The School of Greatness - Unlock the Language of CONNECTION: 3 HACKS for Supercommunicators to Build TRUST & INFLUENCE
Episode Date: May 10, 2024Are you ready to transform your communication skills and build deeper, more meaningful relationships? In this episode of The School of Greatness, Lewis explores the art of communication with three exc...eptional guests. First, Charles Duhigg, Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter and bestselling author, reveals insights from his new book "Supercommunicators: How to Unlock the Secret Language of Connection," sharing practical tips on how to enhance your communication skills for deeper connections. Next, relationship coach and author Matthew Hussey discusses the secrets to successful relationships, emphasizing the power of authenticity, the importance of giving up superficial attention, and distinguishing between impressing and connecting. Lastly, actress and advocate Jameela Jamil shares her compelling strategies for effective self-expression and advocacy, demonstrating how mastering communication can empower us to speak up for ourselves and inspire others, leading to transformative changes in our personal and communal lives.In this episode you will learnHow to unlock the "secret language" of effective communication for deeper connections.The role of authenticity and vulnerability in successful relationships.How to distinguish between impressing and truly connecting with others.The importance of giving up superficial attention to attract what you truly need.How effective communication can empower personal advocacy and inspire transformative change.For more information go to www.lewishowes.com/1613For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960You can find the full episodes from guests featured today here:Charles Duhigg – https://link.chtbl.com/1580-podMatthew Hussey – https://link.chtbl.com/1590-podJameela Jamil – https://link.chtbl.com/1499-pod
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to this special masterclass. We've brought some of the top experts in the world to help you
unlock the power of your life through this specific theme today. It's going to be powerful,
so let's go ahead and dive in. Not everyone's going to understand you, but I think when you
have relationships where people do understand you or see where you're coming from, it makes
you feel safer with them yeah evolution has developed a reward
sensation from feeling understood and feeling connected because that's what helped our species
survive right the the early ancestors who said like i want to take care of my young because i
feel a bond to them or i want to pair off with this community and invest in this community, they're the ones who made it.
Right.
And so we have this inborn need and desire and sense of reward when we feel understood.
That being said, if I'm saying something, even if you're listening closely,
I might not pick up on it unless you tell me.
Repeat it back in your words and say, did I get this right?
Yeah.
Or, and that's that's
kind of formal like it can be more casual like it is with matt which is to say like i hear what
you're saying like that's so interesting it reminds me of this thing yeah yeah like to show
that i'm hearing you which you're very good at like you i've i've watched a show a number of
times like you you do this almost automatically yeah yeah practicing what's also like you know
we were talking off camera a little bit about how if you i mean i speak for myself i grew up feeling like i didn't have any
friends right that was the feeling whether that was 100 true or if it was the story i was telling
myself it just felt like i didn't have friends for a long time until i was like 14 and i started
to get more athletically like confident and have like skills and, you know, add value to teams. Like then I started to feel like I had friends.
And it was almost like, because I didn't have this,
I wanted to find any way for, to feel like, okay,
what's it going to take for this person to connect with me? Yeah.
Oh, I heard that they're having a bad day.
Let me check and ask them what's going on and how can I help them? Oh,
this is what you're going through. And then you see, oh, someone's under listening to me. So I became really good
at listening. That's interesting. I didn't have a lot of friends. And so I've just asked people
questions. I also never felt confident being like the center of attention and having all the funny
stories or like knowing what to say or, or knowing anything to say, because I didn't feel
like I was intelligent. So I would ask questions because that was the easiest way to build
relationship. Right. Not by having all the answers, but having the right questions,
build the deepest relationships for me, not by being the smartest, funniest, best looking or whatever, but by being interested in other people made me more
interesting to them. And just being an attentive listener. Like you said, this goes into looping
for understanding. I didn't know this was a thing. I was just like, oh, it's working. Let me ask more
questions. Let me get deeper. The deeper I would ask the question, I really rarely
ever ask surface level questions. If it is, it's like I quickly go deep just because I can't stay
there. It just doesn't feel right. So the deeper I go into more questions, people feel like, wow,
no one's really asked me these things. Right. They must care in a different way. Yeah. They must be
curious about me. Wow, that feels good for someone to be interested in what I really think or feel about this situation.
Yeah.
And I did it out of necessity, out of survival mechanism, essentially, as a kid.
But it ended up being a superpower as an interviewer now.
And probably as a human, right?
Sure, yeah.
And by the way, the fact that you weren't good at it is something you have in common with most other people who are consistent super communicators.
This is one of the reasons we know it's not an inborn characteristic is because if you talk to people who are the best communicators and you say, have you always been a great communicator?
They'll tell you no.
Like, as a kid, I felt lonely. i felt like i couldn't connect with people i felt like i
didn't have friends or my first job they made me a manager and i completely screwed up because
the reason they become a super communicator consistently is because they've just thought
a little bit harder about it they usually because they have to usually because they screwed up and they're like, I don't want to screw up again. And it's just thinking a little
bit more about how communication works that allows us to really connect with other people.
So how does communication really work? Are there different styles of conversations?
Yeah. So this is one of the big insights. And then I want to get back to questions because I think
it's really important. One of the big insights from the last decade is that we tend to think of a discussion as being
about one thing, right? We're talking about my book or we're talking about, you know, whether
we should send the kids to this school or that school or where we should go on vacation. But
if you look at the conversation that happens, the discussion, what you'll see is that there are
multiple different kinds of conversations in that same discussion
and that same dialogue. And most of them fall into one of three buckets. There's usually a
practical conversation, which is a conversation where we're trying to figure out actually what
we want to talk about and how to talk about it. But also maybe we want to like fix a problem or
make a plan. It's practical. It's using the frontal cortex of our brain. There's a second
kind of conversation,
which is an emotional conversation. And if I come into you and I'm telling you about where I am
emotionally and you suggest a solution to me, I'm going to be like, people don't like that.
You're a jerk. Because when you're having an emotional conversation, you want to share how
you feel and hear how other people feel. You do not want to necessarily solve the problem.
This is where you hear all the, you know, the stereotypes of how men in married relationships struggle to relate or connect to their wives because they're more solution oriented.
