The School of Greatness - The Science of Emotional Intelligence: How to Heal Trauma and Master Your Emotions
Episode Date: October 29, 2025Dr. Marc Brackett has spent decades at Yale studying the one skill that determines the quality of your entire life: emotional intelligence. He reveals why even experts struggle to regulate their emoti...ons, especially during crisis. Lewis opens up about his own journey from explosive reactions and ruined relationships to finding emotional mastery at 30, and Marc shares the RULER method that's transforming how millions of people understand their inner world. This isn't theory, it's survival tools for modern life. You'll learn why permission to feel is revolutionary, how to break cycles of emotional trauma, and why your emotions aren't the enemy. They're the roadmap.Marc’s book’s:Dealing with Feeling: Use Your Emotions to Create the Life You WantPermission to Feel: The Power of Emotional Intelligence to Achieve Well-Being and SuccessLearn more about Dr. Marc BrackettIn this episode you will:Discover why 90% of people never received emotional education and how this one gap sabotages relationships, careers, and healthLearn the RULER method, a five-step framework to recognize, understand, label, express, and regulate emotions in real timeBreak free from childhood patterns of gaslighting and narcissistic parenting by becoming an emotion scientist of your own lifeTransform how you show up in relationships through co-regulation, the skill of managing emotions together instead of aloneUnderstand why giving yourself permission to feel all emotions, even the uncomfortable ones, is the first step to genuine freedomFor more information go to https://lewishowes.com/1843For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960More SOG episodes we think you’ll love:Jerry Wise – greatness.lnk.to/1747SCDr. Becky Kennedy – greatness.lnk.to/1586SCDr. Mariel Buqué – greatness.lnk.to/1555SC Get more from Lewis! Get my New York Times Bestselling book, Make Money Easy!Get The Greatness Mindset audiobook on SpotifyText Lewis AIYouTubeInstagramWebsiteTiktokFacebookX Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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Here's the deal.
Ninety percent of us report never having had any emotion education.
You can't just bury your emotions because they're what make you human.
The number one thing that students said to me was that they felt manufactured.
They really weren't sure who they were because someone else prescribed.
Burns.
Yeah.
Professor of Psychology at Yale University and the director of the Yale Center for Emotional Intelligence.
A guest today is Dr. Mark Bracken.
There seems to be this trend that I'm noticing.
where parents are too much in their feelings with their kids.
Tell me more about your feelings.
It's okay. Cry.
That's not emotional intelligence.
That's emotional indulgence.
Why is everybody depressed?
Everybody's not depressed.
They're just using the word depressed.
We can't allow that.
We've got to get people to understand.
You're disappointed, you're discouraged.
What we want to do is help people understand that granularity, it's called.
I'm pretty convinced at this point in my career
that most of us have been gaslighted in childhood.
How does someone who's experienced that,
that as a child, break the cycle.
Yeah, well, firstly.
Welcome back, everyone in the School of Greatness, excited about our guests.
We have the inspiring Mark Brackett in the house.
And the first question I want to ask you, Mark, is about emotional regulation because
many neuroscientists that I've brought on this show before, brain surgeons that I've
brought on, elite athletes, billionaires, and people that have harmony in their
their life
when I ask them
what is the number one skill
that you should master
they say emotional regulation
and I lacked emotional regulation
for probably most of my life
until I hit about 30
when I had all the outward success
I had money, I had followers
I had beautiful girlfriends
all these different things
but I could not manage my emotions
and anytime I felt like
under attack
or any time I felt abused in any way,
psychologically, physically, financially,
emotionally, whatever it might be.
It was like a bear came out of me, emotions that I could not contain.
And these emotions would ruin relationships.
They would ruin moments in my life.
They would rob me of joy.
They would rob me of peace and harmony inside of myself.
And it wasn't until I hit around 30 years old,
where I started to understand.
understand and study what emotional intelligence was.
I didn't even understand the concept.
I just thought, if you have a goal, you should do anything in your power to go achieve
that goal and be successful.
You know, whatever it takes, win at all costs, be number one, be the best.
I didn't understand the concept of having harmony and peace along the journey.
And every time I would accomplish anything, it was almost like I felt more and more
frustrated with my life.
Interesting.
I felt more and more not enough.
I felt like I had to go for something bigger.
And I didn't feel like anyone ever understood me.
And I'm assuming a lot of people watching or listening can relate to that feeling of not feeling understood,
not knowing how to manage their emotions.
And it's been a 12-year journey of learning how to process my emotions, learning how to regulate
my emotions, learning how to name them, learning how to meditate, learning how to breathe,
learning how to sleep better, learning how to have the curve.
have the courage to actually use my voice
and create boundaries in my life
without screaming at someone.
All these different things.
And you've been teaching this
and you're leading the research center at Yale
around emotional intelligence for a long time now
and you've been teaching this and you have this book
dealing with feeling.
Use your emotions to create the like you want.
And I guess my first question is
why do so many people struggle
with understanding how to navigate their emotions
to create peace, harmony, and accomplish their goals in life.
Well, during the pandemic, which was eye-opening for me about how disregulated people were,
I had written in my first book called Permission to Feel,
and then people were saying things like, well, thank you for giving me permission to feel about,
like, what the hell do I do with all these feelings?
I don't know what to do with them, yeah.
Yeah, like people in the grocery stores were like spraying their groceries.
I mean, it was like, people were out of their minds.
Oh, yeah.
And so, and I was going crazy myself because they was not used to.
to working from home. I was not used to my mother-in-law living with me, and it became,
you know, pretty chaotic. But you were the expert in this. You were studying it and teaching
this. Well, I can write the papers. You can do the research. Yeah. Living it is hard. And so
I've done a lot of research in this space, obviously. And here's the deal. 90% of us report
never having had any emotion education. Mm-hmm. It's probably more. Yeah. I mean,
and seven percent say we got it in school. So there's just no form.
normalize way of teaching it, which is what I want to change. I think that this is as important as
reading, writing and arithmetic. I believe this is the only skill. You know, I learned how to
set goals, how to accomplish goals, how to work hard from sports. Like sports was my playground
for learning life skills. I learned how to be coachable, how to get feedback, how to learn
communicate, all these different things and work together in teams. I learned all these things
in sports, but I didn't learn how to navigate emotions.
Yeah.
So I could work really hard.
I could show up early and stay late and do whatever was required of me physically, but
mentally and emotionally, when something got under my skin, when someone like cheap shot
of me, it was like I felt under attack.
Yeah.
I felt like my life was under attack, even though it wasn't.
And I didn't understand how to navigate those emotions.
So most of the time, I was fine, but sometimes they would get the best of me.
And I would do stuff that I was like, not proud of.
I'm like, oh, why did they react that way?
Why did they scream?
Why did they blow up?
Why did I get into this fight?
Yeah, I got multiple fights just reacting to my emotions because I didn't know how
to navigate and process them.
And thank goodness, I never did anything like that I can't, you know, come back from.
You know, it's like it was all okay, but man, so many people, their emotions get the best
of them and they ruin their relationships, their marriages, their careers, their health.
That's right.
And they do things to harm themselves and others
because they don't know how to understand emotions.
You're speaking my language, buddy.
I mean.
And so when you, when COVID hit for you,
even though you'd been researching and teaching this for a long time,
you had to face your emotions at a different level.
Totally.
How did you learn how to process it as the expert
now that you were faced with this real world experience?
How did you learn how to deal with it and not blow up your life?
Well, the one thing is,
I learned every single park in the town that I live in. And it's a pretty big town. I mean, I literally
would go every day for a walk because I needed the space. I was not a person who went for walks.
But because of being trapped in the house, I'm like, I got to get out of here. I don't want to look
at you and I want to look at you. So it's like, I need like just downtime to myself. And I'm an introvert.
Yeah. So it just, I needed quiet time. That really helped a lot. But I think for me, you know,
I had spent 25 years in my life teaching this writing.
about it. You know, I have curriculum in schools around the world in 5,000 schools. And here I was,
you know, like secretly crying in my room, you know, eating really unhealthy foods. I was, you know,
just takeout. And I was, I'm a martial artist by training. And so I was, I stopped doing that.
I stopped going to yoga. There's no hot yoga during the pandemic. And I can imagine breathing.
