The School of Greatness - The Science of Irresistible Conversations: Michael Bungay Stanier Shares his Secrets EP 1477
Episode Date: July 31, 2023The Summit of Greatness is back! Buy your tickets today – summitofgreatness.com – Michael Bungay Stanier helps people be a force for change. He’s best known for his book The Coaching Habit whic...h has sold close to a million copies and has thousands of 5-star reviews online. His latest book The Advice Trap focuses on what it takes to tame your Advice Monster. He founded Box of Crayons, a learning and development company that helps organizations move from advice-driven to curiosity-led. They’ve trained hundreds of thousands of managers to be more coach-like and their clients range from Microsoft to Gucci.In this episode you will learn,The 4 keys to becoming a better conversationalistPowerful questions that will foster more meaningful conversations in your personal lifeHow to build rapport and invite successful networking into your professional lifeThe 3 personality traits all of the best collaborators and networkers haveWhy some personalities feel magnetic and why were attracted to themFor more information go to www.lewishowes.com/1477For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960More relationship building advice from some of our favorite relationship experts:Esther Perel: https://link.chtbl.com/1291-podFaith Jenkins: https://link.chtbl.com/1221-podMatthew Hussey: lewishowes.com/944
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I'm trying to unweird coaching so it becomes an everyday tool that regular people can use
so the definition that we have for coaching and the coaching habit is can you stay curious just
a little bit longer and can you rush to action and advice giving a little bit more slowly because
most people are advice giving maniacs I mean love it. Somebody starts talking and in about 10
seconds, they're like, I know, I know what I need to say. 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. You are probably best known for your book, The Coaching Habit,
which has sold more than a million copies. And you've also got a new book out called How to
Work With Almost Anyone, which is about the five questions for building the best
possible relationships. And I want to ask you first, um, why some people struggle with having
deep, meaningful relationships in intimacy, personal relationships, and also in their career
versus people that just seem to be so charismatic, seem to be so present, connected, know exactly what to say,
funny, interesting. What is the difference and how can we be more magnetic?
I know. How can we be more magnetic? That's such a great question. Well, some of it is inherent.
Some people I think are just wired to go, I'm over there. I am with you. I am interested in you.
I can make your eyes glitter. I can make my eyes shine as well because I'm so excited around this.
You know, this weekend I was with a mutual friend, Rory Vaden.
He's like that.
He's like, he comes up to you and I'm like, I didn't even know who he was.
And he was like, I'm so excited to meet you.
This is so great.
And I'm like, I'm feeling great.
I don't even know who you are, dude.
And then we got to know him.
And of course, you know him as well.
So I think some people have this willingness to kind of go like, I love people and I'm out there.
But for the introverts of the world.
Right.
And I'm kind of a little bit like that.
I'm like, I have my moments.
But there's one part of me is like, I don't like people all the time.
I'm backing away from them.
And I think there's two parts.
Where would I go with this? I think there are people who go,
I care about relationships. That's kind of where it almost starts, which is like,
my life gets better through people. Work gets done through people. So how do I build relationships
with people that allow me to kind of make that magic happen. And a philosopher, Martin Buber, said,
look, there are two types of relationships.
There are I-thou relationships and I-it relationships.
I-thou.
I-thou and I-it.
I-it.
I-thou is when you show up in your present to that person
and you show up in your humanity
and they show up in their humanity
and you can be just there for the messiness and the glory and the whole of it the whole catastrophe as it's
sometimes called they're kind of like I'm building that type of relationship and I eat relationships
are a little bit more on that kind of transactional mechanical I'm trying to get something from you
here and I think the world pulls you towards I-It relationships. We're all
busy, we're all overwhelmed, we've all got stuff to do, we're all trying to get ahead, we've got
our own ambitions and I think the people who have a real magic are the ones that go I'm just trying
to build I-Thou relationships with you. I'm trying to show you my heart, I'm trying to see your heart,
I'm trying to make that level of connection um without necessarily trying to prove anything without necessarily trying to get anything but just
going i'm trying to see you for the full human that you are what's the question that makes
the person asking the question more magnetic to the person receiving it and also the person receiving it feeling like the most
interesting person in the world. Yeah. I think there's probably a lot of questions that you can
ask. It depends on the person and it depends on the time, but I think the secret is listening to
the answer. There's this ability to kind of like ask a good question and then go, actually, I care about what you're saying. I'm not feeling the need to jump in or interrupt or add value or one up you and tell you how I
also went on vacation in Greece. And if I had an even better bottle of wine than you did,
there's this ability to kind of say, be present to the like, tell me, tell me what your answer
is to that. So I have different moments.
I'm like, what are you up to?
It's a really great question if I'm really interested in that,
if it's not just a transaction.
Sometimes I'm like, I want to go deeper. I'm like, what's the thing it's finally time to put down?
What's the burden you've been carrying that it's finally time to put down?
And in Toronto, I will occasionally host these dinners.
It'll be me and two other people,
kind of random, slightly randomly selected.
I mean, they're in my sphere of the world,
but it's kind of serendipity who comes together.
And I will bring five questions to the table.
And they're like, each person gets to pick a question.
And then they answer the question
and then the other two of us answer the question.
And these are questions designed to kind of break us open a little bit,
to kind of create vulnerability, to show us a bit of ourselves.
And so we'll do one round of answering the question.
And then the second person will pick from one of the four remaining questions.
And then we'll go around.
And that's a three-hour dinner.
That's it.
That's all that it takes.
Just to open the conversation.
Because, you know, it's like, what's the burden that's finally time to put down?
Interesting.
Big question.
You can go really deep on that if you want.
What's the crossroad you're at?
What's the hard lesson that you keep having to learn?
How much is enough?
I mean, these are all endlessly big questions that you can sit and wrestle with.
I mean, if I'd asked you 10 years ago, how much is enough?
You'd have had an answer.
Right.
And it would have been really interesting.
And I would have sat there and gone, that is interesting.
Right.
And if I sit down with you now and I go, well, Lewis, now everything's changed.
You've got books, you've got podcasts, everything's shifted.
Like it's 10 years since you started your business.
But now how much is enough you know what
are you hungry for now you know because who you are in this world and what success is to you in
the world that's shifted and shifts for everybody so i love having a range of different questions
because you know there are some times where if i'm sitting at a dinner party and i'm like you
know what's the burden it's finally time to put down? The person's like, who am I sitting next to? I'm just here for chit chat. I just want to talk about the Oscars.
Yeah. I just want to talk about the Oscars and the sports and the weekend and the commute and
the weather. That's funny. Um, so, and I think you can, you know, a question I asked myself at
the end of a day is what was the best thing about today so that's a great question
to ask people it's like what's the best thing about today because what you're inviting is a
story and what you're inviting is like tell me something i don't know tell me something that
lights you up like you know if you can get to ask a question and then listen you see their eyes
sparkle a little bit what you've got there is an I-Thou relationship
in potentially.
I-Thou, yeah.
It's interesting.
You sparked a video I saw recently on Jim Carrey.
Yeah.
I think it was a year old video.
It was of him saying that he's retiring from an act.
Right.
And he was doing an interview talking about this and he said, yeah, I think I'm done after this last movie.
And the interviewer was like, you're joking, right?
He's like, no, I think I'm done.
And I'm going to tell you something that I don't think any celebrity would say.
I've done enough.
I have enough.
I am enough.
I agree.
I just get chills when I hear that, right?
And I was thinking to myself, yeah.
Yeah.
You know, I'm not sure how old Jim is right now,
probably late 50s or 60s or something,
but I was like, okay, yeah.
But would you have said that 30 years ago?
No.
You know, they're different conversations
and different seasons of life.
When you're 30 trying to make it in Hollywood.
Exactly.
You're like, I'm hungry, I'm doing all I can,
I'm doing the mask, I'm doing whatever it takes,
I'm kind of playing full out for that goofy thing. But now he's kind of, you know, a recluse, he's like, I love hungry. I'm doing all I can. I'm doing the mask. I'm doing whatever it takes. I'm kind of playing full out for that goofy thing.
