeah, I didn't breathe. I held my breath the whole time. Dr. Randall Bells, Jr.: Oh my gosh.
Dr. Amy Moore, M.D.: He's like, well, that's not going to work.
Dr. Randall Bells, Jr.: Yeah, you're going to pass out.
Dr. Amy Moore, M.D.: Exactly.
So he had been like completely still in this power pose and she, I mean, she was laughing
about it, but yeah.
Dr. Randall Bells, Jr.: How long should we be in an expansive postural states for?
Dr. Amy Moore, M.D.: You know, it's funny.
I really emphasized two minutes in the TED talk because that's what we had done in those first studies.
I think actually less is more.
Like we've gone out to five minutes.
I think that it just gets awkward.
It's that silly, like you feel weird,
but also like your body, you get sort of stiff.
So I just think it's,
I don't even think you have to be still.
I think you can be moving in an expansive
Way. Yeah, I think there's it's the whole I
I sometimes wish that I hadn't called this power posing because it was so it's such a sticky idea
Right. It's got alliteration. It's like great. Yeah, exactly exactly
Exactly, but but at the same time people got fixed on on like
standing like wonder woman or in the victory pose and it's not it's being expansive is more expansive
than than this yes you know it's it's in whatever way works for you yeah the tighter you are the
probably less likely you'll perform relaxed right. And football training before games and in practices,
they would always tell us to be loose.
You know, to move our body, to be flexible,
to be expansive, but in a loose state of mind
and a loose body, not like rigid
or you can't catch the ball if you're like too tight.
So it's how can you be expansive, confident,
and relaxed at the same time.
Yeah.
And practicing that in life with the power pose, I think, is great.
Yeah.
And Ted Lasso, she did it great.
She was like, ah, right?
It was like a monster pose or something.
It was awesome.
I think she was like, ah.
It's amazing, yeah.
She made this facial expression that I thought was great.
She's a great actor as well.
I wonder if that was like, so if they were like, just do a power pose.
Off the cuff, yeah.
And she made it up.
She probably did.
I just feel like.
She was great. She was great.
She was so good.
Was there ever a time where you didn't implement this strategy
and you realized, oh, I could have done better had I done this,
but I just thought I'd had it figured out?
Only, you know, so I really love public speaking
and it doesn't, it's like my favorite professional thing to do.
It doesn't make me nervous.
That's good.
So for me, I think a lot of people assume that speaking is the thing that makes everyone nervous.
So for me, it's not that.
What makes you nervous?
You know, interpersonal conflict, like one-on-one.
Um, you know, interpersonal conflict, like one-on-one or, um, I get nervous in like smaller groups. I don't, I don't know. Three people I find much more stressful than talking to,
you know, 3000 people. Um, so I don't like to sit in a room for a long time before I'm going to get up and talk to people.
I don't want to sit there in a cold room.
These rooms are often cold.
And, you know, you're going like this and you're totally sort of stiff.
And then you get up and you're like, oh.
So I've had that experience enough times to learn I need to be moving around, I need to be warm, not cold, and come in sort of,
you know, right before I get up to present or to discuss. So yes, I've had the experience of being
still and kind of, you know, hunched up for too long. So we've got the affirmations we talked
about, self-affirmation, affirming who you are, not just making up lies about yourself. We've got,
what's the actual technical term now? Not power posing. It's postural feedback.
And I think the idea is just to keep in mind your posture is, there is feedback to your nervous
system telling you either you're, you know, I'm safe or I'm not safe.
That's kind of that simple.
You're safe or you're not safe.
It's interesting, I learned a technique 11, 12 years ago,
about 2009 when I got into the business world
and I started going to events and conferences
and networking events.
I remember feeling like I'm a nobody.
I'm this young kid who was just playing football.
I still didn't have a college degree. I was 24.
And going into a room with all these professionals and executives.
I was like, why would anyone talk to me?
I kind of had this feeling early on.
Right.
And I learned from someone.
He said, every time you walk into a door, just act like you're trying to connect the top of your head to the door.
And just walk in.
Oh, yeah.
And stand.
And every time you see a door at any time in your life
just practice you're walking you're entering a room just with your you don't have to put your
chest all the way out like crazy but exactly shoulders back just a little bit your head just
a little bit taller like you're trying to touch the top absolutely just and he said walk in with
a smile yeah and every time i do that i practice it just all the time now it's like it just makes
you feel a little bit better more courageous to actually say hi to someone, a smile, a little taller, your shoulders back just a little bit.
Yeah. It really helps with that. So it's something that I learned early on that helped me kind of
just gain courage. Well, it's, you know, in, in ballet, it's, you know, it's very much like
imagining that you're shooting, but, but another technique that I think works really well for me
that I learned in ballet is you're looking at the people in the balcony.
Uh-huh.
And that opens you up.
Yes.
And it also makes you more aware of this interaction.
And there's also kind of magic and chemistry in the interaction, right?
You're not alone.
Yeah.
And that's a whole other,
well not a whole other thing, but it's, you know,
that ability to be present with people is like,
it feeds on itself, right?
Like you become, the energy level picks up more and more,
the more you can build that intimacy with an audience.
And so by opening up to them,
you're much more likely to create that intimacy.
Yeah.
And so, okay, so we've got the self-affirmation to self.
We've got the postural feedback.
If we can start implementing these strategies.
Yeah, I got another one.
Give me another one.
All right.
I love this one.
So this was research done by a woman
named Alison Wood Brooks, who's at Harvard Business School.
She's a professor.
And she was like a wedding singer
before she went to grad school.
And she just didn't get nervous.
And she was really interested in stage fright.
Like she was like, why do,
I know it's kind of funny, she's like,
this isn't hard for me, why is it hard for you?
No, but she's very confident.
But she was really interested in stage fright.
And she realized that- And learning why people have stage fright. Right, and she's a confident. But she was really interested in stage fright. And she realized that-
And learning why people have stage fright.
Right, and she's a very positive person.
And I think that what happened,
and I don't want to tell her story for her,
but my understanding is basically that
she realized that for her,
the nerves, the,
so basically, emotions have two dimensions. Arousal level, like it's a high arousal or two dimensions arousal level like it's a high or low arousal
and positive negative i mean there's more than that but like think of it those are the two
dimensions and emotions can be clustered around those so she realized that she was having the
same high arousal um feeling in her body before she
sang but for her she interpreted as excitement not anxiety yeah and so she
realized that it's not that she really was having a totally different
experience it's just that she was like I must be excited to do this it's the
interpretation exactly so she did. She had people do singing contests using like,
what was the video game? Rockstar? Rockstar? Might have been Rockstar. Yeah.