So all the tools that you were used to were taken away from me. Yeah. And so I had a
invent new tools and um the night there was one night this is you know the story of the opening of my book
where um my mother-in-law had come to visit us from panama for two weeks on march 5th of 2020
right before right before two weeks turned into two years it turned to eight months yeah yeah and so
you know 81 year old woman doesn't speak english i'm lucky i speak spanish but you know we weren't
used to cohabitating for that long and just so many things came up and
in terms of, like, meals and, like, making coffee and time, like, spending time with someone who's in your house.
You know, I'm not used to that.
I'm used to, like, you know, I go to work and then I, you know, I go to the gym and then I do other things.
You have your routine, yeah, yeah.
And I'm very, I like routine.
Anyhow, one night, she looked at me and she says, are you really the director, the Center for Emotional Intelligence?
And I just looked at it, I'm like, you know, not tonight, I'm not.
And it's like, I thought that night, like, the dogs peed on the rugs.
I mean, it was just sort of like the house was nuts.
But I share this story, A, because the best of us, or the most wisest emotionally of us, fail.
And I went to bed that night, and I said, you know, Mark, you actually are the director of the Center for Emotional Intelligence,
and you do teach this stuff. Like, why are you not applying it? Like, what has happened to you?
And I started reflecting on all this about, like, well, my time and my space and your.
and you know blah blah blah but there's a piece of my work and actually the end of my book
i talk about how we regulate to become the best versions of ourselves and so i had not actually
paused in the few months before the blow up to think about well mark you know here's this woman
who is like displaced from her house in panama she wants to go home yeah she doesn't want to be
with you and how do you show up tomorrow morning when you come down for breakfast as the best version
yourself. Like, what do you need to think about and what do you need to do differently to be that
person for your mother-in-law? But just that literally, that two-minute pause and reflection
and reminding myself about the work I do, it transformed everything. Just transformed everything.
I'm like, Mark, you're a narcissist. Like, you don't care about anybody else except you. Like,
this 81-year-old lady is sitting here, like, depressed and wanting to go home, and you're worrying
about that you want to drink coffee by yourself. And so...
That your routine is displaced because someone's here when she's out of the country and she's not in her home.
She's got a dog and a parrot we had to deal with.
It was nuts.
And I think for me, something that was a wake-up call was having an other orientation.
What does that mean?
It's not just about me.
Yeah.
Emotions are not just my emotions.
Everybody's got emotions.
And I could, yes, I can regulate my own emotions, but guess what?
Co-regulation is a huge piece of emotional intelligence.
What is co-regulation?
So think about it in a baby, you know, you're working with your baby and they're crying and you're holding the baby and you're giving them warmth and you're, you know, give a little cooing, you know, you're talking in a very soft voice to kind of deactivate their nervous system and that makes you feel calm. It's just kind of symbiotic back and forth.
As adults, it's me asking you good questions. It's me showing up with empathy, with compassion, with good listening skills and saying, you know, hey, Lewis, I heard, you know, I heard the news, you know, I'm really sorry about that.
that. What can I do to be supportive? Let's think about it. Let's go for a walk. Let's go play a
game. Let's do something to just get your mind off of it or to problem solve about it. But I'm
here for you. That's co-regulation. I guess the challenge is when someone's, you know, if your coffee
routine is displaced, you know, for months in a row and you're just like, I can't take this
anymore and your nervous system is on high alert or even something more extreme, whatever
might be for someone and their nervous system is not calm and they feel like they're in chronic
stress because they haven't regulated their own nervous system how does someone co-regulate with
someone else's heightened emotions or irrational emotions that might seem irrational in a in a
context of setting um how do you co-regulate when you can't even get your own nervous system or relax
and you think the other person you're with is already irrational
Well, too over-activated nervous systems is a nightmare.
Yes.
It's a nightmare.
And so you've got to be the first.
And it is our responsibility, your responsibility as a father-to-be to deactivate.
You're the role model.
You have to be.
And so the self-regulation piece comes before the co-regulation piece.
And ultimately, if you're talking about parent-child, you're the role model for, like,
daddy can take handle this daddy has you know daddy talks himself in a self-compassionate way
daddy takes care of his body daddy breathes properly and daddy's modeling that for you because daddy
eventually wants you to be able to do that for yourself yeah what about in a partnership though
with two grown adults someone's got to take responsibility i mean this is this is the thing it's
you know it's oftentimes you know in my relationship it's like the battle of who's the strongest
person never works and so sometimes
Sometimes it's like, Mark, remember, you're the director of the center for emotional intelligence.
Because Mark, me, is like, I hate you right now.
Like, I don't want to be with you anymore.
And this is very impulsive, crazy stuff.
We all say this for ourselves.
When you're triggered and activated, the worst of ourselves comes out.
Our automatic habitual kind of really poor habits, just like they come out like there's no tomorrow.
And in those moments, we have to build the space.
And no one's going to build a space for you.
you've got to learn to again take the breath back up maybe you say you know what I'm sorry
I cannot do this right now I've got to go out for a minute yeah but if you build the space the
distance you can deactivate the nervous system and then you can access all that cognition
that you can use to then have a conversation space is key I love this quote in your book that says
success in virtually every aspect of life career friendship love and family is determined mainly
by one thing and that's how you deal with your feelings that's correct
Now, how dangerous is it then to suppress and numb your true emotions?
Well, I mean, they got to go somewhere.
So they go into stomach problems.
They go into physical health problems.
They go into depression, anxiety, losing a spouse.
I mean, you can't just bury your emotions because they're what make you human.
And that's why I think it should be required to teach people the skills of emotional intelligence.
Yeah.
It's so critical.
And I make this claim, and I stand by it, which is that as someone who teaches at a very
powerful university, I always joke, like, all of my students have higher SAT scores than I
had, higher grade point averages than I had, they play instruments I didn't even know
existed, they've traveled the countries to do internships.
They've done everything they can to get into a place like Yale.
But the question I've always had is how many of these students are successful, how many
reach and attain their desired goals of life.
And what I've seen over and over again is that the students with the greatest kind of, you know,
academic skills are not the ones who succeed the most.
Really, why is that?
Because they can't deal with their emotions.
Interesting.
And so.
They can study and get good grades.
But then they get anxious.
90, I mean, upwards of 80% of the students report having anxiety right now.
Yeah. So if our definition of success is getting into a high-powered university and being anxious
all the time, I don't know, that makes no sense to me. Yeah. I know what it's like to be anxious.
I've lived with anxiety. That's not something you want to live with, or depression, or imposter
syndrome, which is a big deal at where I work. Really? Yeah. Everyone in Yale thinks they're an
imposter because everyone else is smarter than that. Exactly. You know, they have their real
valedictorian. It was harder to get an A in their school. Right. They can study for
less hours and get better grades than I do. They have a father who's connected at Wall Street.
They have a mother who's a Hollywood producer. I mean, it's everyone's, you know, focusing on
what everyone else has except for, you know, having some gratitude. Like, I'm actually doing pretty
well here. I'm at Yale University. Yeah, yeah, yeah. But the thing, the real key here about
success is that over and over and again, and again, and again, there are, we know, for some good
and better reasons that people who are not so emotionally intelligent can reach high positions.
Yes.
Usually because they're bullies.
However, if we define success as having the skills of emotional intelligence, meaning that I am well,
you know, I am a person who has the strategies to deal with life's ups and downs, and I'm good at
helping other people and I'm lifting them up, I think it would change the way we would view
people in terms of life success and again just going back to even attaining our goals i don't know about
your career but in my career like i teach emotions a lot of dudes aren't interested in my work a lot of like
fortune 100 CEOs who are mostly men i go give speeches at their organizations they're like just
tell me how to make money yeah exactly yeah i'm gonna get my people to like do what i want them to do
and like totally i mean i have one favorite memory where i'm at this very famous hedge fund and the CEO looks and
He's like, look at my office.
You think I need emotional intelligence.
And the joke behind that is I had interviewed the people who report to him.
I'm like, yeah, because your employees hate you.
Yeah.
And so I don't think people realize that when you're a poor role model for emotion regulation,
people don't want to be around you.
No.
Or they're afraid of you or it's not a healthy relationship.
You know, it's interesting because the more I've studied emotional intelligence and correct me if I'm wrong,
the greatest way that an individual can become a true leader
is not just understanding their own emotions,
but like you said, learning to co-regulate
all types of unique personalities in the world
when you're in an environment with them
and understanding their emotions.
100%.