But now he's kind of a recluse.
He's like, I love painting.
That's it.
And he's like, I'm doing that.
And it's like, I found the second mountain for me to climb.
And it's not trying to stick a flag on Hollywood.
And amass more wealth or whatever.
It's trying to be a fully expressed human being, I think, for him.
Yeah, it's great.
And so I think a lot of it is also understanding what season of life the person is at.
That's right.
On how we ask questions, how we step into conversation and how we connect with them.
And also because, you know, so much of what you're about is how do I be of service? You know,
that's kind of what I sense is at the heart of this. And I'm like, so what's the question that's
of service to them? You know, part of the success
of the coaching habit book is, um, you know, a question like what's the real challenge here for
you? That's one of the questions there. And it's kind of the one that really resonates with people
because it's got two things to it. The first is it says, let's help figure out what the real thing
is we've got to fix because so much in our lives we're busy
solving the wrong problem we get we get seduced into thinking that the first thing somebody says
is the real answer it's like it always never is right it's just their first answer it's not the
real answer so it's like what's the real challenge can you give an example of what people might say
what's say the question again and then what's the typical answer that someone might say? So if you come to me and go, Michael, I love my podcast and I've got big ambitions for it,
which I know you have, and I'm really looking to scale it, to grow it, to make it kind of
like just the podcast, I'll be like, great.
And there's one part of my brain that goes, look, I know stuff about scale and I know
stuff about marketing and I know stuff.
So part of me is like, I'm going to add some value to this conversation. I'm going to show Lewis just how smart I am. I've got all these tactics and tools and strategies
and people and the like. But rather than that, if I go, look, my advice, that may not even be
the real problem. That may not be the real challenge. So I go, but Lewis, what's the real challenge here for you? And you're like, well, the real challenge is I'm still trying to figure out
what success is. Or the real challenge is that actually the podcast needs to morph into this
thing to be it. And I go, yeah, but what else is a real challenge? Okay, what else? And they're like,
well, what else is a real challenge? It's quite deeper. It's unpeeling the onion. And part of the power of that question is it accelerates you towards what the real challenge is.
But then the secret sauce, it's not what's the challenge.
And it's not what's the real challenge.
It's what's the real challenge here for you.
And now we're not talking about the external thing around the podcast or
whatever it might be. It's like, Lewis, you're a founder. You're the figurehead. You're the man on
the camera. You're the visionary. What's the challenge for you in growing it? And yeah,
it could be completely different. It's like, I need to de-Lewis the Lewis brand because I'm like, it's exhausting. I can only be in so many
places at some time. I've got a conference runner in Ohio. I've got a thing to film in LA. I've got
too much going on here. Or I need this brand to last for a hundred years. So how does that work?
Because unless you've got some secret you haven't yet told us
about, you're probably not going to be here in a hundred years. You look very good for your age.
You look young and your skin is dewy and your eyes are glistening. It's fantastic.
But I'm like, you're probably not around in a hundred years. So it's like, is it longevity?
Or like, actually, my ambition to grow the podcast is not an expression of I need more listeners.
mission to grow the podcast is not an expression of I need more listeners it's I need a hundred year brand or it could be going um yeah I'm right in thinking your your COO has been a long-term
friend of yours like another guy from a I heard you're like it's all going with him it was so
good for so long I trusted him with everything but now he's turned on me or we've just grown apart
and actually I need somebody with a different level of skill.
So who knows what I'm just making all of this up, of course.
But the power of it is adding for you onto the end of the question, because now I'm getting you to hold the mirror up.
It's like I get that's the big challenge.
What's hard about this for me?
And all of this is to say, here's how you ask a question
in service of the other person.
Wow.
And me giving you all my answers
is often in service of me looking smart.
Sure, I'm trying to add value and help,
but because I want you to think
I'm a really great guest
and you invite me back
and you think this is even smarter
than Simon Sinek,
who I was talking to earlier today, and Simon Sinek's a smart guy.
But actually, it's like this whole thing about being other-oriented can be so powerful.
Right.
Why do you think the coaching habit has blown up in this massive success,
sold over a million copies?
What is at the heart of that that people struggled with and you were able to give a solution to?
Yeah. I think it unweirds coaching because coaching comes with a lot of baggage.
You know, there are people in the coaching community and I know lots of listeners are
part of that. They're like, oh, we get it and we love it. And we've kind of
drunk the Kool-Aid or whatever the saying is. So they're all for it. But for lots of people out in the world, they're like, I don't know, what is coaching?
Is it sports coaching? Is it life coaching? Is it ADHD coaching? Is it therapy? There's just a lot
of stuff that comes. Is it about fixing somebody who's broken? There's a lot of stuff that comes
with this. And when I was writing The Coaching Habit,
I was really clear who I wanted to serve.
It's like you are a mid-level to mid-senior level professional.
You like your job.
You're a little stressed.
You've got a good team, but you're like,
I could be doing better.
You're overworking.
You've become the bottleneck to your own team.
And I'm like, I'm
trying to un-weird coaching so it becomes an everyday tool that regular people can use. So
the definition that we have for coaching and the coaching habit is, can you stay curious just a
little bit longer? And can you rush to action and advice giving a little bit more slowly? Because
most people are advice giving maniacs. I mean, they love it.
Somebody starts talking and in about 10 seconds, they're like, I know, I know what I need to say.
Why is that the wrong approach in building magnetic connections, relationships, deeper
relationships by giving advice to someone when they come to you with a problem? Whether it be
in your career or an intimate relationship? Yeah, that's such a good question. So a mentor of
mine, a teacher called Ed Schein, just died six months ago in his nineties, but he wrote an amazing
book called Humble Leadership. And in that he talks about how relationships can be level up or
level down. And it's about the kind of the status and the authority and the control that you have in that
relationship. And here's the irony, the paradox of trying to be helpful by giving advice.
As soon as somebody comes to you and goes, blah, blah, blah, this is my challenge. And you're like,
great. I already know what the problem is. I know what, I don't, I barely know you,
but I'm pretty sure I have the solution here. You one-up them and you actually diminish them in a little bit.
So ironically, if you rush them with your advice,
you create resistance from the person who you're desperately trying to help.
Because you're doing it because you have a good heart,
but there's that point of resistance.
What's powerful about slowing down the rush to advice giving,
so it's not not giving advice. It's like, slow it down.
Is that you keep giving them power and you keep giving them authority and you keep the focus with
them. It's like, how do you do that? Well, I go, what's the challenge for you? And then I shut up
and I listened to the answer and I let you try and wrestle with this and figure this out. So you're
creating new neural pathways in your brain. You're coming up with your own ideas. You're not feeling
me taking the, I'm going to save you and rescue you from this and kind of knock the relationship
out. I'm trying to say to you, look, I'm really here. I'm on your side and I trust that you can
figure some of this stuff out.
I've got some ideas.
I'll share them with you.
But what do you think the real challenge is for you?
What else do you think?
So what's the real challenge here for you?
And if that's the real challenge,
what ideas do you already have?
Because I know you've got some ideas.
And what else could you do?
What else could you do?
And so I'm getting them to do all the work in service of them feeling empowered becoming smarter
feeling that they still own the issue I'm you know when I think about coaching I think about
fierce love like love meaning I am on I want them to be the best they can be I want them to
have the impact they want to have in the world but fierce meaning I'm not going to rescue them
or save them or be nice to them necessarily'm not going to rescue them or save them
or be nice to them necessarily.
I'm going to push them and provoke them a little bit.
And I think great coaching can have an element of that kind of fierce love to it.
And that's what asking a good question and saying,
how far can you get without me?
Because I bet you can get a lot further than you thought.
Yeah.
That's cool.
I like that.
What if someone feels like they can't reach out to a mentor or a coach or a guide to help them solve their own problems?
Yeah.