She had them do like debate competitions. I think they did a math test,
maybe different studies, but she assigned them to say to themselves before they did the thing,
to say to themselves before they did the thing,
I am anxious or I am excited.
And the people who said, I am excited,
just said, I am excited to myself.
They did much better.
So she calls that reinterpreting anxiety as excitement.
So reframe it.
So before you go on, her name is Alison Wood Brooks, hyphenated.
And yeah, so anxiety is, reframe anxiety as excitement.
And this is definitely one of my favorites. And I think that that helps a lot of people.
The other one is, and it's kind of related a bit,
is that a lot of times when we go into these stressful interpersonal situations where we
know we're being evaluated and where the stakes feel high. So like a job interview or, or giving
a talk or speaking in class or teaching, whatever it get, the dread leads us also to interpret
other people to see them as potential predators, as people who don't
want us to do well.
Yes.
And the thing is, mostly in life, people actually want other people to do well.
Yes, there's schadenfreude.
We sometimes like to see somebody fail, right?
Right.
But for the most part, people are there because they want to learn something.
They want you to do well.
And so it's not comfortable to watch people not doing well.
And so when I started teaching at Harvard, I taught at Kellogg for a couple years.
And that's an intense place.
It's a great school.
But there's something about Harvard Business School that has this reputation.
You know, so I got there and I was like, I don't know, 32 or something.
And anyway, I was like mid-30s.
Yeah.
Not that much older than the students, right?
Right, right, right.
You're still like, you look like you could be a student.
And I was, you know, I'm not big and, you know, blonde.
I'm a girl.
All that stuff.
So people were like, you cannot show weakness.
Really?
Like, you cannot.
A drop of blood in the water, the sharks will come in for the kill.
That's bad, huh?
So that was sort of, that's what I was told, right?
And so I prepared like crazy for that first class.
For these 18-year-olds, you mean?
Well, no, no.
They're like 20.
This is HBS.
So they're like 28.
Okay, got you.
They're pretty smart.
They're pretty accomplished. They've already accomplished, so they're like 28. Okay, got you. They're pretty smart.
They're pretty accomplished.
They've already accomplished stuff in their life.
Yeah, so I really prepared like crazy,
but I realized that I was approaching it
with this like, as a warrior.
And like, first of all, that's not who I am.
And second-
The roller skating warrior.
Yeah, exactly.
The roller skating deadhead warrior.
Yeah, exactly.
I like people people you know
so like why why would i assume that they are looking for me to fail that they're like sniffing
blood that doesn't make sense they paid a lot of money to go here they work like crazy to get in
here they want to have a good experience not a bad experience so I decided to go in with blind trust, like blindly trusting them
and not try to sort of fake this, you know, badass, you know, personality that isn't who I am
instead to go in and be who I am, assume they want me to do well. And so I went in on the first
day and I said to them,
here's what I've done.
Here's what I love doing.
You know, I've not done this before.
And I'm a little nervous about this,
but I think that we are all in this together
and I think we want to have a good experience.
So just kind of letting you know where I am.
And I feel, I'm in touch with so many of the students
from that year, that first year, I think.
Was this pre-TED Talk?
Yeah, it was like a year or two,
a couple, three years maybe before my TED Talk.
And that really taught me that if I trust them,
they give it back to me, right?
You build trust.
So I go in with blind trust.
I mean, if you think about like in life,
you can either in these situations trust or not trust. So I go in with blind trust. I mean, if you think about like in life, you can either in
these situations, trust or not trust, like which, which mistake would you rather be make? Would you
rather trust and be, and be wrong or not trust and be wrong? Like I'd rather trust and be wrong.
Usually it's not that dangerous. I mean, there are some situations where you probably shouldn't
trust, but I'm talking about just like average situations.
Why not just trust and occasionally you'd be wrong
and somebody actually is.
Right.
Right?
They humiliate you or they are whatever, but you move on.
Totally, but if you go in and you don't trust anybody,
nothing good comes of that.
If they're trustworthy,
you're not gonna build a relationship with them.
If they're untrustworthy, you're not gonna build a relationship with them. If they're untrustworthy, you're not gonna build
a relationship with them anyway.
I would just rather make the error of overtrusting
than undertrusting.
Wow, that's cool.
What did you learn from that first year
of teaching at the crazy shark school?
First of all, they're not.
They're people just like everybody else.
They've got insecurities too.
And 75 to 85% of HBS students at some time feel imposter syndrome.
Like they're insecure as well.
Like, I mean, they're no more insecure, but they've got the same stuff that they're dealing with.
And, you know, there are a lot of like really wonderful people in there.
And the more you give them trust and get it back,
the more they're building trust with each other.
So I just learned to go into every audience
and assume that they want me to do well.
And that of all of the things, it's funny,
because my son, he gets performance anxiety,
like probably every musician.
And it's funny because people are always like, can't you, like, like probably every musician. And it's funny, because people are always like,
can't you, like this is your thing.
I mean, to me, they're like,
how does your son have any performance?
I'm like, well, he's human, but also I'm his mom, right?
So it's not easy to learn this stuff from your mom.
Of course.
But that's the one that works the best for him.
I said, why would you go in to a performance situation,
a musical performance situation, and assume they want you to fail? They don't want you to fail.
They want to see you do well. They want to be there. They really want to be there. Right,
exactly. So he says that's the one that helps him the most. And just having that thought in
your mind before you enter that, they want the best for me. They want to have a good time.
Yeah. Something I was nervous for a long time was public speaking. And I did a social challenge for myself where every week I went to Toastmasters.
Yeah.
And the first week I wrote out word for word my five-minute speech, which was called an icebreaker.
I'm not sure if you're familiar with Toastmasters or if you've been before.
And I remember saying to myself, I prepared for two weeks for a five-minute speech.
It was so terrified.
Yeah. for a five-minute speech it was so terrified yeah again I was 24 going in
to a room of really great speakers who were all much older than me executives
you know professional speakers and I chose that one I went to five different
Toastmasters clubs in Columbus Ohio and I chose that one because it was the
scariest for me that's and I was like I don't want to go to the easy place.
I want to go to the place that's going to really challenge me.
And it terrified me.
I remember I wrote it out word for word, and I practiced it for a couple weeks.
And I could not look up the first time.
I had to stay here looking here word for word and dripping sweat, just humiliated and embarrassed.
But luckily, they're there to give you positive feedback.