Being able to be with your emotions
in the discomfort or the messiness of the moment,
whatever's happening in life,
being able to regulate your own emotions,
being able to see the other person in front of you
what they're experiencing and almost have a snapshot of their life
of where they could have came from,
what they might have gone through,
why they're dysregulated,
almost seeing it without knowing who they are.
That's right.
And trying to flex and navigate emotionally
how to co-regulate with that human being.
You're not going to do skin-to-skin bonding with an adult,
but learning how to just be present,
how to breathe,
relax, how to say, tell me more how you feel.
Exactly.
I think that is true leadership when you can understand emotional intelligence, more than
just calming yourself, but learning how to calm the entire room and the environment around
you.
Well, you just summarize this big study I did during the pandemic.
So we studied leaders across five time periods during the pandemic.
And what we looked at was their employee's perceptions of the leader's skill at dealing
with their own emotions, but co-regulated.
Interesting.
So being kind of, like my, you know, Mark, let's use me as an example, like Mark can, like, he remains calm, he's not freaking out, he can, you know, self-regulate, or Mark, you know, when we're having our team meetings is really helpful to the group and understands where they're coming from and creates the conditions where people feel held, where people feel supported emotionally, et cetera. So it's intra-inter.
Intra-inter regulation. Exactly. Wow. Yeah. And, and then we track that, of course,
across five-time periods and looked at culture and climate in companies.
We looked at it in terms of how the employees felt on average, burnout, intentions to leave
their jobs, and of course everything went in the direction we had predicted, that leaders who
were both skilled at dealing with their own emotions but helpful at co-regulating, had employees
were healthier, actually employees who slept better at night.
Interesting.
I mean, think about that.
The skill of a leader is predicting the sleep quality.
of an employee but the challenge is it's really hard for most people to learn the skill of emotional
regulation in themselves let alone in themselves and with 10 20 50 100 employees or their team or
their family and i'm assuming you grew up with dysfunctional parents like i did and like most like most
of us did yeah where we we mirrored and modeled behaviors that were not healthy from the the the
the dysregulation of fighting, of screaming,
of silent treatments, of feeling fear coming in,
you know, the house lots of times.
At least that's how I grew up.
I left home when I was 13 because I was like,
give me out of here.
You know, I knew my parents loved me,
but they didn't know how to love themselves.
And it didn't feel emotionally safe.
My brother went to prison when I was eight
for selling drugs to an undercover cop.
My older sisters were going through their own struggles as well.
And I was just like, I don't feel
emotionally safe. I knew they loved me. You know, it's like they, they showed up at sports
practices. They tucked me in a bed. They told me they loved me. But when you feel like your
parents are not in an emotionally loving environment and they don't regulate their emotions,
it's a scary world when you're a five, seven-year-old. It's scary. And you don't, they don't
teach you how to regulate your own emotions when they're not regulating theirs.
100%. I mean, we, different families, same experience. Right.
So I had two parents who loved me a lot.
My mom had terrible anxiety, and I'm having a nervous breakdown.
I'm like, wait, I'm the one being bullied.
Yeah, I'm seven.
What do I do with this?
Exactly.
And my father was, you know, we call it today the toxicly masculine tough guy.
So his mantra to me was, son, you go toughen up.
Stop crying.
Stop crying.
I joke about this, but even when I was in middle school,
my father had the nerve to say something like, you know, son, I used to be kids up like you.
and I'm like, okay, you know, like, guess what, dad?
We have very different, you know, personalities, and it was nuts.
Now, again, I think my father's belief system was that's how I'm going to get my son to be tough.
Like, I have to, like, scare him into being tough.
He didn't have the tools either.
You're looking at me right now.
Like, I do have a fifth degree black belt.
I'm still not a tough guy.
It's like, also, what is, that's a whole other podcast.
Yeah.
But anyway, and unfortunately, I also had abuse in my childhood.
While my parents were dealing with two older brothers of mine who had their own challenges,
the person who took care of me, unfortunately, was a pedophile.
And so for about five years, I was abused and didn't say anything about it.
Oh, yeah, that happened to me as well when I was five.
By the babysitter's son.
And I've talked about it many times openly, but it's for 20,
25 years, I didn't tell a soul. And that's where I felt someone was always abusing me,
you know, in every environment in my life. Like, if someone was taking advantage of me, it was like
I'm being abused. Yeah. And for 25 years, I never told anyone. And it felt like, if anyone
knew this about me, no one would ever love me. No one would ever like me, love me. People would
make fun of me forever. I would not have any friends. And so I stuffed this frustration,
this anger until I learned to process emotions around 12 years ago. Wow. And it. And it
it set me emotionally free the journey it took you know it took some time but it set me emotionally
free to have a level of peace that i've never felt in my life that's amazing and i think one of the
biggest and not to not to cut you off i want to share more about it but also i want you to share based on
your research and experience if we don't fully own our emotions and our traumas and we keep it stuck
inside of us, how is that going to hold us back from accomplishing a life we want?
Well, like we said earlier in terms of emotional suppression, that's a form of suppression
or repression or denial. And it's hard to live a full life when you can't be your true self.
I've done a lot of research in this area, too. This is a new line of research that I can just
share with you. And I think what we're both talking about here, you know, about our childhood,
is that we needed adults who gave us, as I call it, permission to feel,
who created the conditions, what we could talk about feelings,
where we can get support,
where we didn't have to, like, you know, secretly, you know,
bang our heads against the wall or drink alcohol or whatever it was.
And I found in my research there are three characteristics of these people.
Do you want to guess what they are?
Three characteristics of adults.
Of the adults who create the conditions for us to talk about feelings and be our true selves.
of like a healthy versions
or three?
No, no, the people
who give us permission to feel.
What do you think are their top three traits?
Well,
they've created
kind of a healthy relationship with themselves.
They feel whole, they feel healthy, they feel healed.
Yeah.
You know, they've created healing journey.
You know, maybe it's not fully healed, but they've created safety
within themselves.
They,
they probably are in a healthy relationship I would say you know they're probably in a healthy
relationship with someone else think about someone you know who just is is that kind of person how
would you what would be their attributes their characteristics very loving very kind very calm
calm yeah peaceful present yeah very connected like they're exactly all the things that we learn
how to develop in school yeah yeah none of that yeah the top three which you're you're
you're kind of bringing them all together.
The number one is non-judgmental.
Oh, okay.
We're just dying to be around.
Yeah, accepting.
Yeah, just like, can I just be me?
Like, why are you trying to make me into somebody else?
The second is listener.
Just listen, stop talking.
And the third is compassionate.
Just let me know you care.
What I think is so fascinating about that is that
never do people say brilliant, wise, talented,
talented, fixer, problem solver.
We don't want that.
We want the presence.
And what I've done in my research is I've asked, you know,
tens of thousands of people, well, only a third of people, by the way,
a third of adults running around the United States at least,
and I've done this cross-culturally, it's the same stuff.
Only a third of us say we had someone like that growing up.
Two-thirds of us.
I mean, shoes.
Yeah.
It's tough.
And the barrier that when I talk to parents
or even business leaders, well, I don't have time.
I'm like, you don't have time to be non-judgmental?
I'm not sure I get that one.
The second is fear.
Fear of what?
That they're afraid of like, if I ask you how you're feeling,
you're going to say, like, I'm feeling this way
and I'm not going to know what to do about it.
So they're afraid to ask the question
because they don't know how to kind of work with the person.
They don't know how to deal with the emotions of a person.
Exactly.
But remember, no one is looking.
for you to problem solve or fix.
They just want to listen
and ask maybe some questions
to show that you care. And also
we want to help kids build resilience.
And so if we just constantly tell our
kids like, do this and do this,
they're not learning anything. And they don't want
that anyway. What they want is someone who
shows their care and gets them to think critically
so they can come up with their own solutions.
Which I think is,
should pull away the fear
that people have because
you actually have to do that much
other than be present and ask you questions.
Yeah.
And so it's time, fear, and feeling like, you know, the skills,
which we've got to build the time, take away the fear, and teach people the skills.
Most people have the skills at least, but they could have the time for sure.
The fear of not knowing how to deal with someone else's emotions, I think, could be real.
Because, you know, even, you know, my wife, Martha, she's, you know,
due here with our twins in less than two weeks.