Whether it be a career or a personal problem.
How can an individual be a great coach to themselves without having someone they look up to guiding them?
It's tricky because we are very slippery with ourselves.
We get stuck.
We're slippery.
We get stuck.
We're sneaky.
It's hard to get out of our own heads around this.
So I think there are a couple of things you can think about.
One is you don't necessarily have to be paying money
to a coach or a mentor or a guide to kind of get this
kind of professional support you might like. You can just go, let me see if I can figure something
out with the people I already know and I like in my life. Like I had a mastermind group for 15 years,
like me and five other people. We would check in pretty much daily, like three or four days a week. We'd just like,
here's what I'm up to. We'd talk on the phone every two weeks. And then once a year, we'd get
together for three or four days to hang out and have fun and kind of go deeper. And that was free.
But we're like, we're going to support each other in terms of what we can do here. So I do think
there's a way that you can be the person who reaches out and says, hey, what if we supported each other?
Because I could do with a bit of support and maybe you could do with a bit of support and
let's do our best guess to figure this out.
But if that feels too much, I think that's when you come into the power of something
like journaling.
Because in some ways you've got to get out of your own head.
So, you know, when I'm journaling, I try doing like the two head. So, you know, when I'm, uh, when I'm journaling, I tried doing like
the two minute morning stuff, you know, where you like write pages every morning. I'm like, I just,
I just can't do that. I just don't have enough to say, or I'm too bored or I'm want to check my
email. So I have, I have three questions at the start of the day and two questions at the end of
the day. The three questions at the start of the day for me are, what do I notice? So for me, what do I notice is about what am I thinking and what am I feeling
and what's right there in front of me and what's been bugging me and what was I dreaming about
last night and what's out of the window. In some ways, it's about trying to be more present.
But for me, Lewis, I don't know if the same is true for you. It's about trying to be more present. But for me, Lewis, I don't know if
the same is true for you. It's also trying to be a little more connected to my feelings. I'm not
that good at that. Not just thinking, but experiencing your feelings. I'm a head guy.
And part of the work I'm trying to do is, there's so much knowledge in your body and your feelings,
I wish I could just get a bit more connected to that. So what you notice helps me with that.
What are you grateful
for is the second question. Cause that's, you know, that's just a silver bullet really. Yeah.
There's so much research that says regular small acts of gratitude just make you a happier person.
Um, and then the third thing I ask is what's the one thing today? Cause I have too many to do's.
I'm notoriously overcommitted. I'm like, how can I do one thing? What's the one thing today? Because I have too many to-dos. I'm notoriously overcommitted.
I'm like, I can only do one thing. What's the one thing? So I don't finish the day.
I've done 48 of my tasks, just not the two ones that I had to do.
Right. It's the eat the frog concept.
Yeah. Eat the frog concept. You got it. And then at the end of that, I go,
what was best about today? Sometimes that helps me figure out what progress
I've made. So, you know, Teresa Amabile, Harvard business professor, she's like, people get happy
by making small progress on stuff that matters. And I'm like, but sometimes I don't, sometimes
it's not about progress. Sometimes it's like, just what was the thing I most want to be grateful for
and think was the best about the day? And then the fifth question for me at the end
of the day is, who do I want to reach out to tomorrow? Because not only is there all sorts
of research about an increase in loneliness in America and in Canada and across the world,
but like, I feel lonely. I feel a bit isolated. I'm like, I know lots of good people and I'm not
naturally wired to be reaching out to them. So who do I want. I'm like, I know lots of good people and I'm not naturally
wired to be reaching out to them. So who do I want to reach out to, to keep being the person
who says, let's connect. Let's build those I-thou relationships. Let me be still present in your
life. I like those questions. So these are five questions, three in the morning, two at night,
to ask yourself, to be more present, to be more connected to who you are, what you're up to in life.
So the I-thou relationships is about service and relationship with others, right?
It's kind of like showing up fully.
So I have a sense of who you are.
You're present with me.
I'm not just getting the mask.
I've got the mask off.
And even if I've got a mask on, I'm like, I know the mask you're wearing.
And I have a sense of what's behind that mask.
Because you take off one mask and there's another more subtle mask.
There's masks all the way down in some ways.
But it's like you're getting close to putting
aside that.
You're not trying to necessarily kind of prove status with each other, kind of one up each
other, but you're just like, I'm seeing the best of you and I'm doing the best I can to
bring out the best of you and you're doing the same for me.
That that's the magic.
Yeah.
That's beautiful.
And how does the coaching habit support with I-thou relationships?
Yeah. What I love about this question, Lewis, is it gets to the thing that I mostly don't talk
about with the coaching habit, which is kind of the way it disrupts hierarchy and it disrupts power.
So most of my work happens in a corporate setting. I mean,
the coaching habit gets read everywhere. I get letters from parents and letters from pastors
and letters from sports coaches. So it's transcended that. But I wrote it thinking
of this middle manager. And organizations have a way of just setting people up in hierarchy with each other, which is inherently an I-it
relationship. And if you're the boss and somebody comes to you with a problem, lots of us go,
my job is to have the answer, which freaks bosses out because they're like, there's so much going
on. I don't know the answer. I barely know the answers to the stuff that I'm responsible for,
let alone the answers for the stuff you're responsible for.
Right, right, right.
But they're like, this is how I help.
This is how I prove value.
This is how I prove my authority.
And what you're doing in answering a question is you're handing the humanity back to that person saying, look, I'm going to raise your status and raise your authority and give you the autonomy, the confidence and the confidence and the self-sufficiency to figure this stuff out itself.
And in doing that, you're really saying, I'm giving you your full humanity.
I'm not taking it away from you.
Right, right.
And I think in that moment, you have this opportunity to be human to human as you work together rather than boss to subordinate.
Interesting.
Yeah.
And what are the main questions that every coach should use to effectively empower the person they're communicating with and build a deeper relationship?
Well, in the coaching habit, there are seven good questions.
I mean, there are five different questions in this new book, but in the coaching habit, there are seven good questions. So I can give you a taste of those.
The first, the bookends, question one, question seven. So if people are listening and they're
like, you know, I'd quite like to be more coach-like, stay curious longer, but how do I
start? You know, it's like, I'm sure I could do it if i got going but i'm not quite sure what the first thing is the the kickstart question is what's on your mind and what's really powerful about that
is it's not what's on the agenda and it's not what what do we always talk about and it's not
here's what i want to talk about it says what's on your mind what are you excited about or worried
about or nervous about or nervous about, or just
feel like it's like, this is the thing I've got to talk about. So it's, again, it's this act of
giving and sharing of authority and autonomy. And the final question in the series, so if this is
the bookends, how to start and how to finish, is the learning question is what was most useful or
most valuable here for you in this conversation in this
conversation and i do this you know i was just speaking at a group of you know in front of 500
people yesterday and at the end of this session i'm like turn to the person next to you and like
what was most useful and most valuable for you and what's amazing is it's never really what I think. And again, when you ask this question, you get two gifts,
three gifts. One is you help them name the thing that they're taking away and they may have missed
it otherwise. So they're actually going, okay, I'm actually articulating what was most useful.
And when they do that, neurons fire and people remember the stuff. Yeah, yeah. Secondly, and here's the gift,
you get to hear what was most useful and most valuable.
And sometimes it's different from what you were thinking.
And sometimes you're thinking,
that wasn't valuable at all, that conversation.
I was just jazz handing my way through the whole thing.
But they're like, no, actually, this is what really landed.
And that might be powerful for one group,
but not for a different group.
That's right. And when I be powerful for one group, but not for a different group. That's right.
And when I was speaking to these 500 people,
and I was like, so tell me some of the things that landed.
I'm like, 10 different people, 10 different things
they took away from this session with me.
And then what's also manipulative, but in a good way,
is that you're not saying, was this a useful conversation?
You're saying, what was most useful about this conversation?