It's not a bad crowd.
Right, they are.
That's true.
It's not like I'm putting myself in front of critics
that are really going to make me feel bad.
They're there to say, you know, here's what you did well.
Here's what you can do better next time.
But I did that for a year until I felt like I had the confidence
and I could go out and get paid to do it.
And for years, I would go speak in front of big audiences
and get paid well, but I still had a little bit of nerves.
And I was like, why have I not gotten rid of this?
And I called one of my coaches.
This was probably like five years ago.
I called one of my coaches and I said,
I don't know why I'm still nervous before these events.
I've been doing this for so long.
I shouldn't be, I'm not beating myself up.
I shouldn't be nervous now.
And he said, the reason you're nervous
is because you're still
worried about what people think about you. You're still thinking of you, like making sure you
remember that joke or make sure you're funny here or you don't mess up. What if I forget this thing
you're thinking about? That's the distraction, right? And he was like, if you just put your
attention on how can I be of service knowing I'm not going to be perfect? How can I help and add
value and entertain or educate knowing I'm going to forget a joke or knowing that the pause isn't
going to be there or knowing that I'm going to stutter? Just let it go and just be of service.
And when I came from that place, I was like, I'm just going to serve. And I know I'm not going to
be perfect. I love that. And that has helped me let go of those nerves. I still feel like, you know, the excitement feeling.
Yeah.
But it's more like, okay, every time I feel like I'm nervous or anxious, this is all about service.
Yeah.
And my friend Rory Vaden says it's hard to be nervous when your heart's on service.
That's so true.
I love that.
And so I just give your heart to the audience.
I mean, it's very related to this trust piece, right?
Like they want to get something out of this. Um, that made me think of two things.
Uh, one was that I, I once asked the, the person that at HBS, who I thought was like the best
teacher. I said to her, when did, when did you realize that you, like, it's clear that she knows she's really good at this.
When did you realize that?
And she said, I went from being a good teacher to a great teacher.
The moment that I stopped thinking about what they were thinking of me and started just thinking about what they were thinking.
Oh.
Right?
So I cared about what they, like I started watching their faces.
Were they confused about something that I said?
So it wasn't about me.
It was about the content and helping them to learn.
And I thought that was really good.
You know, stop thinking about what they're thinking of you
and start thinking about what they're thinking.
Why is that so hard for us to do in general?
Well, I mean, it's back to that social rejection piece.
Because we're environmentally like, sorry, evolutionarily attuned to looking for signals that we're going to get kicked out. And I don't know why we're still like that. And I don't know
of a culture where people aren't like that. It's not like I can think of a society where people
don't have that happening. So that was one thing you said you were gonna say. Do you remember the second thing?
No!
I wanna come back.
Thought that was a great example.
Oh, no, I did remember, actually.
It's that people love,
okay, so the best performances are performances
that have never happened before
and will never happen again.
So in front of a live audience.
When you go see a show, part of why I love
The Dead, The Grateful Dead, The Dead and Company,
is because they have
never played the same show twice. Like every
single show, thousands
of shows, is completely different. They've never
played the same set list.
The entire set list twice.
They always change it. Never. Yes.
Wow. Might be one song
different in every place. No, no. It's really. Wow. Might be one song different and replaced.
No, no. It's really mixed up.
Really?
It's really changed.
That's cool.
And there are all these jams in between.
So, I mean, there are just no two shows that are even close to being identical.
That's cool.
And that's part of what people love about it.
They don't, yes, sometimes they forget the lyrics.
But that's because they've got like, you know, 500 songs in their catalog, right?
But nobody cares.
In fact, like last year, I mean, sorry, last night at Chula Vista,
Bob Weir forgot the lyrics.
It just like for a minute and people loved it.
The crowd like roared.
They love that.
They're cheering him on to remember it again.
Yeah.
And it's just like, you're real.
You're here with us.
You are being here with us.
So I always say, give people an experience that has never happened before and that will never happen again. That doesn't mean you have to
rewrite a completely new speech, but know that audience, know who they are. Um, and don't be
over-scripted. You know, people want it to be a bit raw and you know, they remember the performance
where somebody, you know, dropped their guitar pick and had to pick it and didn't have another one or that's, it's like, I got to see that thing.
Yeah. The mic went out and you had to scream or whatever.
Exactly. So I think that making mistakes actually is, is not only not bad, but it's,
it makes you more human and relatable.
More interesting.
More interesting. Right. And more memorable.
For sure. More memorable.
more interesting more interesting right and more memorable for sure more memorable identity came to my mind just now um and i'm curious about your research or just your personal
findings on shaping our own identity with ourselves shaping our identity having an identity
and how that helps us how that either helps us or hurts us with our confidence and our personal power.
Well, I mean, there's so many different kinds of identities that we can have.
I think that when we get, I mean, there's... Is it important to have a specific type of identity?
Is it important to have a wide range of identities, of things that we're into?
Tell me what kind of identity you're talking about.
Like, an identity is, you know, I'm a man from Ohio.
I grew up in Ohio.
You know, I love football.
You know, I love park.
You know, all these different things that are likes, interests, and that we identify as.
Well, I think that the self-affirmation stuff is all about values.
And so your identity is your values.
And that I think is great.
Being true to your values is great.
The values I'm talking about are not values
that need to be flexible.
They can be wide, right?
But I think that when we get really identified
with a certain group or interest, it can get dangerous.
I mean, I think first we stop thinking for ourselves and we start becoming
much more, much more concerned about remaining part of the group than about our value, our
personal value. Exactly. And so we compromise ourselves to be in the group. And, and I think
that that can be really dangerous. Like we're losing our sense of agency for sure, but also,
you know, might be doing things that are, are not, are not good, like not healthy for us or for other
people. So that, that I think can be, I think we need to stay in check around, around identity
in that way, just because it's what most people in the group are doing doesn't mean it's what I
need to be doing. What is something we can do, I guess, to reflect on or give ourselves feedback on,
on a yearly or monthly or daily basis that supports that?
I think, and this is not empirical, I'm just, this is kind of off the cuff, but I've been
thinking about this a little bit lately, like, you know, thinking about what are my identity
groups that I chose? Like, what are my chosen identity groups? And, you know, are there things that have happened in those identity groups that
I don't agree with, but I, where I didn't do anything to correct it, or I, I kind of let it
slide. Like, how can I keep myself, how can I keep myself honest about these identity groups?
I keep myself, how can I keep myself honest about these identity groups?
Right.
You know, so.