And she's having a range of, more range of emotions than she normally.
normally has right and she's really good at self-regulation like she's done a lot of healing
work she has a therapist and speaks to her family and friends and she's processing a lot
before she brings me the big emotions so I'm not getting you know big emotions every single
day from her right it's like once in a while and I feel like I can handle it like okay
yes is okay if it's every day I'd be like this kind of exhausting too for me right it's all hard for
you and hard for me. But it's more now. It has been more. It's still not that much. And a lot of times
I'm like, I don't know how to solve this because I don't know how you truly feel. I don't have
two kids inside of my belly growing and my pain everywhere. So it's like I can try to empathize
and be compassionate, obviously, but I don't know how to fix. And I think that's one of the key things
you said is don't try to fix it. She just want to believe me. I'm telling you she does not want you to
fix her. Exactly. And so what I have learned is just rubbing her and listening to her is the best
thing I can do. And me learning how to be with the emotions. Or how about saying, what do you need
right now? Yeah, yeah. What do you need? How can I support you? I'm here for you. What would help
right now? Yeah, exactly. Again, that's that other orientation mindset. Yeah, yeah. But it's hard for a lot of,
and I'm in this work consistently and it's still, I have to be reminding myself to be patient,
to listen to know that this may be two minutes and maybe 20 minutes and I get to sit with it
and even though it's uncomfortable it's still discomfort discomfort discomfort is fine yeah so when you
I mean going through the sexual abuse that you experienced for many years as a kid
how do you feel like that shaped your nervous system as an adult and when did you feel like
you were able to start processing the shame or guilt or fear or insecurity around that to feel
like you had a healthier nervous system and a better relationship with all the parts of you yeah well it was
tough because i was a precocious kid and when at 11 when i disclosed it um like any parents my mother
you know had a breakdown she could not believe that her friend was doing this to me oh and my father
got a bat and went to kill the man oh my gosh and luckily he didn't do that oh um uh he was arrested
And it was a long case, unfortunately, it was back, you know, in the 1980s.
And unfortunately, we found that he had abused cousins of children.
But, and then stupidly, my parents had a friend who was a psychiatrist,
and he was writing a book on pedophilia, and I went on television with him,
which was the worst decision anybody could have made.
Because I became, you know, the pariah, you know, of,
people, meaning that
my school found out about it and the teachers
found out about it. That's tough. Parents would say
things, don't play with Mark and he's kind of like
damaged goods. Oh, man.
And so more bullying happened.
It was bad.
But Uncle Marvin,
who is the man who was my hero in life,
who happened to be a teacher in the Catskill
Mouth in the New York State and a trumpet player by
night and a curriculum writer
kind of in other hours, he was
running a curriculum to teach kids about
emotions well and he stayed with us one summer and he was the first person who asked me
questions like hey mark you know how you feeling and then he he practiced his lessons with me with
these feeling words and he'd say you know tell me a time when you felt elated and it'd be like
i can't think of any of those how about when you felt alienated i'm like i could talk about that
all day long and we started having all these rich conversations just about emotions
What was the cause of that feeling?
Was that really the right word?
And how did you deal with that emotion?
Let's think together about the strategies.
So I tell you that because I went to college, life got better for me,
and then I'm in college, I'm graduating, I'm still like, what am I going to do with my life?
I'm in therapy.
And all of a sudden it's 1995, and this book comes out called Emotional Intelligence.
And I see it on the cover of Time magazine.
And I'm like, emotional, totally.
I don't know what that is, but that's my uncle and me.
That's everything I learned when I was a kid.
And so I look, I read the book and I call my uncle and I'm like, he's retired now in Florida.
And I'm like, Uncle Marvin, I think, like, this is stuff that you were doing 20 years before this book came out.
Let's work together and write a curriculum.
And so I pulled my uncle out of retirement.
We sat in Dunkin' Donuts and Fort Lauderdam drinking our decaf and muffins and starting to think
about how could I translate what he was working on in his classroom into a real curriculum,
which then led me to get a PhD in psychology, because in that book, that book was originally
written by a journalist, not the scientists. And so I found the two scientists who were
the real authors and theorists, and I called them both. They both agreed to meet with me. One was
at Yale, one at the University of New Hampshire. A joke about that one is I got rejected
from Yale, where I'm now a professor. And I went to the University of New Hampshire.
to study with the other professor and I share that kind of story because that really was my
healing journey. It started with my uncle and then I started studying it and really understanding
it. And then obviously, you know, other things like my martial arts training, you know,
having a fifth degree black belt in Hopkido, which is a Korean martial art, just the principles
and the mindsets in the martial arts. I study Zen meditation. Yeah. So between psychology and the
martial arts and Uncle Marvin, it was really my healing journey. Wow. And I, you know, it's funny,
I just gave a speech last night. And, you know, there's a lot of people and people give you an
applause at the end. Somebody came up to me and said, you know, gosh, Mark, you know, with all your story,
look at you. You're like, you're the one on stage presenting. And I always say, thank you for that.
And then I go back and I say, but remember, I had Uncle Marvin. Remember, I have a PhD in psychology.
Remember, I got a 50-degree blackout on the martial arts.
I spent 30 years in my life researching, studying, teaching, writing books.
I have a lot of time and effort put into my own emotional health and well-being.
And so while I appreciate that, my big question is how many kids are going to have that journey?
How many kids in our country are getting the emotion education they need to achieve their dreams in life?
Yeah.
And far too few.
Well, I think a lot of people struggle accomplishing their dreams because they deal with a lot of inner suffering.
Yeah.
And I was the ultimate accomplisher for many years.
High school, college, you know, my 20s was like goal setting, accomplishing.
But again, I could accomplish my goals and dreams, but I still didn't feel enough.
Yes.
And if you go make a lot of money and accomplish your dreams and you still feel less than, I don't think that's success.
I think it's like suffering.
You're just suffering because you haven't learned how to.
appreciate life and be at ease with who you are at this season of life, how many, what percentage
of the people in the USA or in the world do you think would associate with the level of inner
suffering, like on a day-to-day basis, like they're going through some type of suffering.
It's higher than it's ever been.
Really?
Yeah.
I mean, I'm just among college students where I work, it's increased 10 to 15% a year
over the last 20 years, every year.
They just, what is the language?
Like, they just say, like, I'm suffering or I feel like stressed out.
It depends where you're at in life.
I mean, here's an interesting thing about you were talking about naming emotions.
So one of my favorite kind of things that I did in my own courses, you know, I ask people,
if you take my course, it's also a research project.
Yeah.
So you're filling out surveys, every class, and you're introspective, blah, blah, blah.
And so 80% of my students said they were stressed.
Now, they say they're stressed.
What am I?
I can't tell you're lying to me.
me but there was something deep inside me that was like i don't get it what does that mean yeah exactly so
i had them journal about all their feelings and why they were stressed what do you think the top
emotion was the real emotion not enough i don't know they're not enough or you're getting
close comparison or not good enough or it was envy jealous and envy yeah well they're different too
we'll talk about okay so they're feeling envy of other their peers what they're
doing is they're sitting in my class they're like this oh my gosh you're richer oh my gosh
you can study for less hours oh my gosh you have more connections oh my gosh you got better hips
you got better lips you i mean it's just endless everyone else is better than i not even in
the classroom but also scrolling on the phone seeing everything on instagram and social media
percent and so the joke i have about this is i went to the counseling center and i said what's our
university's energy reduction program uh-huh and you know everybody's looking at me like what are you talking
about because we're doing breathing exercises or yoga. And, you know, respectfully, I love
mindfulness and breathing exercises. I write about them. They're evidence-based. I love yoga
too. But it's not going to solve the envy problem. You know, the envy is a cognitive thing that
has to be reworked. Interesting. Got to shift the way you're thinking about yourself and other people.
If you don't do that, you can breathe, you're going to go for the walk and you can get back to your
envy. You're going to do your breathing exercise and you're going to feel envious again.
You've got to shift your thinking.
It's a perspective.
The antidote from my perspective is gratitude.
Yeah.
Can we just stop thinking about what everybody else has and like, let's take a minute and look
around us.
Like, we're doing pretty good.
Yes.
Can you think about a couple of things each day, you know, for what you're grateful?
And that will shift the envy.
Yeah.
I mean, your students are in the top 1% of 1% of students in the world at Yale.
And yet they're still not happy.
100%.
Isn't that interesting?
But I think that's probably most of the USA of people who are,
watching or following accounts that make them feel more envious when they see lack.