So you are framing this conversation as a useful, valuable conversation,
which makes them find it more useful and valuable,
which makes them find you more useful and valuable,
which strengthens the relationship.
Yeah.
And what is the difference between a keystone conversation
versus a normal conversation? Yeah. So this is the heart of this keystone conversation versus a normal conversation?
Yeah.
So this is the heart of this new book, which is like, okay, so we're trying to, you know,
our working relationships have such a big impact on our happiness and our success.
Yeah, it's true.
Spend a lot of time at work.
You spend a lot of time at work.
And if you take a moment and you think to like one of the hardest working relationships you've had,
you know, it's a real struggle. It was a bit miserable for you. And you think of the back
and forth of what happened. And then you think of the impact it had on you. It's significant.
Like you hear people talk about it. It's like, I felt distrusted. I opted out. I shrunk. I lost
my confidence. I quit my job. Basically, a bad working relationship
will shrink you and diminish you. And then when you flip it and you go, tell me about a great
working relationship, one where you felt seen and heard, maybe an I-thou relationship. And you
imagine, go back to that moment and you imagine the give and the take and you go, and what impact
did that have on you and your work? They're like,ip you know i felt bigger yes i felt bolder i felt braver i took more risks i i brought more
of myself i brought my genius to the table so it can have such a big difference and most people
go i'll just cross my fingers and hope for the best right I hope I get lucky and I hope we can figure it out
as we go along and it doesn't get too messy. They're not setting an intention.
So the Keystone Conversation-
Without preparing for the conversation.
Keystone Conversation is setting an intention and it is this, have a conversation about how
we work together before you plunge into the conversation about what you're working on.
And it's hard because we are wired to want to talk about the stuff
that needs to get done because it's there and it's urgent
and it's exciting and it's bright and it's important and it's critical.
So we're like, let's just get into it.
But if you go, look, let's stop and go,
hey, how will we actually work together before we get into it?
I mean, before we started filming here,
I was like, so let's tell me, you had a really great podcast guest. What happened? You know,
what did they do? What did you do? What should I know from that? And when you've had one that,
I'm sure you haven't had a bad podcast guest, but one that was like slightly lower rated,
didn't quite have the magic. What happened? What difference there and what we're doing is we're creating a contract between like i want this to i want this to be a
really great podcast for you and for everybody watching i'm like i want them to go that was
amazing and you want that too because you're like i want i want all of my episodes to be
brilliant and i'm like so let's not talk about the content. Let's talk about how you and I are
together. That will bring that because work happens through people. And so let's you and me get
aligned as to don't do this and do do that and be like this and don't be like that. Like when I
talk to your team, uh, cause I asked them the same questions as well. Like, so what, what makes a
really good guest? They're like the thing that you and they have all said is like,
well, the more authentic you can be, the better.
That's really helpful.
There's a sense of kind of vulnerability and sharing and service.
And I'm like, great, because at my best,
I think that's how I try and show up.
But that was really helpful to give me full permission around that.
Whereas other people, I'm like, keep it tidy. Keep it neat. Give me the soundbites. No, no long sentences,
no random stories, no waving your hands around. And I'm like, okay, I can do that as well.
But I'm like, I, I, I'm like, I think I understood the rules. So now I'm trying to,
to allow myself to be the best version of myself. I can be for my sake and for your sake and for everybody's sake.
Right. So it's really preparing before,
asking the questions before the keystone conversation, correct?
Well, the keystone conversation is like,
here's five questions that can help you have
a conversation about how you work well together.
Oh, gotcha. Okay, cool.
Because it's one thing to say,
you should talk about how you work together
before you jump into what you're working on.
But most people then go, well, okay, I buy that.
But how do I do that?
It's like, I've never done that before.
And I'm like, well, here are some questions that can help.
Sure.
Yeah.
And I love this when you're like,
if you're in an intimate relationship,
not a working relationship, but an intimate relationship,
I think that's, you know, you have one of these questions, which is the good date question. What
can you learn from successful past relationships versus what can you learn from frustrating past
relationships? I think that's kind of interesting to ask in intimacy as well. Like what was the
part of your previous relationship that really was great? Maybe you don't need to go into these details. Yeah, exactly. Too much information. Maybe that you were able to
communicate effectively or you guys had calm resolution when there was conflict or what
are some things that you enjoyed that worked really well? And what were things that didn't
work well? And I think you get a better frame of mind and understanding around, okay, how do we
create our own agreement?
What are our own boundaries, our agreements into our working or intimate relationship?
So I've been with my wife for 30 years.
How'd you fool her?
I know.
She was dazed and confused.
But we had both arrived in England to study.
And we had both left pretty bad relationships behind
she was going through a divorce I'd made a mess of the previous relationship I had in part because
she was in Australia I was going to Oxford and it was all getting complicated and we ended up
sitting next to each other um on a bus from Oxford to Stratford-upon-Avon to go see some Shakespeare
play and it's a long and windy road
and we'd been dating like maybe two or three dates.
It was really, really early on.
And we just somehow fell into this conversation
about what are we up for?
Like I was 25, she was 36.
So we were kind of old enough to go,
we want to figure this out.
We're like, we're not kids anymore.
We've got a bit of experience.
Let's actually try and do this.
So we actually had this conversation.
It was like amazing and excruciating at the same time.
Not least because we're in the back of a bus
and we're both feeling car sick
and maybe other things as well.
But we're like, you know,
this is what I've learned from my past relations.
Like I was saying, look, here's what I've learned from the relationships that I've screwed up.
I have a way of disappearing into my own head and taking that other person for granted.
And she's like, great, because I will kill you if that happens.
And I'm like, that's really helpful.
She's like, that just won't happen on my watch.
And that is true.
Very hard to pull that off with Marcella.
But before we had any of this structure, before I'd figured any of this out,
I just kind of got lucky or maybe desperate because I really fancied her.
And I'm like, I don't want to screw this one up.
I screwed up the last few.
I want this to be great.
We actually had this conversation kind of tapping into the good date
and the bad date questions that
you're talking about which is like what can we learn from the past because both the good and
the bad dates those patterns will repeat they'll keep showing up again in the future so why don't
you be explicit about it with each other so that you can navigate around it so you can know where
the hot spots are going to be so you can give yourself the best preparation to say,
this is how we can recover from this.
This is how we'll repair this.
What do you think would be the three questions based on your personal experience
and based on everything you've researched
and taught in the coaching habit,
but also how to work with anyone?
What would be the three questions
that every person should ask their partner
before getting married
to try to set themselves up
for a conscious, loving relationship,
knowing that there's going to be, you know,
ups and downs in life.
But set yourself up for the best possible relationship.
Well, I'm going to take one of the questions
from the book,
which is the fifth and final question,
which is how will we fix it when things go wrong? The repair question.
That's great.
And I just acknowledge all the work of the great people like Esther Perel and Terry Real
and John Gottman and Dan Siegel, these kind of giants in the world of intimate relationships
who really studied this for years.
And as I was writing this book
and kind of re-immersing myself in all of their material again,
two things became really clear.
The relationships that last are the ones that get repaired,
and most of us are not very good at repairing relationships.
You know, most of us, we break far easier than we think.
We're like, oh, I feel a bit broken, a bit betrayed, a bit let down.
And so many of us either do fight or flight or what's the other one?
You know, Terry Reel.
Freeze.
Terry Reel said it was freeze and flee are two options.
But the third one that he suggests, which I really like, is fix.
Fight, fight, fix.
Which is kind of moving into rescue mode.
Right.
Like if you know the drama triangle, which comes from a psychologist called Stephen Kaufman.