Not everyone, but it's what you hear. The stereotype is they're more trying to fix the problem of an emotional feeling that someone's having versus being comfortable sitting with the discomfort and just saying, I'm here for you.
Yeah.
Saying, I hear you.
Yeah.
Right?
Which is, that's like solving the problem.
That's exactly.
If men understood that you just doing that is solving the problem and sitting in the uncomfort of that, but that's a hard skill to learn.
It's a hard skill to learn. It's a hard skill to learn.
It's a hard skill to learn.
And then the third.
So that's the second one, the emotional conversation.
So yeah, there's a practical, emotional.
And the third one is a social conversation.
And that's about how you and I see ourselves in respect to society, how we think society
sees us, how we get along with other people.
And so one of the things that we found is that exactly what you just said, that what's
known as the matching principle within psychology, that if I'm having an emotional conversation
and you're having a practical conversation, they're both legitimate conversations, but
we won't hear each other.
Like I'm going to hear, I'm going to say something emotional to you.
You're going to try and fix my problem in a practical way.
And I'm going to be like, a, you don't hear me and B, I don't hear you.
Like I'm not paying attention to your solution.
It's going to create more miscommunication.
So how do you know which one you're in?
So through deep questions and, and what super communicators do is they match the other person
and they invite them to match back.
And so how do we do that?
These deep questions, which is exactly what you just said.
A deep question is a question that asks me about my values, my beliefs, or my experiences.
And as you mentioned, like a deep question might not seem deep.
So if somebody says, what do you do for a living?
Oh, I'm a lawyer.
Oh, really?
Like, do you love practicing the law?
Like, did you always want to be a lawyer?
Like what made you decide to go to law school?
Those are easy questions to ask, but all three of them are deep questions.
Right.
Because what I'm asking you is I'm asking you, like, what are the experiences that led
you to where you are today?
What are your beliefs that motivate going into the law?
What are the values that your work means to you?
And when you answer that question, you're going to tell me so much about yourself.
And then if I'm prepared for this, I can listen.
Because if someone says, oh, you know, I went to law school because it was really important to me to have a steady job.
And I knew lawyers.
There's always work for lawyers.
And so I, OK, so this person is in a practical mindset.
And if somebody else says, oh, you know, I went to law school because I saw my dad get
arrested and I wanted to fight for the underdog.
Wow.
That's emotional.
That's emotional, right?
Wow.
And so.
Interesting.
So just by, and by the way, the same person might answer that question both ways, depending
on what minds, how they're feeling at that moment.
But now I know like, oh, I can match this person emotionally or I can match this person practically.
And there's,
there's a kind of hear it.
And you can sometimes just ask,
um,
in schools,
they teach teachers that when a student
comes up and they're upset,
they should ask them,
do you want to be heard?
Do you want to be helped?
Or do you want to be hugged?
And those are the three kinds of
conversations. And it just feels, yeah. What do you need? It's essentially helped or do you want to be hugged? And those are the three kinds of conversations.
And it just feels, yeah.
What do you need?
It's essentially what do you need without saying, what do you need?
If you can learn to listen and then ask a deeper question, you'll understand what they need based on these three levels, I guess, of practical, emotional, or social conversation.
That's exactly right. And if you have trained yourself to understand how to be a super communicator and practice it, you're going to feel like a hero to everyone you connect with.
You're going to feel like, wow, Charles really understands me and really gets it. And he's just
so easy to talk to. Every time I talk to him, it's going to make you more likable. Yeah. More
opportunities are probably going to flow your way. You're going to be more top of mind for people in the future when something comes up in a positive way.
They're going to come to you. You know, all these different things are going to happen. I guess
you're going to have to learn how to create certain boundaries if they're, you know, coming to you too
much or using you or whatever it might be. Yeah. But those are good problems to have. Yeah, exactly.
Everyone wants my attention. I'm too popular. Yeah, exactly.
And I find that it's also when somebody asks you
what you want out of a conversation,
it feels really good.
Like I might come home and sometimes I come home
and I'm like upset about work and I'm complaining to my wife
and she'll say, okay, do you want me to solve this with you
or do you want me just to listen?
Right.
Invent or whatever.
Yeah, and until that moment, I didn't know what I wanted. But when she asked the question, I'm like, oh no,
I want you to listen. Like, I don't want a solution. Like suddenly now I know like,
oh, the way I feel better is just by venting. Right. Exactly. I can be that way too sometimes.
You say in the book that all conversations are negotiations. Can you explain what that means?
So they're what's referred to, particularly at the beginning of a conversation.
We usually have what's called a quiet negotiation. And it's important. Oftentimes people hear
negotiation and they think of a negotiation where the goal is to win. A quiet negotiation
is very, very different. The goal is not to win. The goal is simply to understand what the other person wants.
That is the win, I guess. Yeah, that's the win. I don't have to, I don't have to defeat you,
but we can win together. So, so when I came in today and I sat down with you and we were kind
of chatting about, about, you know, how our lives are going, we signaled to each other a bunch of
stuff. Like we signaled that we were casual with each other, that we like each other.
Yeah.
We signaled that it was okay to interrupt each other.
We signaled that, um, that we didn't have to be, we didn't have to do looping for understanding.
Like, like you want, you can hear that I'm listening to you and I can do the same.
There's all these small cues that we pick up on.
Now imagine if we had come in and I had sat down and you were like, Hey man, going on and i was like well it's good to see you today like oh allow me to tell you about
myself right yeah yeah i mean and we had that like people i had this last week with someone who was
here i won't say who it was but i was trying to be you know more playful and open and you know
flexible and uh they eventually got there but in the first 10 minutes, I like
not intentionally interrupted, but I just kind of added to something and, you know,
followed up with a question while they were still finishing something. But it's kind of how I do a
lot of things. And, uh, and he goes, you know, make sure you don't do that with the next person.
He kind of like cued me, like, let me finish first. Right. I was like, okay, well, I'm going
to make sure I've let him finish yeah
before i add something yeah okay cool i know what the rules are now i know the rule yeah he was kind
of like hey you know it was like which we right it was kind of playful but it was kind of like
yeah okay like i don't know him so right okay all right i want to make sure we get a good interview
so i'm gonna play by your rules well, and oftentimes what happens at the beginning of a conversation, even without
us recognizing we're doing it is that we conduct experiments, right?