They see separation.
They see lack.
They see, oh, this person has this.
I don't have it yet.
Now I want that thing.
There's a separation of a physical space or a lack of not having something or accomplishing
something or having a certain amount of followers or whatever might be.
So how do we, so stress is one of the number one things that.
I have to tell you one more thing though.
Tell me.
You just made me think about it, which is in the research,
that I did, I asked them more about their experiences
about their development.
And the thing that made me the most disheartened
was that the number one thing that students said to me
was that they felt manufactured.
What does that mean?
It means that they felt like they had to figure out
this formula to get into this place called Yale,
but then they really weren't sure who they were.
Interesting.
Because someone else prescribed.
Yeah, parents push them,
prescribe them.
And, you know, it's so funny because I was not an Ivy League student.
I went to public schools.
I went to public universities.
And I just think so many people think, like, the only way my kid is going to be successful
is that they go to this top university.
And I just think that's so misguided.
Because it's interesting, because most people want to create a beautiful life for themselves.
Yes.
Right?
Most people want to become something greater.
They want to master their talent.
develop themselves they want to try things they want to explore and they want to
you know have some sense of accomplishment in their life right yeah they don't
want to be broke poor and sleeping on their parents you know basement forever so it's like
they want to get out into the world and make something of themselves but how do we
feel how do people learn how to feel enough even if they're sleeping in their
parents basement and don't have any skills or anything to show for it and how do we
continue to feel enough when we have all the success, money, and fame in the world?
Well, a couple of things about that. Going back to my other research about like the uncle,
I call it the Uncle Marvin's or the Aunt Maria's or whoever, the person who gives you
permission to feel. So my research shows that people who grew up in those conditions,
15 to 20 percent greater purpose and meaning of life.
Who have the ability to feel, the permission to feel. Yes. By someone in their life.
Anyone. Anyone. By the way, the research is pretty,
unfortunate the findings for guys. Only 3% of people say it was their father. Oh, man. So you got
something to look forward to them. And I got two girls, so I got a, you know, topic. So I got a
again, you don't have to just show up, listen, show you love them. Non-judgment. Now here's
an interesting, I have to ask you this as someone I was thinking about sooner earlier.
There seems to be this trend that I'm noticing where parents are,
are too much in their feelings with their kids who are four, seven, eight, and they say,
tell me more. Tell me more about your feelings. It's okay. Cry. Keep talking about
your feelings all day. Yeah, that person stole that toy from you. Keep telling me more.
It seems like this extreme, it seems like so extreme of like it's okay to talk about your feelings
and almost encouraging it so much to stay in the feeling of why you feel, sad, hurt, whatever.
so there can be i don't think that's a healthy thing either that's not emotional intelligence what is that
when a parent is doing that's emotional indulgence ah so when a parent is indulging in their kids emotions
allowing them to express it over and over again what does that do to the child it makes them incapable
of learning how to deal with their own feelings it's the worst thing we can do for our kids and i that kind
of stuff drives me crazy because it's a misinterpretation of the feelings work the work and emotional
intelligence just to go through the skills for a minute yes it's about recognizing our own and other
emotions understanding their causes and consequences labeling them with precise words knowing how and when
to express them and having the strategies to regulate them but it always finishes with regulation always
yeah not just keep talking about no no no you don't want to be in it what you actually the research
shows that venting and talking about emotions can cause more rumination which is what we don't want
Lewis, you know, I know you're going through a lot right now
and I see that you're really sad.
I'm imagining you're my kid.
You know, I know that you really wanted to go to your friend's house today,
but unfortunately we got a flat tire.
Daddy, I hate you.
Daddy, no.
Honey, I wanted you to go see your friend too,
but we got a flat tire.
I'm really sorry.
Let's think about, take a minute and go in the car for a minute
and just think about what else we might do today together.
I'm redirecting, redirecting.
But what I'm trying to do is teach you problem-solving skills.
Not to wallow.
And you're not giving the child the solution.
You say, go think about what is something else we could do today.
That could be fun.
Imagine, Lewis, that this happened to your best friend.
Imagine your best friend just called you or you're on your phone and he said, you know,
I was supposed to go play with you, but I couldn't do it.
What advice would you give them?
You're going to be really good at giving advice to your friend.
And then I'm going to say, as your dad, honey, gosh, you came up with these amazing ideas.
which one do you want to try today?
That's cool.
That's emotion regulation teaching.
Yeah.
The first step of it is recognizing the emotion first.
Is that within yourself or if you're looking at someone else's emotions?
Either one.
Both.
I mean, it's always interesting.
All these skills are self and other.
So if you're the ones, if you're my son and you're screaming, Daddy, I hate you,
you made it so I can't go to my friend's house.
Like, I'm going to get triggered by that.
Yeah.
So it's Mark.
Take a breath.
Mark.
Yeah.
Your kid is reacting.
Your job is to figure.
how to co-regulate, down-regulate, and reach your kid to help them problem solve.
That's got to be the mindset.
Okay.
So recognize first.
What was the second step?
Understand.
Understand.
So, for example, if you're like, I hate you and I want to go home and I can't stand this,
if I do that to you, let's switch roles for a minute.
So I'm your son.
As a child.
I'm a child.
I hate you.
How do I feel?
Angry?
Frustrated?
Why?
I'd have to ask you to understand it, right?
Yes.
Because what you're doing is,
what 99% of people do.
Assuming.
Right.
You're the emotion judge.
You're assuming how I'm feeling based on my behavior.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Your reaction.
Behavior is not feeling.
I've been socialized to be aggressive because that's what boys do to get attention.
That is nothing.
I may be feeling shame, disappointment, overwhelm, you have no idea.
Until you can bring me down and find out what happened, you're not going to know what I'm
really feeling.
And if you don't know what I'm really feeling, you are going to be incapable of
providing or supporting me and regulating.
If someone, let's say it's a child or a friend or an intimate partner, if someone in your
life is bringing what looks like frustration and anger, emotion, what is something that you
can do to understand what is beneath that anger to know exactly what it is?
Yeah, I mean, the first is you don't want to ask them when they're in that place.
it's like why you're so angry
exactly yeah like that doesn't work
because that'll just you know
yeah yeah but
I would say
it looks like you might be angry or frustrated
but I'm not sure what's happening right now
just can you tell me what's going on
so ask a question
just ask you open any question
just tell me more what happened
and then you start hearing the theme
see part of the core of
emotional intelligence is that you
we adults have to understand what we call these core themes of emotion. So anxiety, the theme is
uncertainty. Fear, the theme is danger. Frustration, blocked goals. Anger, injustice, disappointment,
unmet expectation. I'm giving you the kind of unpleasant feelings. Interesting. And until you,
as a father, as a friend, as a partner, as a boss, understand that.
You're not going to be to help people.
Is there a graph or a chart that you have
that explains what the root foundation is under every emotion?
There is.
What's it called?
It's the app that I co-created with the co-founder of Pinterest
called How We Feel.
Okay.
And it's free.
And you can download it on iOS or Android.
What's it called?
How we feel.
How we feel.
Okay.
144 emotions, including their definitions.
Wow.
And ability to track your emotions over time.
Okay.
And once you get that, because here's the thing, once I understand that what you're feeling is disappointment and not anger, because anger is an injustice, right?
Anger is, for example, someone treating me unfairly.
So if you think about it, if your wife tells you, like, comes in, like, looks like she's pissed, and you think, or comes in, like, you know, I can't believe this happened.
Oh, why you're so disappointed?
did. Well, the disappointment is, oh, well, you thought this was going to happen and it didn't happen.
Let's think together about what you could do differently next time.
If it's someone treats her unfairly, yikes. Now she might have to have a really difficult
conversation with someone to say, listen, you can't treat me that way. Your support in helping
her find that solution is based on knowing what the actual emotion and experience is.