He's like, when relationships get
dysfunctional, three roles play out. There's the victim, there's the persecutor, and there's the
rescuer. And they're all equally dysfunctional. Rescuer sounds better than victim and persecutor,
just as screwed up as the other two. And they're all reactive ways of behaving and they keep the relationship stuck in dysfunction wow
and in fight and flight and fic you actually have the brain description of those three roles
so i reckon interesting because when you when you're like in the first two years of marriage
really in all the years you know to it it's like this is amazing she's amazing
I'm amazing we're amazing this is any any kind of hiccups you're like minor stuff that we get
over that because everything else is going on for us it's fantastic but after two years it's like
okay the veil drops a little bit you kind of get clear on other things and there it will go off
the rails somewhere you know it might
be an explosion it might be a dent or a crack or a bend or something but something will happen
so i would say oh you know i wish i'd i wish i'd asked this question because i didn't um how will
we fix it when things go wrong how will we fight you know how will we fight in a way that will not break us, but will kind of be a source of learning and growth and clearing and kind of resetting.
Yeah, I think my friend Jay Shetty talked about this in his recent book where it was about, you know, the success of a relationship is in how well you fight.
Right.
And how successful you can fight together.
I think so, yeah.
And not hurt each other too far beyond repair,
which is the repair question.
Yeah.
How will you fix it when things go wrong?
And I think it's death by a thousand paper cuts.
It can be.
Where you hurt someone little by little,
it's just like, I just don't care anymore.
Yeah.
If you don't learn to repair it.
I think that's key in intimate relationships, family relationships, friendships, career
is like repairing these things.
Uh, when you maybe feel like there was something that wasn't good, but I think the challenge
is asking this repair question, how will you fix it when things go wrong?
It might be easy to say,
oh, when things go wrong, I'm going to be fine.
I'm going to apologize.
I'm going to do all these things.
But then when that time comes two years later,
you're like, screw you.
That's exactly.
You're horrible and I'm not talking to you for a week.
But here's the magic.
You may not remember what you said.
You probably won't.
But that's not the magic of that question.
The magic of that question is it says things will go wrong. It's an acknowledgement that this,
the honeymoon moment is going to pass and that things will get hard and you get a chance to
revisit it. So I think getting, getting people's best guesses about how they've got to fix it when
they go wrong, that's helpful. And you know, if they can pull some of that off, then everybody benefits.
But what I think is the real hidden power of that question is it says it will go wrong.
And we're acknowledging that now.
And when we say, how will we fix it when things go wrong?
We're acknowledging a shared commitment to wanting to fix it.
And when it does go wrong, it's something that you can say is going wrong.
Right, right.
We can actually talk about it going wrong because it's been raised before.
Yeah.
And I think it's that permission and shared commitment that actually can be part of the
real magic of that question. Yeah. And maybe you can say like,
it's not going wrong. We're just not in alignment or something is off or whatever might be happening. And I think this is one of
the reasons why I really love hearing stories about world-class athletes, Navy SEALs, MMA fighters,
because they talk about preparing for challenging situations and how am I going to get out of the challenging
situation? Usually as an athlete, it's more of a solo sport or a team sport, but the MMA fighter
doesn't just train standing on his feet, punching when he's healthy and in the best position. He
trains upside down with his neck against the cage with one arm behind his back, getting punched in the face over and over again.
Solve this.
Saying, how do I get out of this?
Right, exactly.
It doesn't say, I'll be fine.
I'll never be in this situation.
And it's like same thing with Navy SEALs.
They train for, okay, here's the mission and here's the best case scenarios.
Like this is the plan.
Yeah.
But what is a backup plan when everything goes wrong?
Right.
Right.
When this person gets hurt, when this doesn't work out, then what do we do?
And I think when we prepare and acknowledge something's going to go wrong, we're not going to go 100% according to plan in intimacy and career and relationships.
What can I do and take ownership of to be responsible for my part? And
how can I get back into alignment? And I think that's a powerful thing with this question,
the repair question. Yeah. To your point, there's that quote, maybe from the seals. I know James
Clear, King Cooper said as well, which is like, we don't rise to the occasion. We fall to the
level of our training or the level of our systems depending on our habits yeah so because there's variations on it but it's like you prepare for them for the the mess of it um
but for me just the permission like i didn't have this conversation with my wife and i kind of wish
i had because we didn't we we don't really have blow-up fights we have kind of separating moments
where i'm like i get into my own head. I take it
for granted. We do that. And I'm like, how do we fix that when that's happening? And that would
have been a healthier conversation. We figured this out, but that would have been a healthier
conversation earlier if we could have got to that. Sure. What question would you add? Like I've given
one question, but what's the question that's at your heart in terms of setting up intimate relationships for success um i'm just trying to think about all the things
that i did with martha my girlfriend which is essentially the opposite of everything i've ever
done before um the thing and listen i'm we're two years in so i'm not 30 year marriage so i'm
you know sharing that information because
people might say, well, wait till five years, wait till 10 years, all these things. But the
thing that really made me say, oh, this is, this is my partner. Right. And I can really feel safe
emotionally, spiritually, physically safe with this person. It's early on I said, listen,
I've made a lot of mistakes in my past relationships
and none of my past relationships have worked.
But in each one of them,
I wanted to do therapy when they weren't working.
Right.
And the partners that I chose
never wanted to do therapy with me.
Right.
They were resistant.
It took a year and a half, two years of like it not working
and me saying, hey, can we do this and find support?
Yeah.
And they never wanted to do it.
And I said, listen, this isn't really an ultimatum,
but I want to feel emotionally safe.
Would you be open to going to therapy
in the beginning of the relationship?
Not when things have problems in the
future, but can we go together now? Yeah. She was like a hundred percent. That'd be amazing. I'm,
I'm down for whatever. She was like, I've always wanted to do that too. Yeah. I felt like,
oh, okay. Just her acknowledging that. Yeah. And then us doing it has been a beautiful foundational
a beautiful foundational process of a safe space to talk about maybe touchy or uncomfortable conversations to create boundaries, agreements, and commitments,
which has not removed all friction or conflict, but has removed a lot of it and given us a lot more grace and flexibility
and freedom to have courage to communicate
when there's something that,
ah, that didn't feel right.
Let's talk about it.
Yeah.
And that was a beautiful thing,
just asking that question.
So I don't know what that question is.
It's not the therapy question,
but it's more like,
hey, are you open to having outside support and having these conversations? Yeah, it's really the therapy question but it's more like yeah hey are you open to having outside
support right and having these conversations yeah it's really powerful and so for me that was that
was a beautiful beautiful yeah beautiful conversation well you know the question that
relates to in the book is the bad day question the bad day because what can we learn from
frustrating past relationships and it's like and this is in my words not yours lew. And it's like, and these are my words, not yours, Lewis,
but it's like when the relationship was hard,
I didn't feel like I had the support I needed
and I didn't feel the other person was as committed to repair
or fixing it than I was.
And that's what I really want in this.
And, you know, there's a definition of like an adult-to-adult relationship.
An adult-to-adult relationship is being able to ask for what you want,
knowing that the answer might be no.
You know, you don't always get what you want,
but being able to ask for what you want is a really rare thing
and a really powerful thing.
And, you know, it just feels like from your story, it's like what I've
learned is I've figured out what I want and I've got the courage to ask for what I want. And that
made all the difference. And the courage to walk away, you know, the steady question, what are
your practices and preferences? You know, I was very clear with her in the beginning of us dating
and really in the first couple of days of meeting each other, I said, this is who I am. Right. This is my vision. This is where I'm heading. Yeah. This is what I will
be doing. And this is what I will not be doing. Yeah. And I will not be living this type of
relationship or this type of life. Yeah. If you want to put me into some stereotypical box of
certain relationships, that's not me. Yeah. That doesn't mean I'm going to be, you know,
out of alignment with a monogamous relationship,
but I'm a driven human being.
Yeah.
You know, I run this business.
I've got a vision.
Yeah.
That is going to take a certain amount of energy and effort.
Right.
And she asked me a question early on,
which essentially is, what are your preference questions?
She said, what are your priorities?
Yeah.
And I had never had the courage before
to be honest with my priorities.
Yeah.
Now, this may evolve over time and everything else,
but I said, listen,
no woman wants to hear what I'm going to tell you.
Are you sure you want the answer?