I might say something casual to you and then I pay attention.
Right.
Do you laugh back?
I might interrupt you.
And I, and if you say like, don't do that again, I'll know this.
Right.
And the thing that to remember is that I don't think it was a,
it was not a mistake that you did that. It was not even a failure because the whole point of a conversation at the beginning is to work out those rules, experiment with it, experiment with
it. And if some, and if every, like my wife is a scientist, if every experiment is a success,
you're a terrible scientist, right? You want to do experiments that fail and succeed. That's when
you're learning. And the fact that this guy told you that, it experiments that fail and succeed that's when you're learning and the fact
that this guy told you that it means that he actually told you something about how he
see communicate he likes yeah yeah and you know as an interviewer um i don't know if you do this
when you're doing research or interviewing people as well for me i like to tell people when they
ask me about interviewing or podcasting this is my 11th year now I'm doing this show. It'll be 11 year anniversary, probably when this episode comes out. Um, I always tell
people that the pre-show is the show us talking for 10 minutes before we turned on the camera
really determines a lot of how successful or unsuccessful the episode will go or the energy or
the flow is based on the connection.
When someone enters the door,
the experience and the environment you create for them,
whether that's you or the actual environment,
your ability to see them before going on.
And if they feel heard and seen.
Yeah.
That is the show.
And vulnerability, right?
100%.
And I think what, so there's another idea that's really critical in the book and that
is critical to what we've learned in the last decade, which is known as emotional reciprocity.
That when I show you something vulnerable, you need to show me that you've heard it.
But if you share something vulnerable in
return, we will feel closer. We really can't even, we can't, it's like hardware. We can't
not feel closer. So one person shares something vulnerable and the other one does not at least
show empathy, even if they don't share something vulnerable about them, but if they show some type
of, well, so showing empathy is a form of, okay. Right. So, so if you say like,
you know,
my,
my dad passed away and I say,
Oh man,
I totally understand.
My,
my aunt died 12 years ago.
Right.
That's not empathy.
That's not empathy.
That's not,
I'm trying to steal the spotlight from you.
I'm not trying to share it.
But if you said,
you know,
my dad passed away and I said,
Oh man,
I like,
I know how hard that is.
I'm really sorry.
And then like,
I've struggled with it.
I'm sure you are. If you want to talk about it.
Right.
That's all it takes for me to reciprocate that vulnerability and to say to you, like,
I welcome your vulnerability.
I am trustworthy with it.
And more importantly, like, I'm willing to go there with you.
Right.
That's when all of a sudden we know the rule we know the rules of
this conversation we know that and and when we were talking before the show and you know i asked
about martha and i asked about your life and like you're very open and you're very you're very easy
with your vulnerability and just hearing that like it tells me the rules right that like you can be
open yeah this is a conversation where we can be honest and real.
And once you have that, you're exactly right.
The rest of the conversation is so much easier.
Absolutely, yeah.
A lot of it is the first interactions you have with someone and kind of experimenting so you can understand the rules, the quiet negotiation.
What are the rules of this dialogue going to be?
Yeah.
the quiet negotiation, what are the rules of this dialogue going to be?
Speaking of honesty and challenging conversations,
how can a super communicator that might be avoiding hard conversations with someone that as a friend or a business colleague or their partner,
their intimate partner, how can a super communicator, I guess,
navigate conflict, disagreement,
or challenging conversations to create a win-win?
It's a great question.
Right.
And there's a couple of chapters on it, and it is sort of one of the biggest questions.
And this is particularly in the last couple of years, there's a chapter about the story
of what happened at Netflix because there was an
executive at Netflix a couple of years ago in a meeting used the N word. And very quite rightfully,
the rest of the company was like, this is totally unacceptable. But it threatened to actually divide
the company because this was a popular executive. Some people were like, look, he didn't mean it as
a slur. He was using it as an example. And other people were like, he didn't mean it as a slur he was using it as an example and other people were like this is unacceptable you can't like he's got to be gone
yeah yeah and so and it took four months for them to fire him but at that point the company was on
the brink of civil war and so the culture wasn't good the cult yeah the culture was just tearing
themselves tearing them apart so they they hired this woman, Renee Myers, who's an amazing woman
to come in. And the first thing that she did is she said, okay, look, instead of avoiding
conversations about race, we're going to have conversations about race, but here's how we're
going to do it. We're going to start each conversation by acknowledging this is going
to be awkward. Like, and by the way, I'm going to make a mistake. You're going to make a mistake.
We're going to say things that like, don't really come out the way we intended.
It's going to be hard.
And number two, everyone at this table deserves to be at this table.
So simply, you know, obviously someone who's black belongs to this table, but if you're
white, you also have a racial experience and like we need to hear that
experience you right you can testify you can witness how your life has been as an expert
and everybody at the table has an equal right to talk about their own experiences and and that
worked at netflix it i mean it actually worked really well it brought the company back together
now when that tough conversation you're having with an intimate partner or with a business
partner where there's some conflict there think about how differently it goes if you sit down and
you say something serious i want to talk about let me just acknowledge this is going to be like
awkward and i'm going to say i'm going to say some some things that like i don't they'm going to say, I'm going to say some, some things that like, I don't,
they're going to come off dumber than I mean them. Yeah. And I'm just going to ask for your forgiveness in advance. And, and my goal here is to like really understand where you're coming from
because you belong at this table as much as I do. Impressing sounds like trying to be perfect whereas connecting sounds like trying to be
real and authentic yes exactly i think connecting comes from being real and authentic and
impressing is is what we do when we go in like we have something to prove and if you go if you
approach anyone less from a place of i've got something to prove and more if you go, if you approach anyone less from a place of, I've got something to prove
and more from a place of, I want to find the human in you and I want to show the human in me.