In your book, dealing with feeling on page 109, you say labeling is a little.
link that connects our internal lives, our feelings to our outward actions, how we react to those
feelings. I'm not exaggerating when I say that mastering this skill is what ultimately gives us
the power to control our own fates. It's a pretty important thing. Yeah. And so when we can learn
to understand, I think, the root underneath each one of these emotions, we're going to have better
awareness around why we're feeling that way, why someone else is feeling a certain way. So we can
co-regulate or interregulate the thing that's what you're talking about and and the key to having
a rich life is having beautiful relationships first with yourself yes so you're not suffering stressed
and overwhelmed or envious or jealous constantly because then you're just in a suffering state
of being you're not in a rich abundant beautiful grateful state peaceful state so it's getting in that
relationship with self and understanding your own emotions and then learning how to navigate those
and others. It is what I'm here you say. It's correct. And it is a caveat, which is that understanding
emotions doesn't mean you know exactly the reason why and that we each feel the same emotion
for the same reasons. Right. Yeah. And that's important because we tend to think other people
feel emotions because of the way we feel those emotions. No, it's different. And so like the things
that, for example, with anger, you know, the things that I see as an injustice, you may not relate
to. And I may not be able to relate to the things that you see as an injustice because of our
childhoods, our upbringing, our culture, our religion, our gender, race, whatever it is.
And so the goal of emotional intelligence is not to be right. The goal is to be curious.
The goal is to, hey, Lewis, tell me more. Oh, you know, it's hard for me to really be empathic
because I don't get it. But I hear you and I believe you and I want to support you.
So my wife and her emotions right now, just being pregnant, I'm like, I don't know. I don't know.
I don't know, but I can be compassion.
I can be non-judgmental.
It doesn't matter.
It doesn't matter.
What matters is what she's feeling and why she's feeling it and that you care.
Yeah.
And you said, so number one is to recognize emotions.
Number two is to understand.
What was the next three?
Then there's L labeling.
Labeling.
So that's, you know, within an emotion, there are many degrees.
Am I angry or am I just peeved or am I enraged?
That's important because,
the smaller, the emotion, the easier it is to regulate.
It's a lot easier to manage peeve than is enraged.
It's a lot easier to manage disappointment than it is despair.
But if we don't have that granularity, which a lot of people don't,
this is, I was talking with someone recently, and why he goes,
why is everybody depressed?
I'm like, everybody's not depressed.
They're just using the word depressed.
And this is, we can't allow that.
We've got to get people to understand.
like I used to work at Bellevue Hospital
I'll show you depression
you know catatonic depression
is real depression
you're disappointed, you're discouraged
you know we don't want to say you're that
but my point is that
what we want to do is help people
understand that granularity it's called
okay so labeling number four
expressing
expressing so it's knowing how
and when to express emotions with different people
across context and culture
yep
and then the last
one is the r which is this my whole book on regulation regulation yeah at the end okay it always culminates
in regulation now importantly regulation doesn't mean you have to change your feeling regulation
you just mean acknowledging it and being with it yeah it doesn't mean you have to like
remove the feeling right away i mean you might still be let down or yeah you might be let down
or frustrated or sad or hurt or whatever might be but allowing
that feeling to dictate your joy and rob you of your joy or presence or ability to connect
to other people, then you're kind of in a powerless state. Something else has power over you,
and emotion has power over you, rather you taking back control of your life, which is what
you talk about in the loss. There are five in my work, I have my, like, I call it my money slide
when I give my presentations because there's so many naysayers that like emotions, like they roll
their eyes or like we leave our feelings at the door we don't have time for this we're a high
achieving high power and I'm like all right if you want to make more money yeah do this yeah but
there are um you know I say how much of the science have you read about emotional intelligence and
leadership and management and productivity none okay well let me show you what let me show it to you
because you may think differently now there are five reasons why everybody should care about
emotional intelligence what are those one you're a better learner
period. Two, you're a better decision maker. Three, you're way better at building and maintaining
healthy relationships. Four, you have better physical and mental health. And five, you can achieve
your goals. That's pretty convincing to me. Yeah, exactly. But what would a naysayer say to that then
of like, well, it just seems like woo-woo or fluff or therapy and I don't have time for that. So how can I
learn to master my emotions better or have a better relationship with them, well, how I'm going to
go through all this woo-woo stuff. Yeah. Well, firstly, I mean, that's a trigger for me that you're
calling it woo-woo. I understand. This is what other people would say. Yeah. I'm not saying that.
I'm being, yeah, yeah. I'm all in this. I'm all, give it all to me, you know? Yeah.
What I would say is tell me more about why you think it's woo-woo. I just want to hear.
Because I'm looking for results. I just want to, I need, you know, I've got pressure from my boss,
I'm trying to accomplish these goals.
I've got responsibilities.
I got kids that need me and I'm all the time for these things.
Seems like too much, you know, soft work and I need hard results.
Yeah.
Well, what if I were to tell you that organizations and have managers with higher emotional
intelligence have less attrition?
What do you think about that?
I just think, you know, most employees are weak-minded.
And if we got to go through them and just find new people, then we just got to find new people.
but we need people that have strong, you know, strong will, not weak emotions.
Yeah, and I agree.
This is why I think it's important to develop the emotional intelligence of your employees
because they're going to have difficult clients.
You know, I stay at some really nice hotels,
and my decision to go back to a hotel is about the customer service.
If I come in early and there's not a room available,
and the person at the desk says, like, you know, sir, there's just no room.
I'm like, okay, great, I'll go someplace else, thank you very much.
if they were trained in emotional intelligence,
do you realize how much more business you would have?
Because how I feel when I enter that hotel
and how I'm greeted and the way I'm treated
is a determinant of my wanting to return.
Right.
No, I get it.
I'm just trying to find the devil's advocate.
I love it.
I mean, like, this is my favorite test of emotional intelligence.
But I think that's what people need to hear.
Sure.
And if I'm in that archetype that's combating you,
I would say, well, gosh,
we just don't have this extra money
for these type of training
are these budgets and how long is this going to take to have someone heal their like inner child wounds?
You know, it's going to take decades for these 25-year-olds who have had no training and are
already complaining and I already show up late and already don't do a good job.
How am I to get them to understand this in the next three to six months?
I don't have time to train them.
Well, you can use our app, number one.
But I think more importantly, Lewis, what I'm hearing from you is that you're confusing scale building with like therapy and counseling.
and some people do need therapy and counseling
because of whatever they've experienced in life.
I'm talking about really serious skills.
I'm talking about collaboration on your team.
I'm talking about having people in your workplace,
inspire other people.
I'm talking about people being able to give them receive feedback
without creating chaos.
Do you think that your organization might do better
if people were better at giving and receiving feedback
and inspiring teams and collaborative?
100%.
Well, there you go.
And a side note on this,
Something I learned when I started my emotional intelligence training was I was good at being
coachable in sports, but I wasn't good at receiving feedback of my person.
Totally.
It's a huge issue.
And I was very, it's like an attack on me as a person.
I was like, ah, don't give me feedback.
I couldn't take it.
And it was so hard for me.
And once I understood the incredible.
power of receiving feedback even if you don't like it it's a gift it is the greatest gift and it doesn't
mean every all feedback is accurate it doesn't mean you have to receive all feedback kind of sift
you got to sift it you have to know where it's coming from the context setting who you know
if you're getting the same feedback from multiple people maybe that's something to listen to um but
why is receiving feedback such a crucial part to achieving more success in life
because when you're getting feet i'll give you an example of this so early in my career i i think i was
just overcompensating you know i had like i knew how to do complex statistical analyses and i
i would i had this tendency like when i would do a presentation said like this is very complicated
and one person a woman once came out to me at the end of my talk she's like you know
i think you're a great presenter but the way you're framing things about like how complicated your
ideas are and your work is, it's insulting. It's kind of diminishing the strength of your
presentation. Now, my immediate reaction was like, oh my gosh, like this is the worst thing
could ever happen. Oh my gosh. And then I just sat with it. I'm like, thank you. Because
the last thing I want to do is come across as an arrogant professor or the last thing I want
to do is have people in my audience not receive the information because of the language that
I'm using to teach it. But that's a mindset. That's a big mindset.
shift and if you if your eye is on attaining your goals then being open to that feedback is just
critically important and managing the feelings yeah man well here's so what would you say then to
anyone you know in their late teens or 20s in the gen z range on who maybe don't receive
feedback well yeah why they should be open to receiving feedback whether than their career or
relationships or friendship circles like why is feedback important for anyone who's gen z
because if you want to achieve your goals in life uh oftentimes you're going to have to change
some of your behavior because you're having an impact and some of you want to be conscious of your
impact and if you're not conscious of it you might be going down a path that's not going to be
the best for you why does it seem like most
the younger people don't like hearing that.
They're like, why don't you accept me for who I am and just receive me?
Why do I have to change who I am, my personality?