Because you may like, you may like the, you know, the Grateful Dead.
Right.
But there may be things that happen at the concerts that you don't acknowledge or you don't like.
Yes, exactly.
You don't want to be, well, I'm never going to watch or support the Grateful Dead again
because this happened.
That's right.
But how can I make sure, yeah, I can enjoy a hobby and an interest, but not the identity of that thing.
That's right. And yeah. And so I think that, yeah, there are things that happen at shows that I haven't been liking lately.
Like, you know, we talked about this a bit, like people being very territorial in the front space, which is called the pit, you know, about their space and being really nasty to each other.
It kind of goes against, to me, the whole sort of essence of that community. And I get angry about it. Like, you know, and I,
part of it feels like righteous anger. Like I want you to not be that way, but I also need to check
myself. Like, I don't want to contribute to the anger either. But it also doesn't, because it's imperfect,
it doesn't mean that I have to leave it.
Yeah.
Right?
Because I get into that trap sometimes.
Really?
I sort of get into the like, oh, there's something wrong.
I probably shouldn't do this anymore.
And I need to accept that nothing's perfect.
And I'm still allowed to love imperfect things
as long as I'm checking myself.
Right.
Does that make sense?
Yeah, it makes sense.
No, it makes sense.
Yeah, yeah, for sure.
We talked about this a little bit earlier
about the kind of fake it till you make it thing,
but it's more of like facing it till you make it,
I think is how you reframe it, right?
I say fake it till you become it.
Fake it till you become it.
Yeah.
Yeah, because it's hard to,
well, it's,
why is fake it till you make it. Fake it till you become it. Yeah. Yeah. Because it's hard to, well, it's, you know, why is fake it till you make it harmful?
If it's like, let me just keep faking and hopefully it'll happen.
I think the problem, and it depends sort of, you know, the slick salesperson who, like,
really does not buy what they're selling,
but they're going to sell hard. Right, right, right, right.
And never, and they're going to be faking,
they will, yeah, making it might be, you know,
being promoted or making a lot of money, but they're still faking it.
Faking it till you make it means faking it, getting the promotion, and continuing to fake it.
Fake it till you become it.
And it's also about what you're conveying to other people.
Faking it till you become it, the way that I think of this, is you're tricking yourself into believing in yourself.
You're tricking yourself into,
like incrementally,
be a little bit more courageous.
Every time, yeah.
And eventually you become the person
that you are in your mind's eye as your best self.
So you're not becoming, you're basically,
it's like, I kind of think of it visually like you're this,
we're not just shells,
but think of yourself as a shell and you're sort of half full.
Faking it till you become it is sort of filling that shell
more and more and more.
You're partially, you're partially, but you're not fully.
You're getting there.
Because imposter syndrome is a term that's been thrown around a lot in the last couple of years.
I'm hearing it all the time.
Everyone's saying, not everyone, but a lot of people are saying,
I feel a sense of imposter syndrome, like I don't belong, or I'm not ready, or I don't have the, whatever.
For me, I felt like I had nothing at the beginning and I was just like,
I'm just going to throw myself in. And if it works great, and if it doesn't, I have,
I have nothing to embarrass myself because I had nothing. I was living on my sister's couch for a
year and a half. I had no money. I didn't have a college degree. So I was like, there's nowhere
else I can go that's worse than where I'm at. I didn't have anything to lose. I was just like,
I have nothing to lose. So I'm going to throw myself in there
and hopefully certain things happen.
So I didn't feel like an imposter.
I felt like I'm an experience
and I need to figure out how to gain experience
by learning skills, by finding mentors,
by reading, by consuming content
and developing more confidence.
But why has imposter syndrome
become such a popular phrase?
And is there a way to actually overcome it?
Or are we always going to kind of feel like imposters if we're constantly growing?
Because there's a new thing that next year I've never done that I'm going to try to do
that I'm an imposter because I've never done it.
So I'm going to feel a sense of, oh, well, I've never done this.
So here we go.
If I'm growing as an individual, right?
We should always feel it in a sense.
Definitely.
So I think, okay, to the question about,
well, I don't know why it became,
it's again, it's a catchy, it's a sticky,
it's a sticky term to describe an experience
that's pretty universal.
And so it became, it's funny,
because to social psychologists,
it's like a thing that we've talked about
since the 1970s.
Not that I was talking much in the 1970s,
but it was coined in the 1970s.
And so in academia, it's something we talk about.
But it really got sticky in the last,
like, you know, I do think that like,
I talk about it in the TED Talk, I think that was part of it.
I think there were some other books that came out
that were talking about it.
And it just captures the experience so well,
of feeling like an imposter in your own life, right?
But the interesting thing is that,
well, first the woman who coined the term, Pauline Clance,
who was teaching at Oberlin at the time in the 70s.
Really? In Ohio?
Yeah.
That's great.
Yeah, Ohio.
That's great.
My identity.
Your identity?
My identity.
Exactly.
She, well, first of all, she said,
she says that she wishes she had not called it a syndrome
because a syndrome implies that it's pathological
and rare, like it's unusual
and it's actually so not unusual.
It's common, yeah, yeah.
There are different estimates,
like 75 to 85% of people feel imposter syndrome.
Also, women do not experience it more than men.
Men are just less likely to openly talk about it.
So when it's anonymous, which is a burden, I not which is a burden I think they're the only ones feeling it
yes they fell alone and then women get the burden of being like oh you always
feel like imposters right so it cuts both ways in bad ways but you're I don't
think many people stop feeling it if they keep on trying new challenges so in my book i interviewed neil
gaiman the amazing author of you know many many many many bestsellers and and um you know super
award winner yeah and um anyway neil uh really had bad and by part of why i interviewed neil
uh, really had bad in my part of why I interviewed Neil is he's a lovely human, but he's one of the only men who talked openly about having imposter syndrome. And so I wanted to talk to him for that
reason. Um, also he has a way with words, but he said that in the beginning, when he first started
writing and was successful, he kept being afraid that somebody was going to come and tap him on the shoulder and be like, are you Neil Gaiman? And he'd say, yes, I am. Say,
oh, sorry. You know, we made a mistake. We're taking all this back. And then he said he finally
got to the point he'd written American Gods, which was like his big novel. He said like that was the big grand novel. And he said he
thought he'd finally conquered imposter syndrome. And he spoke to one of his mentors and said,
I think I finally conquered this. And he said, you never I finally conquered writing a novel.