Right.
Are you sure you want the truth?
Right?
It was kind of like my Tom Cruise moment.
You can't handle the truth, right? And I said, are you sure you want me to tell you. Are you sure you want the truth? Right? It was kind of like my Tom Cruise moment. You can't handle the truth, right?
And I said, are you sure you want me to tell you the truth?
She said, yes.
Yeah.
And I said, I don't think you're going to want to hang out with me after you hear this.
Right.
Because no one in the past was able to handle it, was able to receive it.
Right.
And so she said, yes.
And I said, okay, well, it's been good knowing you, but here are my priorities.
Good for you.
I said my priorities. Good for you. I set my priorities.
A brave moment.
Right?
And I was like,
but I wasn't willing to abandon myself anymore,
which is what I had always done.
I'd abandoned to make someone else feel okay
or safe or secure or whatever,
as opposed to just,
this is who I am.
And it means we're not the right fit for each other.
Right.
We're not the right match for this type of relationship.
Yeah, but let me show you my cards
and let's see how this goes.
But I always lacked
that emotional courage
because I was afraid
of hurting people.
Right.
And I said,
my priorities,
my number one priority
is my health.
And no woman wants to hear
that they're not
the number one priority
in a relationship
with an intimate partner, really.
They don't like that, most of them at least.
And I said, my number two priority is not you or the relationship either.
And no one wants to hear they're not number one or number two.
Please, number two.
Exactly.
At least give me a silver medal, man.
Exactly, exactly.
No, I said, my intimate relationship will be my third priority.
Now, let me give context because I need my health to be my third priority. Now let me give context because
I need my health to be a top priority so that I have more energy, focus, and value to you and to
my second priority. That kind of foundational thing that allows everything else to be built,
relationships and business. And to my second priority, which is my vision, my mission to serve
people. And if you hold me back from my health
and I feel unhealthy,
I'm not going to be good for you.
If you hold me back from my purpose
and you try to deter me from that,
I'm going to be resentful, frustrated, like antsy.
But if you are in alignment
that these are my top two priorities,
you're going to feel like the number one priority.
Oh, that's nice.
And so it's creating that context and conversation,
just setting the stage and just being like,
you can never pull me away from these things
unless there's some emergency or whatever,
but it can't be this, I don't want you going to the gym.
I don't want you working on your mission.
I don't want you.
I need you here with me more.
And I was like, I'm not that guy.
Yeah.
Maybe in 10 years that'll change and I will be,
but right now I'm not.
What was the work you did
that allowed you now
to ask for what you want and be
as clear as that? I needed to
heal
a lot of my inner child wounds.
Right. Really. And
have a different relationship with
my younger psychological self
that never got to hear
or be validated the way that I needed to
validate it and never got to heal or mend painful memories. So it wasn't until I was able to mend
the memories of the past and create new meaning around them and create a sense of connection and
an intimate relationship with my painful wounds of repair,
that's when I was like, okay, I am safe.
I am free.
I am peaceful as I am.
I don't need to please you to feel loved and accepted and free.
And I was able to say, okay, I'm happy alone if this relationship doesn't work.
But I'm never going to abandon myself again.
So that was a big part of it,
having that healing journey
and doing the therapeutic work on that.
You can go, Michael, stop interviewing me
and don't ask me about my partner.
But I'm curious to know
if you were able to ask her what she wanted,
like what her priorities were.
Yeah, I asked her, yeah, really early on.
Yeah.
And she, you know, one of these,
this conversation where she asked me about my priorities,
she was like, I was like, what do you want?
What's your vision?
And what's your vision for intimate relationship?
You know, a committed relationship long-term.
I've said this on the show before a few times, but I was like, you know, committed relationship long term um i've said this on the show before a few times
but i was like you know she said well i want to be married and have kids
and that's something that i want and i value i said okay cool um i value that as well but i can't
tell you that in the first couple weeks that that's going to happen with us so i need to feel
safe i need to feel time a foundation So if you're cool with that,
knowing that maybe it's a maybe, but everything has to work out for me to feel like a yes. I can't
commit right now. And another thing was also, I said, I'm not going to be
sharing things with what I think is not the role and responsibility that I want
when we have kids.
Right.
And this is the type of, you know, partner that I will be and father that I will be.
Now, maybe all this changes.
Yeah.
And maybe when I have kids and all these things, my role and responsibility, I'll be more flexible
or I'll change or whatever.
But I'm telling you, this is where I'm going to be.
This is what I will do really well.
And this is what I'm not going to do.
I'm not going to do these roles and responsibilities as a father.
Now, I'm going to be fully present, fully committed, fully in,
all these things.
But I'm just not going to do certain things that maybe isn't society looked at
as what's supposed to happen.
Yeah.
And if you're cool with that,
then I feel more seen, safe, and valued.
Yeah.
And she was like, 100%, I'm cool with that.
You know, it works for me.
So it was just being clear about the future
and really having conversations about money,
you know, intimacy, kids,
all these different things early on
and not guessing that they were thinking something.
Right, because it's so easy to make up what they believe.
Like you kind of piece together clues.
You kind of have your own confirmation bias.
You have your own secret hopes and wishes,
which you then project onto them.
And mostly, like, you just don't know.
Like one of the great surprises to me
and that has been kind of foundational to our relationship And mostly you just don't know. Yeah. One of the great surprises to me,
and that has been kind of foundational to our relationship with me and Marcella working,
is that I like the spotlight.
I like the spotlight.
I like performing.
I like being a leader.
I like having a vision.
She really doesn't like that,
but she loves playing the support role.
And what that meant is that it helped us negotiate
kind of our careers about how we would manage that together.
And rather than me going, oh, I feel bad about this
because I'm probably stepping on her toes
and I probably need to shrink to allow her to space,
we're like, no, we just figured it out,
that I'm like, this is my job is to be the visionary
and to try and change the world and kind of...
That's a big area of conflict for, I think, couples where, you know, if you don't feel like you can fully be who you're meant to be, or if someone's resentful of your success.
I had that in a lot of previous relationships where I felt like I would share something I was working on and really excited about.
And it was almost like they'd get sad because they weren't doing that for themselves.
So John Gottman, who I mentioned earlier on,
who wrote a fantastic book about the secrets of successful marriage.
But one of the intriguing things that he found through his research
is 70% of issues in a relationship are perpetual.
They don't get solved.
And that for me is a very liberating discovery because it means that there's a bunch of things where we're like, we will
perpetually be at odds around this. So what we're now doing is we're learning how to navigate our
different points of view and our different ways of working around that so that helps me figure out how to manage the
70 percent that are perpetual they're never going to change but it says 30 percent of issues within
a relationship are solvable and resolvable and evolvable and there's ability to work on that
so i get freedom from both of those things which is like it's kind of like that that circle about
what can you control
and what can you influence. You're like, I can't control or influence these, but I can kind of
figure out how to dance together around the stuff we're never going to agree on. Like for my wife
and I, I'm like, she's a talker. She loves to talk. She loves to share that. I'm terrible at that,
which surprises everybody because they know me as a kind of talker, but I'm like at home,
she's like, what are you thinking? I'm like what am i thinking she's like what happened today i'm like
oh what did happen today oh it's in la oh it's with lewis yeah it's like i'll remember that
and we're like i'm like that's i don't think that's going to change so we now have we have
our language and we have our humor and we have our way of dealing with that when I do my best to tell her stuff and she does her best not to grill me. And then we can, 30% of stuff we can really kind of dig into and go, let's make this
better because we're both committed to a great long-term relationship. I'm curious, what do you
think are the four or five key habits of magnetic individuals who can communicate clearly and get incredible results
from conversations and relationships, whether they're introverted or extroverted. What are
those four key habits that make them magnetic and enrolling and captivating to get things done?
No matter what personality type they have.
I think one of the key habits,
and we've talked about this already,
is knowing what you want.
Knowing what you want to ask for.