Well, I never want you to change your personality, but I want you to understand your
impact of your behavior.
Yes.
I think, you know, this goes back to this kind of that everybody gets a trophy, you know,
stuff that was going on for many years and still goes on, whereas people have been raised
with not having any resilience because, oh, my gosh, don't cry, honey.
Oh, my gosh, you know, I would have parents call me and say, like, you're, you're, you've
now made it impossible for my kid to go to law school.
I'm like, I didn't take the test.
They took the test.
Right.
So, like, really?
And, you know, I stand firm on this kind of stuff.
I mean, my true belief about this is that, you know, being someone who's out in the world a lot and teaching a lot and, you know, doing webinars and workshops and classes, is that there's some, there is variability.
Even within, I mean, a lot of people love to talk about this generation, that generation.
I'm okay with that, but I really think there is a distribution within every generation of people who are going to understand the nuance and work hard and take the feedback because they want to achieve their goals in life.
And my belief is that if you really want to have your goals realized, you have to be highly self-aware, highly self-aware.
And you've got to be willing to shift and change.
Adapt, shift, change.
It's not that you have to be someone else, but you just have to be aware of your impact.
What does self-awareness look like for anyone in any generation?
What does that even mean being self-aware?
Well, that goes back to the R and ruler, which is being aware in my work about your emotions.
Like, what emotions am I experiencing right now?
Am I even aware of it?
And most people are not self-aware.
But it's socially aware, too.
You know, for example, I love this because when I do public speaking, I tell people right away, I'm an introvert.
Like, I'm pretty good on stage, but, like, afterwards, I'm going to want it, like, kind of do my own thing.
I'm not going to go to the big party and, like, celebrate and, like, drink alcohol and watch TV.
and like, oh, you know, I'm going to go to a wine bar by myself, maybe.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. And then I say this out loud, and I'm always so curious about the people
who have come to talk to me at the end and they want to tell me their entire life story within
and it's like, and I'm sitting there like trying to be like.
So like, I really want to leave right now. Yeah. Yeah. And so people aren't listening.
And that's just kind of an easy example, but in general, we're just not paying attention.
and like people who you know in meetings like I do this little joke you know when I do
trainings is you got 30 seconds introduce yourself and there's always somebody that's like
on their fifth minute yeah you know you're like all right but that kind of self-awareness is really
important like just be aware of your presence be aware of how you're dealing with your own feelings
Are you eye rolling?
Years ago, there was someone in my office
who was unconscious of the fact
that when someone said something that they disagreed with,
they would do this.
They'd have this stern kind of weird facial expression,
which was kind of like a little bit of contempt, actually,
or kind of disgust or anger.
And it was really hard for me to give that person feedback.
Why?
Because, again, it was like an attack,
on her facial expression attack on her presence and so but it well I felt it was
super important for this person to be aware of it because it was scaring
employees and so people didn't want to work with this person because they
were afraid of that person that's this person was a wonderful human being yeah
it just was unconscious of her automatic reactions to things that she
disagreed with and it was a gift to give her that feedback about her facial
expressions I have the same problem by the way so
because I'm always thinking.
I'm a scientist.
Even right now, I'm like,
I've got to do a study on this idea.
And when I get in that mark-bracket scientist,
but I'm like,
I get these weird facial expressions.
Oftentimes people come up to me and say,
and is there anything okay?
And I'm like, what do you mean?
And they say, well, you look really upset about something.
And I'll have to say, gosh, you know,
like I'm just thinking about something
that's really kind of, I'm being critical,
and when I make, I have my critical face on.
I share that also because
I think we can also be outwardly kind of acknowledging our own kind of nuances.
And because I'm an introvert who's a scientist, I kind of be, people think of me as
sometimes being aloof.
I'm very friendly.
I just, it's not like my, it's not like my first go-to.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And then the extrovert who is a narcissist is difficult, at least for me.
Sure, sure.
Yeah, it's like emotionally draining probably for you.
Very draining.
Yeah. What would you say is the number one emotion that is holding the most people back
in the world or in the USA? Like what's the number one go-to emotion that blocks most people
from true abundance in their life? You know, because I'm a scientist, I can't answer that
question so easily. It's very different for a lot of people. I think the envy right now is a
serious issue. And I think people are not aware that it's envy. I think, um, I think, um,
and fear, the fear family.
What does envy and fear block for a human being
when they're constantly in that emotion?
Well, the envy, you know, because envy can go in multiple directions.
You know, envy can be admiration, or envy can mean resentment.
And I've seen so many people, unfortunately,
resent other people's success.
They start hating people for reaching certain goals
or hating people who have a certain way of being in the world
that they don't feel like they can ever attain,
which I find sad, you know,
that people go down that route of, you know, of resentment
because it just paralyzes you.
It's not a place of growth.
When someone is resenting or frustrated with someone else's success,
whether they know the person they don't,
what happens in the brain or the body that blocks them?
I mean, it's all the self-defeating self-talk.
It's they become their own self-critic and self-sabotor.
It's, I'm not enough.
I'm not good enough.
I'm not smart enough.
This will never happen for me.
You know, everyone else can do it, but I can't do it.
It's all that negative spiral.
What is the science or research that you've discovered say or share
when we say to ourselves we're not enough or envying someone else or self-deprecating or
whatever these not enough thoughts or saying it out loud to ourselves or other people
what does the research or science say about how that hurts you or helps you in accomplishing your
goals or living a better life when you're constantly in that state it's a roadblock
you're just you're basically creating your own barrier to your own success because if you're
always second-guessing yourself, if you're always thinking I'm not enough. If you're always
thinking, you know, I'm not smart enough. And by the way, I have a strong stance on this. I'm
pretty convinced at this point in my career that most of us have been gaslighted in childhood.
We've been told we're too fat, we're too skinny, we're too tall, we're too short. Our nose is too
big. Our nose is too small. We're too dark. We're too light. We're too masculine. We're
not masculine enough, we're too feminine, we're not feminine enough. And what happens is that
our own self-talk is not defined by us, is defined by other people trying to create a reality
for us. And what happens is that because there's no intervention, there's no training, there's
no teaching, we believe it. Maybe I am too sensitive. Maybe I do have, you know, my nose,
maybe I am too feminine, maybe I'm too masculine. I mean, I can't tell you how much of that I had
internalized as a kid. Really? Oh, yeah, everything. I was
believing everyone's whatever one else said about me became my reality no pressure to parents
no pressure to parents or teachers or anyone peers yeah yeah coaches so what would you say are the
three most important things a parent can do for their kids one is you got to be the role model
so monitor your own self-talk yeah you know what are you saying to yourself when you make a mistake
are you out loud saying i'm such an idiot i'm a moron mommy's a mommy's dumb you know dad
these, whatever, that's a big deal. You've got to monitor what comes out of your mouth because
kids are listening and kids are watching. The second for parents is they've got to deactivate
before they can co-regulate. They've got to learn how to pause, take that breath, bring the
nervous system down so they can be more present and show up with compassion, non-judgment,
and good listening. The third is they've got to help their kid label those feelings
and help them to co-regulate. They have to kind of validate, not indulge,
and do that search finding to see what the experience is
and then work with their kid for solutions on managing it.
And that's, by the way, that's for couples.
It's for bosses with employees who are upset.
This is not just parent kid.
This is life.
This is life.
What's your thoughts on Inside Out
and how that's helped or hurt people by consuming that?
I think it's helpful.
I think it just gets the word out.
It gets that, you know, emotions are out there.
and the more we can do to show people that how people feel matters but importantly how people deal
with their feelings matters even more that's true because it's not just the it's interesting it's
you got to show the skill how people feel matters but how people deal with their feelings matter
even more yes that should be on a bumper sticker you know it's like that should be on a back of
every car in la traffic yeah exactly because you can be like ah i'm angry about
this but it's like how you respond with your feelings that's the answer is one of the
greatest skills to develop if you can respond well with them i you know i'm in favor of a
quote that is attributed to victor frankl it's i live by it the space between that's right
between stimulus and response there is space in that space in that space lies our power to choose
our response and our response lies our growth and freedom and a lot of the work that
I do is built on how do you fill that space. I think right now in society with between, you know,
climate change problems between political polarization, between wars and justices, shootings. I mean,
people are just chronically overwhelmed. They're stressed out and that space is getting shorter and
and shorter and shorter and shorter and short and shorter and shorter and shorter and shorter and short and
and shorter and shorter and they can't build the space. But we have to do it. We just have to do it. We have to. It's,
If we want well-being, if we want good relationships, we want to make good decisions, if we want to achieve our goals in life, we've got to take care of ourselves and other people.