And he said, you never conquer writing a novel. You just conquer writing the novel that you're
writing. And so next time. So now a lot of his books have been turned into really wonderful television
series and he's a showrunner, right? And that was a whole new thing for him. So he said, it's just,
it just pops up. You see it on your desk. You're like, oh, there's the imposter and he'll go away.
And so you keep, you experience it every time you
start something new. It just goes away faster. You don't, you don't get hung up on it. You don't
become anxious about the imposter, the imposter feeling. And I think the more you're living your
life and creating and building, if you can start to reflect on like, look at all the times I was
feeling an imposter syndrome and look what I was able to create.
And the results I got and the success or the impact that I had from making this thing or creating this thing, I can do it again.
Exactly.
It's like looking backwards to see the results.
Right.
So you have this transferable sense of agency.
Yes.
Like self-efficacy is, I mean, the way it's defined in psychology is like, it's your feeling, you know,
it's your belief that you're able to do this certain thing.
Agency is wider than that.
And this feeling of being agentic, like,
and I think that when you conquer imposter syndrome
again and again, that feeling does become transferable.
Right, and you're like, this is a totally new thing,
but like, I've never been part of this rodeo, but I think I'm going to be okay.
Right, right.
Yeah, exactly.
You just know, okay, I've done this before many times.
I can do it again.
And if not, I'll be okay.
I'll be all right.
I'll survive.
Right, exactly.
I'm curious.
I'm a big believer that self-doubt is the killer of dreams.
I think when we doubt ourselves, we're not breathing correctly, we're shrinking, we're not taking any actions, we don't have the courage because we're just constantly in self-doubt.
Do you think we can ever have too much self-belief?
I mean, that's a tricky question. First, I think what you call self-doubt, I think of
as personal powerlessness. And what happens is that it activates what we call the behavioral inhibition system.
So it leads us to be more pessimistic, to be more fearful, to think more narrowly, less creatively, to not take risks, to see people as predators.
It inhibits us in every way. Even physically,
like we can tolerate less pain when the inhibition system is activated.
Interesting, really.
Feeling personally powerful activates the behavioral approach system, which does all
the opposite. So it's like instead of seeing a challenge as a threat, we see it as an opportunity.
Interesting.
Instead of seeing other people as potential predators, we see them as potential allies and collaborators. You know, we feel optimistic instead of pessimistic.
Now, you could, you can get to the point of feeling too powerful. And, you know, in that case,
I think that one of the things that, that what we know that one of the things that happens is that people,
they're not as good at taking other people's perspectives.
So they're not as good at perspective taking when they become really,
and this is a lot about social power.
So when people have both social power and personal power,
they're not as good at taking other people's perspectives because they're- I mean, their feedback or their information or their ideas or-
Just understanding what other people are-
A feeling.
Honestly, it's really more about social power.
Got it.
As people gain social power, they're less dependent on others.
And so when you have not much social power, when you're at the bottom of the hierarchy,
you really need to be able to read other people's minds.
You really need to understand what they're thinking because you're dependent the bottom of the hierarchy, you really need to be able to read other people's minds. Like you really need to understand what they're thinking
because you're dependent on them.
And as you gain more power, you're less dependent.
And so you're more likely to stereotype people.
You're less likely to be able to take their perspective.
You just kind of forget what it feels like
to be where they are.
And so I think that's that's a problem yeah you
know I think you know there's a lot of research on overconfidence versus
confidence and overconfidence is I don't even really fully understand like where
it comes from and I don't I to me I don't think it is overconfidence. I think it's a different thing altogether.
It's like ego.
Yes, or like arrogance.
You know, it's an overconfidence,
arrogance is often coming from a place
of feeling threatened and defensive
and it's a smoke screen for insecurity, right?
So yeah, I say it's a smoke screen for insecurity
and it's a way of deflecting. So, yeah, I say it's a smoke screen for insecurity. And it's a way of deflecting.
It's a way of preventing people from challenging you because honestly they don't find you pleasant.
They don't challenge you because they don't like you, not because they believe you.
Right.
So, you know, I always say confidence, not arrogance.
Confidence allows room to be wrong. So you can hear people.
When you're confident, self-affirmed, you know who you are, you're able to hear feedback. You
don't feel like you have to steal the microphone all the time. Yeah. Confidence plus curiosity.
It's like being willing to be, okay, I feel confident, but also I might have a beginner's
mind. Totally. And if you're confident and you're excited about an idea, you should want that to be as good as it can be.
And so, you know, if you're around people who are offering you good feedback, confidence allows you to hear the feedback, which I think is really interesting.
So I love watching Shark Tank.
Yeah, it's great.
I love reading the body language.
Jonah, my son, and I used to watch this when he was younger.
He loves reading the body language and guessing who's going to do well.
And I know you've talked to people about the body language of lying.
It is so fascinating.
I think this body language of arrogance is really...
You can read it. You can feel it.
Yeah, and it's also...
Body language is also
non-verbal um vocal cues like a certain way of speaking and but it's it's like it's when they
don't buy what they're selling if you don't buy what you're selling nobody's going to buy what
you're selling you know if you don't believe your story nobody's going to believe your story
not at least in the long run how do you learn to buy what you're selling? Well, first of all, when people say, well, how do I, how do I sell something that I don't
believe in?
I say, don't sell it.
You shouldn't be doing it.
You don't find a different vision.
Right?
I mean, you can try, but I don't think you should.
You need to check in with yourself about that.
Like I, you know, the whole, like it for, okay.
There are different reasons why we don't buy what we're selling.
You could not buy what you're selling because you're actually self-doubt.
You doubt your ability to sell anything.
Okay.
Right?
And that's different.
Than the product or the vision. Right.
Or it's just not interesting to you.
It's not something that you would use.
But it's not that you think there's anything wrong with it.
So there are a number of reasons that you can fix, right?
You can learn to understand, well, this product, you know, really is helpful
and valuable to these other people.
And I need to understand their perspective, right?
That makes you a more effective sales person.
But there are also reasons that should lead you to go I shouldn't be selling
it right so you need to figure out like is it because I don't I don't relate to it or I don't
believe in myself or is it because there's something wrong with this thing who are the
people on shark tank that you see after their one or two minute pitch where you're like they're
gonna get someone interested you know if the numbers line up and everything works out just
based on their body language their belief what do they have in common where you're like, yes, I would invest in them?
There is, well-
Or I like them.