And if we do that, then we're just going to enjoy each other's company. And that's the,
that's like the highest goal is that we enjoy being around each other. Not that I have some
kind of power over you by impressing you so now i could you've put me
on a pedestal and now from that pedestal i feel like i'm in control and i can control the dynamic
here because that's what so much of that is isn't it it's like if i'm impressive then it gives me a
sense of control but if instead i come to connect it's like we're really relating to each other and and the the power isn't my power
over you the power of the situation is that we really enjoy spending time together you and i
have friends and the reason we love spending time together is not because you know we come over to
each other's houses and impress each other right right right it's we're friends because we when we
hang out it we're we're enjoying each other's company and it's we're friends because we when we hang out it we're
we're enjoying each other's company and that comes from connecting and i think actually
our our love lives would be served more by bringing the connection part forward
and the impressing part can that will happen sure all the things that are wonderful about you don't
worry they're gonna
they're gonna figure it out and by the way how much more powerful or impressive when someone
figures out something that's awesome about you and you didn't scream about it it's even more
impressive very impressive it's really powerful because you go if they didn't feel the need to
make that the headline what else do i not know about this person it's interesting you say that
because i can't remember what it was in the last month, but
Martha was like, oh, I didn't know you did this like 10 years ago.
Like she just found out something that I did in the past, but she was like, I never knew
you interviewed this person or you did this thing or that's really cool you did that.
And just allowing someone to discover things about you, I think is impressive that you
didn't shout it at the rooftops in the beginning the first date or something and and that doesn't mean that you have to artificially hide things either
from a place of humility if organically certain things about your life come up that's fine but
it's it i think it's questioning our intention going into a situation i think about look like
i'm out there talking about a book right now and talking to lots of amazing people and people who on the surface are very intimidating big shows
whether it's podcasts like yourself whether it's tv whatever it's like you you're in some high
stakes environments and if i go into those things thinking I need to impress everybody here, then I'm already in danger of losing the thing that actually makes people connect with me.
Right.
Because I'm trying to now be something.
I'm trying to wear something and wear this badge of look how great I am.
thing and wear this badge of look how great I am.
When someone is, I guess when someone is connecting with another person, the first meeting, first date or first interaction, what is the biggest mistake they can make you think in pushing
that person away from actually wanting to be curious about them and wanting to learn
more about them?
What is the biggest mistake that a guy could do and a woman can do in their first interaction of
a date? I mean, something that I think there's a real deficit of these days is actual vulnerability.
Not like there's sort of fake vulnerability. There a lot of fake vulnerability there's a lot of
people telling like their hero's journey you know what i mean like sure where and we all have one of
those stories right we all have the story of when we weren't doing so well and when this our back
was against the wall and the odds were against us and we were in a really bad spot in life.
And then we came through it.
But those aren't necessarily vulnerable stories because you're the hero of that story.
It's like, look how hard it was.
And look how awesome I am that I was able to get out of that.
There's no shame on doing that it's just i don't think that that's the same thing as as connecting
with who you really are and what you think about and that's like a very you know we have these very
well scripted hero's journey stories of our life that make us sound really impressive but i don't
think that's the same thing as really connecting and being vulnerable. And so I think one of the mistakes I suppose that people make early on is never really being vulnerable. And vulnerability isn't. and before anyone who doesn't know me watching this thinks that that must mean I'm Australian,
I am not, I'm English. I feel like everyone in America always still thinks I'm Australian,
but I was doing, confusingly, I was doing a TV show in Australia.
Did they know you were British in Australia?
Yeah, they know, they know. But I remember this woman that I was coaching on this show. She kept going on to every date.
She went on this date and I was supposed to give feedback, watching them on the dates and seeing
how they did and what they could do to kind of improve next time around. And one of the things
I kept noticing was like throughout the date,
she was just really laughing hard at everything this guy said. And at the end of the date,
I said to her, he's, he wasn't that funny. Like you were laughing like constantly,
but he wasn't very funny. it doesn't mean you couldn't have
politely laughed now and again you know his attempts to be funny but it but the way that
you were laughing all the way through the day it was sort of inauthentic it wasn't that wasn't
really you because i know you i know you didn't find all of those things funny and by the way you
were laughing hysterically even when he wasn't trying to be you know like it sure so i said that in itself was an absence of vulnerability because instead of
just connecting as you were and sitting into the day and maybe occasionally allowing there to be a
breath without filling every silence and that would have been even that would have been a more authentic
experience so i said to her the next day you go on with the guy i want you to just share a little
more you know because you also asked him a lot of questions that's another version of not being
vulnerable is when we just ask someone else lots and lots of questions and keep them talking yes
and we don't ever share anything.
And I coach a lot of people who are like, you know, especially a lot of women I work
with are like, men don't ask questions.
And I know that if you were to watch a lot of them, by the way, that's true.
A lot of guys aren't asking questions.
They're all too happy to just take the floor and talk about themselves.
And talk about themselves.
But we play in, if we're in a insecure place of not wanting to be vulnerable ourselves,
we play into that dynamic because we keep setting them up.
We ask another question and when they're finished talking, instead of vulnerably allowing there to be a silence for that person to have to now come in and ask you a question you fill it again and
you ask another question and then that person says okay me again and then they start talking
and telling you another story so we you know that we actually precipitate that dynamic yes
by never taking the floor for ourselves and telling a story or sharing so anyway
for me her version of just asking questions and laughing
was a form of lacking vulnerability, not really sharing.
So I said, the next date I want you to go on,
I want you to be a more authentic version of yourself
and I want you to share.
And this is darkly funny,
but you understand the context in which this was funny she went on the
date and she told a story of a horrible car accident her father had had oh my gosh that
changed his life forever and you know i just remember being tickled by it because it was
obviously a very this was a big story in her life this is like one of the most
tragic moments in hers and her dad's life this was not like a second date right like this is how to
like when i said be vulnerable i didn't mean go and tell the most tragic story of your life yes
there's other ways to be vulnerable because not everyone deserves to know at the beginning of our
connection with them all of our flaws everything we're insecure about, everything we worry about on our worst days, all of the things we're struggling with.
All our wounds, our traumas.
Yeah, like you don't necessarily trust someone enough with, you don't feel safe with them enough to share all of those things.
But there's other ways to be vulnerable.
If you share with someone something that you're passionate about, that's vulnerable.
Yeah.
Like if you, because often what we're passionate about isn't popular or it's not cool.
It's weird.
It's nerdy.
It's some unique hobby.
It's weird.
Yeah.
It's like our thing.