And I think that, you know, today we spoke a lot about the mindsets and that permission to feel, the labeling of emotions, but there are strategies, the breathing work that is so important, learning how to go from being a self-critic to having some self-compassion, knowing that it's okay to get help, have an emotional ally, I call it.
Not someone who's going to tell you what to do,
but someone that you have that psychological safety with
to just have a conversation.
Not indulge, but have a conversation.
Not indulge, but have the conversation.
And the good emotional ally,
what they're doing is they're providing support,
but they're also helping you think through things
through another lens.
They're helping you reappraise
or helping you shift yourself talk.
Yes.
And then we've got to take care of our bodies.
I think people fail to understand
the biology of regulation
in terms of sleep, nutrition,
and physical activity.
Yes.
I mean...
If you didn't work out consistently
or do your martial arts
or the movement that you enjoyed,
if you got 20% less sleep
than you normally get,
and if you ate poorly,
do you think you would have the ability
to regulate your emotions?
No.
100% not.
And most of America is sick or obese
or chronic stress or chronic illness?
Or have sleep deprivation?
Uh-huh.
Yeah, a lot of parents,
going back to parenting for a lot of parents,
in my work and in my book we talk about
what does it mean to be the best version of yourself
through emotion regulation
and people set goals we help people set goals
like how do you want to be seen and talked about as a parent
as a leader as a friend
I want to be more empathetic to my child
I want to be more patient with my child
and that parents set these goals and they're like
I got my patient's goal and I'm like
how's it going for you well this morning
the kid was crying and screaming and I lost it
and I yelled to them and I sent him to the room
I'm like you set the goal what happened
and they say well this best self stuff doesn't work I'm like I promise you it works I've
taught it to millions of people but let's look at the barrier to being your best self
tell me about the night before tell me about the morning oh I have three hours sleep
yeah good luck yeah you're not being your best self exactly you can't be and so part
that's this is one it's very interesting that we're talking about this because some many people
come to me like just to not be stereotypical here but I give this speech to about 1500 police
officers who were not patient with me right right and they're like dude what's the best strategy
and I'm like I don't know like self-talk you know yeah I got you know under pressure
that's not the way it works all of the strategies of emotion regulation work together
yeah and in certain context with certain emotions you know with different people you're
going to use these strategies in different ways and you've got to be aware that you need
strategies for your for the barriers yes and so that parent like you get more sleep guess what
your fuse is going to be longer in the morning you have more space exactly but if you're having
sugar all day you're going to be like crashing and high and crashing and you're not less space
exactly get less sleep if you do all these if you're not moving your body and you're just
stuck all day in one place you're not processing your emotions and processing your body also so all
these tools combined allow you to have more space to then
see the emotions in yourself, see the emotions in another,
and hopefully respond with curiosity, compassion, listening, asking questions.
Self and other.
Self and other.
And trying to find some type of resolution with the emotions rather than overindulgence,
overreaction, or stuffing of the emotions.
I mean, this is like you're going to come on the road with me.
I was doing.
I was doing it. I'm curious about co-regulation.
Yeah.
If we grew up, if someone watching and listening grew up with a narcissistic parent,
how do they learn to break the cycle when they've been gaslit most of their life as a child
and regulate and co-regulate with another?
I mean, obviously you've shared a lot of this already,
but how does someone who's experienced that as a child break the cycle?
And it's like a, you have to make such a conscious.
decision. You have to say, even though this wasn't fair, and this probably happened in this
parent and this parent, I need to be the one who's going to break this cycle, right? Is it at first
of the decision of like, I'm going to be the one, even though it's not fair? I mean, I think
you're getting to a really good point here. And this is a lot of people in our culture.
One of my favorite stories of all time was a 94-year-old man wrote me after reading my book.
And he said to me, you know, I'm a lawyer, I was successful, but I really was not a great parent.
I was not a great husband.
I worked all the time.
And after reading your work, I realized how much better my life would have been and how much better of a parent I would have been.
And I was blown away by this 94-year-old guy writing me this email.
And I wrote him back and I said, you know, thank you so much for writing me.
and I'm just blown away that you're thinking about this.
And he went me back and he goes, you know, Mark,
thank you for being my Uncle Marvin.
Because tomorrow is the first day of the rest of my life
and I'm going to start using these skills now.
That's cool.
That was pretty cool.
That's really cool.
Yeah, a 94-year-old, you know, like stoic, you know, lawyer
is saying like tomorrow is the first day of the rest of my life
that I can apply these skills.
That was pretty mind-blowing to me.
And so if that person can do it, any of us can do it.
That's cool.
And awareness is the first step.
Just being aware, like, and I ask people to be emotion scientists about their life.
Yes.
Like, that's my vision.
As everyone becomes an emotion scientist.
Uh-huh.
Because that curiosity, is my life working for me?
Or is my life working against me?
And if it's working against you, it doesn't have to.
Yeah.
Because these are all learnable skills.
That's beautiful, Mark.
Dealing with feeling, use your emotions to create.
the life you want. I truly believe that everyone should get this book because I don't know a
better skill than learning the art of emotional regulation, learning the tools of emotional
intelligence, and like you said, like being a scientist of your own emotions, and then once you can
learn yours, learning how to regulate with other people to navigate in the world. The key to success in
life is relationships. And if you don't have a good relationship with yourself, you will not
not ultimately live a happy, successful life. And if you don't learn how to have relationships
with others and understand their emotions, you will also struggle in life. But when you can learn
to navigate and master these tools, which takes your whole life, it's not like you learn it
and you're done. You can live anyway. You have to practice it constantly. You will only see
your life get better and improved. So I want to acknowledge you, Mark, for having
the curiosity as a young boy to reach out to your uncle and go down the journey of studying
and trying to understand emotional intelligence when there really wasn't a lot of information
when therapy wasn't cool back then when you know you were made fun of and you know
kicked out of social circles because of choices you made all these different things like
knowledge you for staying in the emotion and allowing yourself to process and teach others
because you've helped your own life,
but now you've helped millions of people around the world
with a lot of your work, your books, your students.
And I acknowledge you for the journey you're on
of trying to make people understand it better,
which is probably the most complicated thing to understand
is our own emotions and feelings.
And learning how to heal and integrate the healing lessons
is probably one of the most courageous things
that any person can do for their own life.
One of the hardest, but most courageous things they can do.
So I acknowledge you for everything you're doing,
you're on Instagram mark bracket mark dot bracket markbracket markbracket.com we've got the
app how we feel app which is an award-winning app that's helped millions of people improve
their well-being and we've got the book dealing with feeling which is out right now
that people can grab get a copy for a friend a sibling you know whoever may be give a copy
to your child whatever might be and and learn these tools
and help someone else as well.
I've got two final questions for you.
Okay.
This one is called the three truths.
Hypothetical question.
Imagine you get to live as long as you want,
but it's the last day on earth for you,
many years away.
You've accomplished all of your dreams.
You have all the relationships you want to experience,
memories, fun, joy.
But for whatever reason on the last day,
you have to take all of your work with you
and we don't have access to your content anymore.
This interview is gone.
The books are gone, the app.
We don't have access.
But you get to leave behind three lessons to the world.
That's all you get to leave behind, or three truths.
What would those three truths be for you?
I have to say, my first response is, you know,
the world's chaos will worse than expect my return.
But I stole that from my martial arts master.
But I think the first is it goes back to permission to feel.
Just give yourself and give everyone else permission to feel.
I feel like that's at the heart of the work.
I think the second is being other-oriented,
that life is about supporting other people
and achieving their dreams.
Yes.
And the third, I think, is, I don't know.
My guess is, it's around freedom.
It's just that life is about moving forward, not staying in the past.
And while we're in dark places in our lives, those moments are impermanent and relish
the theory of impermanence because we don't have to be stuck.
We can move forward.
That's beautiful.
and final question what's your definition of greatness i think my definition of greatness goes back to
what i said which is having an other orientation i feel i mean and this is developmental for me
but i feel like my job now is to support other people in achieving their dreams yeah mark
thanks for being here appreciate you amazing i have a brand new book called make money easy
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