Okay. There are three kind of characteristics. The first is that they believe, they just,
you feel that they believe their story, that they just so deeply buy what they're selling. They
really care about this. And it's with their body language. Sometimes they say it,
and I'm not sure that helps when they say like, I mean, and I don't think they're necessarily
lying when they say it. Saying it isn't, you can just feel it. They convey it with their body
language. Their energy, their postural feedback, everything. Right. There's also, they're confident and not arrogant.
And so they are open to feedback.
They're not like, this is the greatest thing in the world.
Completely. Like the arrogance is just, it just kills the,
it kills the whole, all the energy.
No, why would a shark want to invest
if you're clearly not open to feedback?
If you think you have all the answers. Right. And if you start conveying that right away, you're out.
Yeah, why are you here in the first place?
Right.
So you have to buy what you're selling and convey that.
You have to be confident and not arrogant.
And that is, like I said, you show your confidence through your openness, your willingness to be open.
It's not insecurity. It's not like, oh, I mean, if you don't know the numbers, you show your confidence through your openness, your willingness to be open. It's not insecurity, it's not like,
oh, I mean, if you don't know the numbers, you're out.
You do need to know the numbers.
You need to know certain things.
But you can't know everything, that's why you're there.
Right, because you need support.
Totally, and the last thing is that
their verbal and nonverbal language is synchronized.
So what they're conveying with their words. So what they're conveying with their words,
the feelings they're conveying with their words
match the feelings they're conveying
with their body language.
And if you see somebody trying to demonstrate
deep care in an issue,
but their body language just doesn't line up with it. They're crossing their arms, they're turning to the side or whatever.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Or, or, um, or if they're trying to convey, um, I don't know, like, you
know, confidence, but they're showing fear that when we, when we are, you
know, fully present and just, you know, in, in it, that stuff becomes synchronized.
We're not scripting our body language.
We're bad at scripting our body language.
We're best at scripting our words,
second best at scripting our facial expressions-ish,
but below the neck, we forget about it all.
Like, you know, people don't know what to do
with their hands, for example, right?
There's like, I don't know what,
there was a 30 Rock episode about this.
About not knowing what to do.
Will Ferrell is just like, he's like in the-
I can't remember, I just remember there were so many,
yeah, there was a whole episode about not being able,
not knowing what to do with your hands.
But, and people really don't pay attention
to what they're doing with their feet and their legs.
Like, so I don't know if you-
How important is body language with the feet and the hands
when building trust and confidence with others?
It's funny.
Have you ever had Joe Navarro on?
No.
Do you know who he is?
Former FBI agent.
I want to have him on, yes.
You should.
He's great.
He's such a character.
I love Joe.
He's a great guy also.
But he has many body language books, but one of them is called What Every Body Is Saying, which I love.
Great.
It's clever.
And he really gets into the nitty gritty,
but he says one of the things as an FBI agent,
I think he did counterintelligence,
was to pay attention to people's feet.
So if you're questioning, and I'm not saying that this is,
and I don't know what the empirical evidence is.
But like if somebody looks like, if their feet are turned away from you and they want to run, he's paying attention to that.
So he, like if they're, but it's more if their feet are turned toward you and they don't seem afraid, he's more likely to believe them.
Right? Like if they, if they, right? But if their afraid, he's more likely to believe them.
But if their feet, that's the asynchrony. If they're like, I'm fine.
Exactly, and their feet are,
so yeah, he thinks the feet are really important.
More than the hands?
Well, only because people are so unaware
of what they're doing with their feet.
So it's not that necessarily-
You can hide your hands.
You can put them in your pocket.
Yeah, exactly.
They're just not thinking at all that my feet are going to give me away, which is kind of
interesting.
But yeah, but also I think there's really a lot of evidence that being grounded is really
important to how you feel.
So like walking around, if you're speaking or something,
this is like I'm kind of switching a bit here,
but feet can really help you feel better.
Sometimes people will stand with their ankles crossed
or not totally balanced.
Make sure that your feet, you feel that you're grounded
and you feel that string, right? I have a friend named Rachel Kossar who used to be a professional
ballet dancer and a rhythmic gymnast and she does body language training now and she's really into
that feeling of being grounded and how much that helps you. Like, yes, you're connected to the ceiling,
but you're also safe.
You're connected to the floor.
Like you're not gonna fall through it.
There's no trap door.
You know, allow yourself to find energy
in that feeling grounded.
It's fascinating how many psychologists
talk about body language and the power of body language
to just improve the quality of your life.
I know Jordan Peterson, I think in his book,
12 Rules for Life, I think one of the first rules is-
Sit up straight.
Yeah, put your back straight.
I've heard that, yeah.
Put your back up straight.
It's like the rule of life.
That's the whole just-
Put your shoulders back.
Neutral posture, right.
Right?
It's just like-
But the funny thing about that is-
You'll have more confidence.
You'll get more opportunities.
People will like you more.
It's like-
Yeah, yeah.
I think that like the funny thing about sit up straight is that, you is that a lot of us heard it as kids from grandparents.
We resented it, right?
But also I think part of it was because we were told to do it to show respect to others.
And the thing is, it's actually more about showing respect to yourself.
Like be self-reliant.
You like that one?
Yeah, it's good.
Sit up straight to respect yourself. Like be self-reliant, you like that one? Yeah, it's good. Yes. Sit up straight to respect yourself.
Yes.
And if you respect yourself,
you're more likely to be able to respect others.
You know, it's, you have to feel good about yourself
to be able to treat others with sort of generosity
and respect.
That's true.
So I think if we tell kids, well, you know,
if you sit up straight you know
you're going to feel better about yourself they're more likely to be open to that you're gonna feel
more confident you're gonna love yourself more you're gonna feel happier you're gonna have more
to offer others as well right when you respect yourself like you said you're gonna have more
generosity hopefully right or more so the whole like sit up straight you're being rude if you
don't sit up straight you know kids are like well like, well, then I'm just going to be rude.
It's so funny because, you know, our parents' story of make your bed in the morning, you know, was something that I never did until I actually went to a boarding school that was kind of similar they graded you every morning in the dorm oh to make the better it wasn't military but it was like just a strict kind of boarding school with rules and you know
dress code and all that stuff and I remember just like after that when I went to college I was like
I'm just gonna you know wake up and let the bed be messy yeah and then when I got to I think it
was like in my late 20s I was like I just don't feel good when I come back and look at a messy space
Let me try this out
Let me just start making my bed every morning and just spending two minutes even though it's kind of a hassle like let me do
This so I can come back and just feel at peace in my my resting space. Yeah, not messy
Yeah
And I'm like I wish I would have wrote the book make your bed because that came out like five years later and became like
this massive speech and phenomenon
make your bed because that came out like five years later and it became like this massive speech and phenomenon and i was like i know what our moms told us growing up you know for me i was like this
has got to be a routine every time i don't make the bed i feel like i have a sloppier day yeah i
feel less productive i feel less proud because i disrespected my sleeping space yes those little
routines like that really help i mean i mean that's the whole thing about being sort of neat
is that it's self-respecting, right?