And it's a little bit like, it's very us, whatever that thing is very often or why we like it is very us.
And so sharing something, whether it's a TV show or a song that you listen to a lot that you like, if it came on your like Spotify shuffle, it would like, it would embarrass you that it came on in a room and that was on your show.
The shuffle gods really screwed you by playing that while everyone else was around that sharing those things and the things you're
into that that itself is an act of vulnerability because you're sort of allowing yourself to be
seen a little yeah so you know i think these are all ways that people can be on a date with us or
be in a room with us and go aha aha, a person. And it's worth asking
ourselves, did I create any of those moments on this date? Or was I constantly tight and tense
and censoring myself and anything that was really me and asking them lots of questions, which is,
it feels like connecting when you're only ever asking someone else questions. Cause you're like, I'm doing it. All right. I'm told to be a great listener and I'm
told to be curious. And I was doing that. I was being really, really curious, but that there's
a point where that goes past too much. Yeah. Because now there's not a connection here.
No one knows anything about you. Yeah, exactly. Now here's something I'm curious about.
What is it that women actually want today in a relationship?
And I'll give you context.
I was watching this video online recently of some guy on the street asking a woman,
like what's your biggest turnoff in a man?
And the woman said, she was probably in her late twenties.
The woman said, when a man is nice to me, she goes, I know I probably shouldn't be saying
this, but when he's too nice to me, it's a turnoff.
And then turns into another video
of a guy holding flowers at a restaurant
who's taking a selfie video saying,
I just got stood up by my date.
You know, we were having a good conversation online
when we were connecting.
You know, we were having a good conversation online when we were connecting.
You know, I was taking the lead by choosing a restaurant that I thought she might be interested in by doing research on her profile and making suggestions.
We were having great interactions.
I was being very kind and generous with my attention.
I brought flowers.
I was on time and she stood me up and I'm trying to be a thoughtful,
generous, kind man. And I got stood up for it. So what is it that women actually want today? Do you think, you know, and I know maybe this is just this one woman that was interviewed saying
when a guy's too nice to me, it's a turnoff. But why is it sometimes it seems like
when men are actually trying to be good leaders,
trying to be providers,
trying to show up and do a nice gesture,
here's some flowers, pick the restaurant,
show up well-dressed and groomed,
why is that a turnoff for some women?
Okay.
I feel like there's a lot to say about this.
Firstly, can we talk about the spent a lot
of time looking at her profile figuring out what she might like picking a restaurant for the date
bringing flowers like that raises a lot of questions for me okay well let's say it was
all good intentions though let's say it was no no but those are good those might be good intentions
let's just take it that they were good intentions.
It's still like, I don't know if that's nice.
I don't know if that's nice.
I think that that's like a, there's that.
It's like trying too hard.
I mean, you know, if you've just been talking to someone and you haven't even been on a date with them yet.
I mean, it's different.
to someone and you haven't even been on a date with them yet. I mean, it's different if you were long distance talking with someone for a month and you were having an amazing time with them
and you were like having great phone conversations and FaceTimes and then you show up, like finally
you get to meet in person and you've picked a restaurant, you know, they'll like, cause they've
told you what food they're into and you've brought flowers cause you know what flowers they like at this stage and you know you're you're bringing them as because it's it represents a connection that you already have
then all of that feels more appropriate to me sure but that feels like a kind of
a bit of a victimized a guy victimizing himself by saying look at everything I did for a person who's sort of
going to show up to that date and go, why did you do all of this? We don't even, we haven't even
been on like a date before. We don't even really know we like each other. Why, why are you buying
me flowers on a first date? It feels a bit like, I don't know a lot of people that would show up to
a first date having put in all of that effort and i would worry that
anyone who puts in all of that effort for someone that they're just meeting up with to see if they
like each other i would worry about that person coming across a little bit creepy interesting okay
so i think that that's a and look we're talking about a youtube video so you know it's quite
possible that someone did all of those things and they said, look, women say they want a nice guy.
And then I brought flowers on a date.
And, but let's, but let's rewind for a second.
Cause you said the woman saying, yeah, now look, I think that's, I think that's very
honest.
And she was like, I shouldn't be saying this, but when he's too nice to me, it's kind of
a turnoff.
Yes.
Now there's versions now.
Okay. off yes now there's versions now okay there's the version of it i just said which i think does indicate to a person like there's something a bit off here about how hard you're trying at
this stage sure because i shouldn't could be too creepy i shouldn't get i shouldn't be getting this
amount of effort at this stage and by the way if i am getting this amount of effort at this stage here's what i know about you this isn't really about me
because you don't know me interesting so if you suddenly it's like a guy love bombing almost
yeah and we you know love bombing is is often there's there's can be a more manipulative or
sinister aspect of love bombing that i kind of know what I'm doing when I love. I think there's a
very dark end of the spectrum with love bombing and there's a much more naive end of the spectrum
with love bombing. The sort of dark end of the spectrum is someone who's really trying to get
you to move faster than you would organically move so that they can extract a lot of attention
and value and love from you very, very quickly quickly but the more naive end of the love bombing
spectrum i think happens with people who you know fall for someone very quickly and then because
they've fallen for this person that they don't even know they are now trying on a level that
is completely unjustified because they're responding to the story they've created in their head not the person they actually have in front of them and when
someone feels that they are they can sense that there's something off about this that you don't
really know me we've exchanged texts yeah you don't know who i am you don't know what i'm into
on a deeper level you don't know what i'm into on a deeper level you don't know
what i'm like you don't you shouldn't really know that you like me this much yet so given this kind
of flowers and poetry and whatever and this doesn't interesting this is actually a sign that
you're projecting right now and i don't like that you're projecting it makes me feel strange because
you're not really seeing me and so and if by the way if you're projecting it makes me feel strange because you're not really
seeing me and so and if by the way if you could be feeling this about me right now based on how
little you know me what it says to me is you could be feeling this about anybody next week
interesting so this is about you it's not about me so i so but i do want to go back to the to the
women you know saying they want a nice guy thing because or that they might get turned off by
someone who's too nice so i think that's one version of being turned off because someone's too
nice we sense that their niceness is false gotcha but what if someone is genuinely nice yes they're
just maybe not mean to them then they're not showing them poetry and flowers but they're just
attentive kind that's a sign of look that's a sign of an unhealthy person in in if it's a sign of, look, that's a sign of an unhealthy person. If it's a woman saying it, it's a sign of an unhealthy woman.