And that immediately makes you quite different
from other people,
because a lot of people are like,
they're in a conversation and they're communicating,
but I'm like, but where where are we what's the point and if you can get really clear on the request you have and and the hope you have as an outcome that is an extremely charismatic and
powerful place to stand and how would you set that up is that like the intention behind it or
saying it right away is it like knowing what you want in your like the intention behind it or saying it right away? Is it like knowing what
you want in your mind, but not saying it or saying, this is what I want. The hard work is to know what
you want. Then you negotiate and you navigate the moment in front of you and the person. Like you,
you, you've got to play that, play the person, not just the cards in your hand. What's helpful for me
is to tease apart in any conversation, just what do I want but what are
the facts and what is the feelings and what are the interpretation of the facts and I think people
who are charismatic and how they communicate often have an ability of not getting all that
sort of stuff squished together which is what happens to most of us. So I know that for me to be in conversation with you, and if I'm trying to
move something forward or change something, it's really helpful for me to know the data
and the facts of the situation. What's amazing is that there's almost always very little data.
Most of what we're experiencing about a situation
is this combination of our feelings and our judgments.
And most of what knocks us off of being magnetic
and being charismatic and kind of being compelling like that
is the fuzziness of some of our judgments and our feelings
in terms of actually how we then communicate.
So I'm always going, okay, what are the facts?
I need to know those.
What feeling and judgment combination
is most powerful for me to express
that serves me and them in the situation?
Because a lot of my judgments aren't that helpful.
Often my judgments are like,
I'm a loser, this is a disaster,
why am I here?
I should never have signed up for this this is
going south this is never going to get anywhere i mean all of that sort of negative self-talk going
on but if i'm like you know giving somebody feedback perhaps i'm like look i'm frustrated
because i'm not sure you understand how important this is that's a feeling and judgment combination
really helpful particularly i go so here's what i want like i'm sad because it feels like we're
stuck and i'm not quite sure how we're going to get out of this so what i'm what i what i want
is for us to go see a therapist together to get support to work through this sort of stuff
and this idea of going how do you learn how to add the the depth of feeling and emotion to owning your judgments, to asking for what you
want, can be a really compelling way of actually communicating in a way that feels magnetic and
authentic and grounded and human. Wow. Okay. What's the next habit?
Some of this is self-management. And this got taught to me by a friend of mine
called Mark Bowden. He runs a company called Truth Plane. He's a fantastic TEDx talk on this as well.
And particularly if you're in front of a crowd, how you use your body and how you use your hands
in particular is a very influential way on how the, the feel about you. So the language he gives me is
be the strongest signal in the room because the crowd will respond to the strongest signal in
the room. They will feel what you feel. They will be who you want to be. So I'm like, great. So how
do I want my audience to feel? And, you know, often for me, I want them to feel encouraged
and to feel loved and feel awesome and feel light, like a playfulness.
So I'm thinking about that in terms of what I am bringing to my presence.
And then what Mark taught me was these three different positions
you can use to communicate.
And it's about where you put your hands, particularly in front of a stage.
And the critical one is the truth plane.
And he calls that, it's like, keep your hands at your belly button level.
Because actually that is the most vulnerable expression you can have.
Because you're basically saying, look at me, this is my weak spot.
My belly's my weak spot.
I'm showing it to you.
And this is because the body leads the brain
so the brain go the body goes if you're showing him that your most vulnerable spot you must feel
safe and you must feel confident and you must feel relaxed and that makes you feel safe and
confident and relaxed and because you're the strongest signal in the room the audience feels
safe and confident and relaxed and then if I want to shift the energy in the room I'll just lift my hands up. So you can see that just by
going like this, even though I haven't changed the content at all, actually the
experience has actually shifted a little bit. If I really want to make a point
I'll lift my hands right up here and everyone's like, I don't know why I'm feeling so
good right now but for some reason I'm feeling good right here. I'm like I'm
just saying the same stuff but I've just lifted my hands up but now come down here suddenly we've become a little more
intimate and a little more vulnerable and a little more human around that so for me this
this is stagecraft which is like in these subtle ways you prime an audience to respond to the
strongest signal in the room which means you have to get your signal clear,
which means you have to have an intention
about how you want the audience to feel,
and you have to have the movement on stage
to actually reflect that.
That's a good idea, yeah.
And then there's a third thing I might add.
So there's something really powerful about priming.
So just like,
see how you're nodding your head right there? That's a classic priming move. So if I go,
Lewis, look, I'm about to tell you something here and you're going to really love this.
What's happening is you're nodding your head. People at home are nodding their head as well.
And they're like, I don't even, why am I doing this? Why am I, why am I, I already love this and he hasn't even told me.
And there's a way that you can use language to help your audience understand and appreciate what's about to happen.
How?
This is going to be fantastic.
I think you're going to really like what I'm about to tell you now.
That's it.
That's me priming.
The audience doesn't even hear it,
but I'm just giving them a chance to get their brain to be ready
and to hear it in an open-hearted, open-minded way.
It's like, this might be the best thing I've got to tell you all day.
Right.
This second thing is going to be fantastic.
What is it?
This second thing is going to be fantastic.
And, you know, it's this fine line between like,
I am manipulating an audience when I'm doing this.
I'm working really hard to give them the very best chance to get the very most out of what i've got to share with them so that they feel present and
served and i've done my best contribution to them and i'm doing all of that to kind of be an act of
service and you know all of these things can be used for evil as well so you're like it's your
intention is significant in this.
Right. Okay.
I love these habits so far.
Would there be one more habit that would make someone a magnetic communicator and roller and force for good?
Well, here's my preference, Lewis, and this is a bit kind of off the path, but when I am working with, uh, if I'm presenting or running a
workshop or speaking to a large crowd, I get, I spend a lot of time getting the audience to speak
to itself. How do you do that? I say, turn to the person next to you. Like this is how I started.
This is how I started keynote. I'm like, like, I asked him some check-in questions.
I go, first of all, on a scale of one to seven,
how active do you plan to be with me
over the next 90 minutes?
And they're like, oh.
And I'm like, I don't mind what number you choose.
You can choose.
You're an adult.
I'm not bullying you into a seven.
But like, one is, I'm right at the back.
I'm planning on having a nap.
I'm hoping to get my pulse rate down into the low 30s.
I didn't even want to be here.
Seven is like, I'm stoked to be here.
I'm so excited.
This is the talk I've been hearing.
Fantastic.
And then my second question is, score one to seven.
How much risk do you take with me over the next 90 minutes?
I don't mind what it is.
You choose.
But one is no risk at all.
I'm hoping to think nothing new, learn nothing new, meet anybody new.
I'm hoping this whole thing doesn't affect me at all. I'm hoping to think nothing new, learn nothing new, meet anybody new. I'm hoping this whole thing doesn't affect me at all. Seven, on the other hand, is like, you know, I have poor
personal boundaries. You know, I'm going to talk about the incident from my child. I'm talking about
my inner child's wounds and how that still makes me cry when we do the naked thing. I'm going to
be taking all my clothes off. That's a seven. Everybody laughs. If you can get an audience to
laugh early on, they form as a
group and they like you more. They feel safer. That's great. And then the third question I ask
is, a scale of one to seven, how much do you care about the experience of the other people in the
room with you here? One is, I hate these people. This is a nightmare. I'm at this greatness
conference and I'm trapped. I don't even like any of these people. I thought this was an automobile conference.
I don't know what I'm doing here.
Seven on the other hand is like, I love these people.
These are my people.
I'll do what I can to contribute to the group.
So I'm inviting people to show up.
In some ways, it's a version of how to work with almost anyone,
which is like, let's have a conversation about how we be together
before we get into the work.
That's cool.
And I'm priming them to kind of go, look, I'm making a decision on how I'm showing up.
I'm making a decision on how much risk I'm taking.
I'm making a decision about how I contribute because they hadn't really thought of it before
they sat down.
They were just there because it said, be in this room at nine o'clock for the opening
keynote.