And I mean, it also, I know there's,
yes, it clears your mind, right?
To not have to worry about clutter,
but I think the self-respect piece is a big part of it.
Although for me, I was like an OCD bedmaker as a kid.
Oh, so you were like.
It wasn't good.
Like people could, if somebody sat on it, I'd be like.
Cleaning it.
Yeah, it was weird.
I had, you know, a lot of kids can go through OCD periods and not have it as an adult.
But I definitely had some weird stuff like that.
Do you still have it as an adult?
No.
Okay.
You can hug people and you can be messy.
Sadly, I don't with the bedmaking.
Yeah, now you're messing bad yeah yeah no it's funny
because to me you know being a grown-up is about having freedom you know i want to do what i want
to do now you know it's like i have a lot of flexibility right now and my son like called
me the day it's like 10 o'clock and he's like are you still in bed and he's i'm like yep and he's like, are you still in bed? And I'm like, yep, and he's like, why?
And I'm like, cause I'm a grown up.
And I'm allowed to be.
I can do what I want.
Yeah, I can do what I want.
Exactly.
So funny.
Yeah, I love that.
I mean, it's more of like,
just what are the routines that are gonna help you
be the optimized for that day and that season of life?
Right.
There's certainly months where I'm like,
For sure.
Okay, I'm just gonna sleep in
and I'm not gonna do what I wanna, you know,
what I know I could do to be optimal performance, but that's the season where I need
right now, rest recovery season. So it's, it's being okay with that as well. And not being so
militant, like every moment, which I think that's not helpful either. Yeah. You're too obsessive.
No, for sure. I absolutely got to hit every routine all the time and every minute. Yeah,
absolutely. Wake up in the same, you know, that's a lot. They have to be your routines that work for you.
I was talking to a friend of mine who was an Olympic skier and a national champion in women's downhill.
Lindsey Vonn?
No, her name is Alex Bubbles.
And she's a fascinating person because she also, she had a second wave of fame.
I mean, she was pre-downhill skiing getting a lot of attention, right?
So that was like 98 to 2002 was like her era.
Her maiden name was Schaefer.
So anyway, but her married name is Alex Wubbles.
So anyway, but her married name is Alex Wubbles.
She became famous again about five years ago because she is now an emergency room nurse.
And she was working at a hospital in Utah,
the University of Utah.
And there was a car accident.
There was a patient.
She specialized in burn victims.
He was badly burned, he was unconscious.
And a police officer wanted a blood sample from him
to see if he had alcohol in his system.
By the way, it turned out he did not
and it was the other person who was drunk.
But really not the point.
The point was that you cannot take a blood sample
unless you have a warrant or verbal permission.
He was unconscious.
So he couldn't give verbal permission and they did not have the authority to do it.
And she was defending this man, nobody else really was. I mean, they, they weren't, they were,
they were kind of being bystanders and she was doing exactly by the books, what she was supposed
to be doing. Her voice is shaking. She's clearly really scared and not getting support.
Is this on video or something?
Yeah, sorry. It's all on video. And this police officer eventually, he's just,
and this police officer eventually,
he's just, this is not a statement about police officers.
This is just an agitated guy, okay?
And he was just like, I'm gonna get this blood sample.
He throws her against the wall and handcuffs her and throws her into his cruiser and arrests her.
And she's screaming, it's like 90 degrees outside.
It's a really upsetting scene. and she absolutely did the right thing so she
became you know known as people as a super brave person and who wish she is
and I knew I wanted to interview her for my next book and but I didn't know her
I'm giving a talk at the Association of critical care nurses it's like 10,000 I wanted to interview her for my next book, but I didn't know her.
I'm giving a talk at the Association
of Critical Care Nurses.
It's like 10,000 people.
It happened to be in Boston.
And I did, I think, the longest book signing line in my life.
Nurses really relate to this material.
I think-
Grey's Anatomy has been on there five times,
so they watch this show.
I think that there's a lot of power stuff going on in health care it's
tough and they're exhausted and anyway i did the signing line and there's one and i i was really
tired i i loved signing lines i love talking to people but i was like exhausted after five hours
you're like okay it was it was a few hours and i i um there was one last person and she was with a man and the man walks over
and as she approaches, I see who it is.
And he says, um, I don't know if you know who this is.
And I just like, she's crying.
Like I knew exactly who it was.
We embraced, I mean, we just like held onto each. And she's like, you mean so much to me.
Like you've helped, your work has helped me so much.
And I'm like, I am such, you know, I'm such a fan of you.
And I wanted to reach out to you.
Anyway, it was Alex Wubbles.
I did not know at the time that she is, she was an incredibly good skier you know and national champion many times
and i i love skiing yes anyway it turned out when we lived in park city for seven months through the
pandemic and and she lives very close by and we've got to be very close friends during that time
anyway that's great what's interesting is that she's a physically brave and socially brave person
like to ski like that also she's like the nicest person on earth.
Like she gave us, she would give us ski lessons and be like, well, what do you want to achieve
today?
Like just for fun, you know, and like my husband wanted to get, be able to get his hips on
the ground, you know, and she's like, we're going to make that happen.
And by the end of the day, and she like, she cheers, you know, she's cheering for you.
She's a great person.
But I said, what is said, what are the similarities?
Going down the mountain 70 miles per hour and being brave in that situation.
And she said, for her, it's about following her own kind of rule book.
She said, the best skiers are not skiers who take a one-size-fits-all approach.
skiers who, who have like a one size, like take a one size fits all approach. Like, you know,
you know, Lindsey Vonn, you know, she, she likes fashion. She likes style. And people were really critical of that. And it's like, she's got to be able to be who she is to be the best at what she
does. Like, why are you bothered that she likes to wear makeup and, you know, have nice clothing?
Why does that bother people?
The more she was able to be who she was, the better skier she was.
And Alex said it was the same for her.
The more she was able to do it her way, and she had a coach who recognized that.