If it's a man saying it, it's a sign of an unhealthy man.
What is a woman saying?
What is a woman truly saying if they say, I don't like nice guys? does not produce the effect that i call love around people who do not send it into some kind of
fight or flight response wow it's there are when i am met with someone who does not make me chase, when I am met with someone who doesn't make me
feel I have to earn their love, when I am met with someone who doesn't play games,
doesn't give me anxiety by being consistent for three days and then dropping off the radar for five or a week.
When I am with someone who doesn't do those things, it doesn't feel like love to me. It
does not feel like passion. It doesn't feel like fireworks. It doesn't feel like the thing
that I think I'm supposed to feel wow and you know there's obviously so much
knowledge now on where those things come from and that there are old patterns
and how we related or to our caregivers or our parents or how they related to us that
uh that gets us used to a certain pattern we get this nervous system imprint that is created
at a very early point in life and we spend the rest of our lives replicating that if we're not
careful so the the great kind of challenge i think for all of us. And this is true, by the way, of men too, right?
How many men relentlessly chase after women who don't seem to want them?
Right.
Who-
Reject them.
Reject them, who treat them like they're disposable.
Yeah.
How many guys are playing the friend to a woman for years on end who picks them up and puts them down whenever it suits her and they're doing it for years on end?
This is not just a female pattern.
This is a people pattern.
Why is it that we respond to people who treat us poorly?
Why do we think we do?
Because there is something about it that is known to us.
It is familiar.
It's, it's familiar.
And we don't realize it.
We think it's, we think we hate it.
I hate it.
I hate that this person doesn't want me.
And if I could just get this person to want me, I'd feel good again.
But what people often find is if that person truly turned around to meet you and gave you
everything that you wanted from the beginning
it would have felt strange that there's something in this dynamic that is in a weird way safe to you
yes it doesn't make you feel safe but there's some kind of safety in the familiar and and that's not
our fault we should exercise compassion towards ourselves for and and that's not our fault we should exercise compassion
towards ourselves for that because it's not our fault that these these really damaging and
destructive patterns are things that we chase because that this was created at a time when we
weren't deciding our response systems to things it was we were in survival mode and you know there's a um
i spoke to a woman recently i did a show recently where the host of the show said i really struggle
to have hard conversations with people like if i have to have a heart and a big part of this
book is like i have a whole section on how to have hard conversations because by the way every relationship is shaped is is is is made in the crucible of hard conversations
right can you have the difficult conversation can you say the thing you're afraid to say
and can you express your need without fearing that if you do something bad will happen. And so many of the times people end up in
painful relationships or not even relationships, they end up in painful dynamics or they end up
in limbo with someone where it never ends up as a relationship. It's always casual is because
they're afraid to have the hard conversations. There was this woman that was part, one of the
hosts of the show. And it was was and she said to me i really
struggle to have hard conversations and i don't know why i just you know every time i go to have
a hard conversation it's like i break out in sweats and i panic and i'm you know she said it's
just it wasn't that in my family like no one's really ever had hard conversation she said and
she didn't realize what she was saying as she said it, but she said, you
know, I mean, it's like my dad, for example, if I try to have a hard conversation with
him, he just leaves the room.
Right.
And I, and she kept going, but she didn't realize what she had said, which is your entire
life.
Cause that wasn't a pattern your dad started yesterday.
Right.
Your dad's most likely
been like that since the day you were born so what you learned is that if you tried to have a hard
conversation with your father he would leave the room he would abandon you so now you have
what therapists call a core abandonment wound right that right? This is something that's now with you.
And you wonder why with this person that you're on date three with,
who shouldn't even be that important to you,
why it feels hard to articulate that, you know,
you are disappointed that they showed up half hour late to the date
or that they didn't text you
for a week. And then all of a sudden, like reached out out of nowhere to say,
do you want to do something in one hour? And then you went without expressing that, like,
Hey, we had two great dates. And then you would like, I didn't hear from you for a week. And now
you're like, are you ready in an hour? The reason she didn't express that is and the reason it made her so terrified to express it un irrationally
terrified is because in her world it's been perfectly rational it's not this is where
compassion comes in because we're very good at calling ourselves crazy. Like I feel crazy. Why am I so scared of
having this conversation? Or we get called crazy by other people. That's a favorite thing to call
people. Ah, she was crazy. Ah, they're crazy. Like you can't believe what they tried to do or what
they said to me. They're not crazy. Something happened so they experienced something in their world at a time
when it was their reality it was her reality growing up that and i'm you know i'm extrapolating
here but like i said if she's saying that about her dad almost certainly her dad didn't start
doing that last week right he's been doing it her whole life it was real for her that there was a time in her life where if she tried to
express a need with her father or tell him something that she wasn't happy with or something
that she'd like him to do more of or less of or a way that he'd hurt her he would not be able to
have the conversation and he would leave that when
you're a child that's that poses a real threat to you yes so what she's feeling now is rational for
her in her world based on where she came from we look at it from the outside and go i can't believe
that she would be so afraid to say this thing and And she's going to end up in a two year relationship with someone who never meets any of her needs, who doesn't
even know what her needs are, who she resents deep down because it's like, he never thinks of me.
But she's terrified to have that conversation because for her, if she has a hard conversation,
it means abandonment and abandonment means on an emotional level, not a logical level, she might not survive.
And so when someone says I struggle, I find it a turnoff when someone is nice,
they are articulating a deep, deep pattern that has been there for a long time in their life.
pattern that has been there for a long time in their life.
And what I'm hearing you say is we just need more grace in general for ourselves and others.
No, we don't just need more grace. We still need more order. We still need to stop accountability and more accountability and more self-accountability, less hypocrisy, and more self-accountability more like less hypocrisy and more like organizing for what
the actual end goal is here what are the big things we're fighting for let's stop like focusing
in on the minutiae let's work on the big things that hurt everyone in our society and let's work
together on that let's organize and then on top of that in order to be able to do that you need
more grace.