And they're kind of in
passive recipient mode. And then I'm like, now get up and go and find a partner. And I'll often
ask one or two questions. It's like, talk about the high point of the week for you. Person with
the longest hair goes first. Give them really certainty about who goes first. And the buzz in
the room lifts because everyone's talking about a high point.
It's an I-thou conversation right there.
And so far, I've taught no content.
We're now 10 to 15 minutes into a 90-minute speech.
So I've given up a lot of time.
But you've built connection.
But I've built connection.
I've given the audience autonomy.
I've given them a sense of being seen and heard. They've often met somebody new that they haven't met before. And they think I'm brilliant.
And you haven't done anything.
Well, I have. I've got out of the spotlight and I said about how coaching shifts the conversation from me having the authority to having you figuring some stuff out and giving you the authority.
That's powerful.
I'm constantly going, how do I hand authority and power to other people?
and power to other people, not least because, you know, I'm a straight white bestselling author,
road scholar, tall, devastatingly handsome, blah, blah. I've got, I've got all the, the kind of the cards of power and privilege. So my job is to go, how much can I give away? How quickly? So that I
can invite other people into that, to have some of that. Cause I, how quickly, so that I can invite other people in to have some of that?
Because I've got a lot of that I can give away
without diminishing who I am.
That's really smart and a good habit to do
because I learned early on, not by choice,
but because, well, I guess kind of by choice.
I didn't have any other choice.
That when I was early on going to
conferences and events and networking outings i didn't think i was smart or intelligent or had
anything to offer right i didn't think i had any skills i didn't think i i didn't have the
confidence to actually like tell my own story none of that stuff. And so I got really good at just asking other people questions
and kept following up the next question
and never saying anything about myself.
Right.
And by the end of the night, people were introducing me to everyone,
like, this is the most interesting guy here,
and I didn't say anything.
Right.
I mean, I said questions, but I didn't talk about me.
You were interested in them, which makes you interesting to them.
Exactly.
The most interested person in the room becomes the most interesting.
I think so.
And when you become interested in your audience, having value, connecting, feeling great, you become more interesting to them.
And they are more likely to listen to you.
Exactly. in really connecting deeper and allowing yourself to work with almost anyone, people who are willing
to participate actively in that. And that's a lot about what your book is about, how to work with
almost anyone, which is the five questions we were just going over for building the best
possible relationships. And as you know, and as our audience knows that the quality of our life
is directly related to the quality of our relationships, the conversations, the emotions, the feelings, the experiences you have in those relationships.
And that's why this is all about having deeper, better, more fulfilling relationships. which has sold over a million copies, helps people have better conversations and just have more tools and skills
for learning how to connect better with people
of all walks of life.
I want people to make sure they get the books.
We'll link it all up.
What else are we missing here?
Is there anything else that people need to know
or hear to support them
in deepening their relationships,
accelerating their life in a positive way and having everything they want.
Well, I'm going to say two things. One is a bit more tactical, which is around,
well, what is the best possible relationship? And we've kind of covered it, but just want to
nail it for people. It has three elements. It needs to be safe, which you've talked a lot about
and the importance of that. It needs to be vital, which you've talked a lot about and the importance of that.
It needs to be vital,
which means it needs to have life and it needs to be repairable.
So safe and repairable,
I think we've talked about,
but I just want to point out
that psychological safety is so important,
but I don't want a relationship
that's just psychologically safe.
I want a relationship
where I can also be psychologically brave and that's the vitality. And in any relationship, you know, you with your
partner, me with my partner, me with the people who run my companies, I'm trying to build our
version of a relationship that is safe and vital and repairable. And they're different with each
relationship because it's a unique relationship, but I want that right combination. So that's kind
of a tactical level. And then if I was to ask anything of this audience, it would be to be
the people who are brave enough to start this. We've talked a few times about the power of
reaching out. Somebody said the other day to me, nobody likes to be the first person to say hello.
said the other day to me, nobody likes to be the first person to say hello. Everybody loves to be greeted. And one of the responses people have to this idea of having a keystone conversation,
a conversation about how we work together, not what we're working on, it's like,
that feels like it's going to be a bit awkward. And I'm like, it probably will be a bit awkward.
It's like, you don't have a role model, you probably haven't experienced it before.
it i'm not i'm not it's like you don't have a role model you probably haven't experienced it before but to be the person who is brave enough to say hey before we get into it or we've been in it for
a while but let's just take a beat and actually stop and look across the table at each other like
we're doing and go how can we work better together for our sakes for our happiness but also for the
success of the work we're doing yes what would What would that be like? And so what I hope is people have the bravery to kind of reach out.
That's beautiful.
And we'll make the call to action to people right now.
My friend Jesse Itzler says every day he reaches out to three people in his life and asks them
interesting questions and gets them to open up.
And so I would say to everyone listening or watching, you know, to reach out to at least
one person a day, send them a text, ask them one of these questions,
check in on them, see how they're doing,
and let me know in the comments if they reply
and what sparks from you reaching out
and have that courage and that bravery.
I'm excited to dig into the comments too
and see what happens from this.
I think some magic's about to happen.
Exactly.
Michael, again, I want to make sure people get the book, How to Work with Almost Anyone. Make sure you guys take a look at this,
get a copy of that and The Coaching Habit. You're at mbs.works, mbs underscore works on Instagram and
all over the place on social media. We'll have all this linked up. You guys can go to Amazon and get
the books as well and see everything there. This is a question I ask everyone towards the end of our conversations.
It's called the three truths.
Yeah.
So imagine you get to live as long as you want and accomplish and experience all that
you want.
But for whatever reason, it's the last day for you on earth.
Okay.
Many years away.
Yeah.
And for whatever reason, this hypothetical scenario, you have to take all of your work
with you.
So no one has access to this conversation.
Right.
Any book you've ever written or will create.
Yeah.
It all goes somewhere else.
Yeah.
But you get to leave behind three lessons to the world.
Three things you know to be true from all your experiences that you would want to share as lessons for others.
Such a good question.
What would those three lessons be for you?
The three lessons for me would be
stay curious longer
because magic starts to unlock
when you can stay curious longer.
You see something new in the people you're curious with.
You see the world differently when you're curious.
The second lesson would be,
we unlock our greatness by working on the hard things.
So I think there's probably a theme that resonates loudly here,
but it's like, you know, having the courage to step out to
what I would call a worthy goal,
something that's thrilling and important and daunting,
is not only about doing the work,
but it's
about cracking you open so that future you can call you forth there's a future version of you
which is the next level of you and when you do the hard things that's what opens you up
and uh and allows that next best version to be called forth. And I think the third truth,
which we've talked about a little bit in the last segment,
was to say, be the person who reaches out.
Because people are lonely
and people welcome somebody who reaches out and says,
hey, how are you? How can I help?
Yeah, I'm here.
That is a powerful gift to give people.
That's beautiful.
I would acknowledge you, Michael, for your wisdom and your ability to communicate clearly
and effectively and be curious enough to ask these questions for yourself on how to
be a better communicator, a better friend, a better lover, a better coach, and all these
different areas.
And taking this information and simplifying it for the rest of us, because I think a lot
of people struggle.
They are lonely because they don't have the skills and tools to communicate better.
So I acknowledge you for putting this together, creating this work, sharing it with us here,
and being of service to humanity.
I really appreciate it.
Again, I want people to
follow you, check out everything. MBS.works is where they can get all your information and all
the links to everything, the books. We'll have it all linked up as well. But the final question for
you is what is your definition of greatness? I think it is the fullest expression of the best version in the service of. And if you want weekly exclusive bonus episodes with me,
as well as ad-free listening experience, make sure to subscribe to our Greatness Plus channel on Apple Podcast. If you enjoyed this, please share it with a friend over on social media or
text a friend. Leave us a review over on Apple Podcast and let me know what you learned over
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and it helps us continue to make the show better.
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And if no one has told you today,
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.