Like, she could not, she needed an off day before before um races and he he was like
okay i'm not gonna force you to rate like i realized that for you you're gonna perform better
if you can do it that way the bravery thing but there is there's this this she said for me in that
moment i knew that like i could not live with myself if I did not, like, this was just the right thing to
do. And I had no, she said, there was no question that I was going to do this. And she said, I was
following my rule book. She said, to me, that's what's important. I knew that justice was important,
justice in this sense of, you know, protecting this man's, you know, sort of freedom and his rights.
And she said, I just knew that.
And I knew when I was skiing that I had to do it my way
and that allowed me to be brave and perform at my best.
So I think that that's really important.
You gotta figure out like, what are your,
again, it's back to like, what are your values?
And how can you be true to them?
But she's just, yeah, she's pretty.
That's cool.
Wonderful.
I feel like I could talk to you for another few hours.
I know.
But I want to bring us home here.
And we're going to have you back on when the book comes out.
God, don't do that.
And have you on for another long session.
Where we're both recovered from surgery and, yes.
I know.
God, for sure.
I feel like, actually, the pain has been going away throughout this I feel like early in the day the pain was heightening but
with you I feel like I'm just so excited about learning this that this this
information has been so powerful I've got so many notes here so I'm just
excited to go back through all this stuff this is a a, before I ask the final couple of questions,
again, I want to thank you, Amy, for being here.
This is really inspiring.
Thanks for making this work.
I've heard so many great things about you
from all mutual friends over the years.
I'm glad we were able to make this work.
How can we, before I ask the final questions,
how can we be of support to you right now?
What's the thing that we could do to,
is there somewhere we can go on your,
what social media are you most active on,
your website, can we opt in for your newsletter,
can we get your books, is there speaking
to what you're doing, what can we do?
Follow me on social media, I'm on LinkedIn for sure.
Is that your main place?
It's funny, I have the most followers on LinkedIn.
And I don't post that often because I wanna post
really good, sort of longer longer high quality content on there Twitter
Instagram you know keep up with me on social media Amy Cuddy everywhere and
yeah and you know be like for me it's just like sort of be brave like that
that would make me really happy and it's okay if you say, like, you know, tag me when you do it.
Like, I want to see it happening.
But, you know, when you see, for example, somebody being, like, bullied on social media, the way to handle that is not to attack the person attacking them.
It's say something nice about them in the comments.
Like, support them.
It could be totally unrelated just say you know say you see something some somebody
being you know trolled or whatever and and there's a pile on because that that
looks like the norm so more and more people are doing it change the norm by
being nice say hey so and so you know I really like that thing you shared last week, and this is how it helped me.
And it's amazing.
What you'll see is more and more people will start being positive.
That's a way of being brave.
Like, be the one to make the first positive comment, to turn things around.
I love that.
That would make me feel supported.
Okay, cool.
Yeah, so if you're on Instagram, make sure to share this and tag Amy.
Again, Amy Katia over on Instagram, tag her that you're watching this or listening to this over on
YouTube. Leave a comment below. Leave something positive about this, the thing that you enjoyed
the most about this over on YouTube as well. Okay, there's a question that I ask everyone at the end.
It's called the three truths question.
Okay.
So it's a hypothetical question.
All right.
Imagine many years away, it's your last day on this earth.
You've lived as long as you want to live and you accomplish all the dreams and you have
the life you want.
But for whatever reason, everything you've ever created, your written word, this video
content has to go somewhere else.
It's not on this earth
anymore okay so it goes when you go all right hypothetical and the only thing you get to leave
behind are three truths three lessons that you've learned that you would share with the world
what would you say would be those three truths for you oh my gosh yes Off the cuff. Oh my gosh. It was really hard. Um, the whole haters going to hate
philosophy. Like the idea that people are just, there are just bad people and,
and people are just going to be bad. Don't buy into that. It's just keep trying that the, the,
the only thing that makes that absolutely true, true is if we believe it's absolutely true.
So keep trying to be a better person, to model better behavior, to be optimistic about people, to have grace.
I think that's the most important one.
Okay, that's number one.
The second is, I'm going to quote Maya Angelou,
stand up straight and realize who you are, that you tower over your circumstances.
So that is, again, Maya Angelou, not me, but I love what it captures, which is carry yourself with a sense of pride and, you know, and self-respect.
And you will become more self-respecting
and you will treat others better.
Yes, okay.
That's the second.
The third, I think, is like we just leave room
for people to be weird.
Like, you know what?
Let people let their freak flags fly.
Like don't put people in a box.
Let people be different.
Like appreciate it.
Just stop judging.
Like do your thing.
Let your freak flag fly and let other people do the same thing.
Like if they're not hurting other people, you know, like give people space to be themselves.
That's it.
Those are powerful.
I love those truths.
Before I ask the final question, Amy, I want to acknowledge you for all that you've done,
all the research, all the work, all the giving back to serve people and helping them gain
confidence.
Thank you.
And improve the quality of their life.
That's what my mission is with the School of Greatness is to help people improve the
quality of their life.
And it's to bring people on like yourself that I've been inspired by for a long time to teach what you know you have
this information this knowledge from deep research practical experience and
teaching it to so many people that this audience could really use so I'm
grateful for your consistent dedication I'm grateful for you being weird and
starting to express that more on social media in
the world and accepting that socially by posting the stuff that is unique to you, the things that
you love and reminding us that we need to continue to be unique to ourselves as well and be willing
to share that. And acknowledge you for the generosity you have with so many people. Again,
I have so many mutual friends that say you're an incredible giver,
incredible, kind human being.
Thank you.
So I really acknowledge you
for the impact you've made on my friends.
Thanks.
And the person you've become.
So hopefully we can be friends after this
and have you back on many times.
And I want to see you continue
to spread this message far and wide.
Thank you so much. What a pleasure. It's been great.
My final question is what's your definition of greatness?
I think greatness is,
I think people might think of it as sort of about being the most,
the sort of the best, the most competent.
I think it's a combination of being, yes, your most sort of effective self, the most competent. I think it's a, it's a combination of being,
yes, your most sort of effective self, but also your most generous self. So greatness has to
combine those two qualities, right? It's, it's about, it's about being both generous and, and,
you know, capable. Thank you so much for listening. I hope you enjoyed today's episode and it inspired
you on your journey towards greatness. Make sure to check out the show notes in the description for a full rundown of today's show with all the
important links. And also make sure to share this with a friend and subscribe over on Apple Podcasts
as well. I really love hearing feedback from you guys. So share a review over on Apple and let me
know what part of this episode resonated with you the most. And if no one's told you lately, I wanna remind you that you are loved,
you are worthy, and you matter.
And now it's time to go out there and do something great.