Doesn't mean you can't criticize each other.
It doesn't mean you can't get pissed off with one another.
It doesn't mean you can't fight.
It just means that the fight has to end at some point.
There has to be a road back.
We have to allow for a space for atonement and we have to recognize that there is a part of
us that enjoys watching other people fail and do something wrong and make mistakes because
then we don't have to think about all the terrible mistakes and terrible thoughts
that we've made yeah and all the mistakes we've made it's like oh good everyone's looking at
them so no one's looking at me right and so the reason dog piles happen mostly it's not because
everyone cares that much about that thing we can see that the thing that we want to say has been
said a thousand times but we want to loudly from a tribal perspective from a tribal place rather we want to loudly exclaim our disapproval so that we announce
which tribe we're on we want to say i'm i'm with the bigger crowd so don't include me in any of
that i just want to we want to be safe we want to be in the tribe we don't want to be left on our
own to be eaten alive and what i feel very sad about is that more and more when someone
gets into trouble for something that isn't like egregious physical violence right the kind of
thing where they've really destroyed someone's life where that person might never recover
we just leave them for dead when i got pil piled onto, I got left for dead.
And racists and bigots and misogynists were all able to come for me.
And no one from my side stepped in.
How is that?
And then as soon as I overcame it, everyone came back.
Why is that?
Everyone came back and it was like it never happened.
And they were like, oh, I'm so glad you came back through that thing.
And I got Marvel.
And then I was back on the cover of Vogue.
And I was having a great time. And all of a sudden, all my friends came rushing. Not through that thing. And I got Marvel. And then I was back on the cover of Vogue and I was having a great time.
And all of a sudden,
all my friends came rushing,
not my like real friends.
They never left me.
Slow to friends.
But all these people,
all these media figures were suddenly all over me
wanting to be in pictures again.
And I was like,
Isn't that interesting?
Yeah.
And so, you know,
sometimes I now get into trouble
for trying to show public grace
to someone in a moment of their disgrace.
And I understand why I get into trouble for trying to show public grace to someone in a moment of their disgrace and I understand why I get into trouble for that but this is it might be my mistake
but I'm not afraid of mistakes I I believe in my heart right now that love and extending a tiny bit
of grace or hope to someone is the best way for them to come back from that thing
and do better.
And that seeing someone go from doing something bad
to doing something better
is much more healthy and helpful for our society
than just watching them disappear.
100%.
Seeing change, seeing change.
My audience love watching me change.
They love that I used to be a misogynist and I, you know, I'm growing less and less problematic as time goes on.
But they enjoy the fact that they're watching me become not only a better person, but happier, happier, healthier, allowing myself to fail.
allowing myself to fail like getting rid of the shackles of the perfection that women are held up to like the standards of perfection that women are held up to i've never felt more at peace
i've never felt more love i've never felt more connected i've never been more open to a fist
bump i'm english but i'll take it but i've never felt more connected to the world and i think a large part of our loneliness
as a society is coming from the fact that we are starting to we're being trained and encouraged by
social media and media and algorithms to look at each other as enemies we are not each other's
enemies there are people far more powerful whose names we don't know deliberately who are controlling all of this and making us stare at
each other rather than looking for them yeah and i want to go after them so expect now that i've
said that to be another huge random media scandal this is powerful i'm curious where do you think
you'd be if you didn't have the uh you have the attacks of everyone coming at you in 2020?
Where do you think you'd be right now without that experience, that sadness, that loneliness, that loss of, oh, I thought these people were my friends and then they left and then they came back?
I think I'd be in a fairly similar place.
Really?
I really do.
I think when it comes to noticing and fighting for the way that we elevate women just to
drag them down, I think that's what that taught me.
Because you experienced it.
And I think I might be less inclined to reach out to someone in a moment of disgrace.
That would be something that would be different.
I think I would be the way everyone else is, which is all, I don't want to catch it.
I don't want to be nice to them or like anything or keep following them in case anyone drags me into this.
I don't want to be in the tribe.
But what you do is you leave someone so isolated
that then they feel hopeless and, you know.
Bad things happen.
Yeah, people have died.
I know people have died.
I almost died.
I almost truly died.
I can't believe I'm still here.
Wow.
And had I not lived with my best friends
and my boyfriend
and not had the kindness of the people,
you know, around me and medication
that I'm no longer on,
but I need it in that moment,
I'd be dead for sure.
It isn't.
I understand that people look at public figures
as like, well, you've got this money
and this power and definitely true.
Yes.
It's not the same as when it happens
to someone who works in a shop or a store in a school which
does happen it doesn't just happen to that's the other thing we think this stuff just happens to
famous people what happens is it bleeds into our culture and it permeates our culture happens to
people who we never hear about it happens to people in schools in you know uh in their workplace and
they get ostracized and and they lose their job,
and they have no other means. They can't even afford a therapist to all of it.
The kids are watching, and they're learning. But I think other than that, I think I would be at the
same place when it comes to division, because the pandemic shifted something in our society globally,
pandemic shifted something in our society globally uh and the loss of women's rights and the hatred that we're seeing now we're not seeing people disagree with each other's opinions
we're seeing real visceral hatred evil hatred yeah and we're seeing mockery of each other that
i don't think is very helpful that i totally participated in before. Just a few years ago, if some man
was incredibly degrading to me on Twitter, I would call him an incel. And I look back and I'm like-
Call him a what?
An incel.
An incel.
Yeah. When someone's involuntary celibate. Without really thinking about like, yes,
he shouldn't have degraded me. And yes, he should never have spoken to me in that sexist and
disgusting way. But my calling him an incel just lowers me to his level and is actually perpetuating
a really cruel, unkind message about men who feel lonely.
So then I suck.
Right.
And so I stopped doing that a few years ago.
That's good.
But I, you know, it's not like I'm not like.
Right, right, right.
But it's just.
It's good you're aware of it and you're acknowledging it and you're, you know it's not like i'm not like right right but it's just it's good you're aware of it and you're acknowledging it and you're you know it's like slap down smack down own the libs own the
republicans you know even liberals these videos they make where they go out into these country
these parts of the country where they've where a lot of these people they're not from the same
metropolitan cities we are they're not exposed to the same news or algorithms that we are.
They are largely ignored by both coasts until suddenly someone's got a microphone and they want to go and interview some 70-year-old Republican man who's a farmer and ask him his opinions on these very new topics of discussion.
And he might give an ill-informed or
outdated answer and then the way we laugh and it goes viral and everyone loves it and we just
on them what message does that send what does that say to everyone watching that it says we
think you're idiots you're less than you're less than they
think we're idiots we are all everyone right now being idiots because we're we're fighting the
wrong target when none of us are smarter or better than each other we're all just informed differently
and the faster we can all work to explain that to people, the faster we will bring people together into a much healthier and happier society.
And that's where I want my work to.
Everything I'm doing is now towards mental health.
I was just going to mention that because with your show, your podcast, I Weigh, which is a great show that I've been on.
And I think I've seen the evolution of it, which is inspiring to see that it's focused more on mental health now.
seen the evolution of it, which is inspiring to see that it's focused more on mental health now. And I think something you said, which is self-accountability, self-control, mental health,
and enter your own healing are the things that I think when we work on those things,
everything gets better. Because then you can interpret things better. You can pause. You can
give people grace. You can give yourself grace. You can, to just i'm angry i'm lashing out because i'm hurt and i'm
afraid yes everyone feels afraid all the time it's really bad for your nervous system it's it's
neurologically terrible you know we've had doctors on my podcast come on and explain that mistakes
are the way the most effective way for somebody to learn. That's how neurologically your brain
is more likely to implement and keep information. We've made people afraid of the six. We've made
people afraid of everything. And people feel so afraid of and isolated and judged by each other.
It's not good. And so what I weigh has been more focusing on is me reaching across to people who
are less and less like me and wanting to engage in civil
discourse. It's inspiring. And wanting to expose new ideas that are away from group think and just
challenge them sometimes, but respectfully. Yeah, of course. Or sometimes have my mind opened.
What's the thing that's opened your mind the most from someone that maybe you said,
I don't think I'm going to learn much from this person, but I'm curious to see what
they have to say. And maybe I'd be open what who shocked you or what idea opened you up i think the thing that
has probably taken me by surprise the most has been neurologists in that it's not that i went in
with any kind of preemptive decision of what i was gonna hear but i had no idea how much neurology how much brain science
actually informs our personality and informs our behavior and informs our anxiety and informs our
depression i had no idea about the way that we are wired and how much that could and how what we eat
and what we drink and how much we sleep i always thought yeah yeah i get it i get it exercise
yeah yeah yeah i hate exercise yeah don't drink alcohol yeah yeah it's like yeah yeah i get it
it's completely transformed my life i've been listening to these people i've been learning about
glucose and i've been learning about daily exercise and i'm mortified to admit that it's
made me happier than i've ever been. I'm mortified.
Because you were like, screw this stuff.
I'm furious.
I hate sweating.
I think it's disgusting.
Wow.
But I've been exercising, you know, a little bit every single day.
I've been bringing my audience along for the ride
because obviously we were kind of a very clear anti-diet culture space.
It was, you know, where a lot of eating disorder recoveries.
Sure, sure.
You know, where a lot of people
who've had eating disorders
come to, you know,
what we've created
as a safe haven
for eating disorders.
And so exercise
is a really tricky conversation
for most people.
Yeah.
Because there's so much shame
around exercise.
It's not a healthy version.
It's more of an extreme version
to get you in.
It's all for the external.
It's all for the vanity.
But when you know
the power of your brain and how helpful it is for that, which helps you heal, calm, feel differently.
It changes everything.
But our focus is, you know, look at the exercise attire that men and women are expected to wear, especially women with the bra and like the light colored leggings.
And that's fine.
Everyone should just do themselves.
Sure.
Not everyone.
Not everyone feels comfortable because
i don't want to bend over and see what i look like bending over in a mirror i had an eating
disorder for 20 years i have body dysmorphia that's going to make me not want to go again
the next day because i'm going to go into a place of judgment and you know we also again we want
instant results instant results it takes a long time it takes a long time not that long not as
long as you think but it takes like six months it's not to see three week out yeah exactly it's like six months minimum
when i was 24 i walked into my friend who's a personal trainer who then went on to train me for
marvel al jackson i walked into his gym when i was 24 i was like how long would it take me to get an
like nicole scherzinger and he looked at my and he was like about three months and i was like how long would it take me to get an like nicole scherzinger and he looked at my
and he was like about three months and i was like no i don't mind i walked out even three months is
amazing it's not that long amazing yeah three months it was probably gonna be a he's gonna
sneak me into a six but but still i heard that and i was like well there's not two weeks i have
time for that oh my god classic classic. Classic. Classic of our generation.
I'm just not going to work out at all.
But when you think about the neurological benefits of exercise and the fact that within 10 to 15 minutes,
you have endorphins, you have happy chemicals going through your brain that are de-stressing you,
making it more likely for you to be able to sleep that night, de-stressing you,
you immediately feel better than you felt beforehand.
And then if you keep that up every day, within a week or two,
your life starts to genuinely feel differently.
And so I've been trying to bring my audience along with me on this journey doing that.
It's called Move For Your Mind.
How dare you?
How dare you exercise?
How dare you enjoy it?
But I found a way that is like in baggy clothes, eating sugary snacks,
so we can divorce the idea of calories out, calories in.
We're going against all of exercise culture and all of diet culture because exercise culture and diet culture are just
married now um and so we are we've kind of created this slightly anarchist rebellious
like exercise don't work out but make sure you're moving yeah yes but you can look ridiculous i look
ridiculous i have no that's great like swag you know i don't know if that's the right don't work
out for instagram yeah don't work out for Instagram.
Don't work out for Instagram.
Work out for yourself.
No one's going to want to see that.
But like dance in your kitchen.
Do things that are free.
Lift water bottles.
Lift your dog.
Lift your child.
You know, go for a walk every day.
Do simple things.
Buy a $300 walking machine, which might be expensive for some people.
For some people, it might be affordable.
So if you're a woman and you're afraid of walking at night,
I walk on that and I watch my favorite TV shows and then I get my half an hour a day
and then I feel amazing and I have a great night's sleep.
I sound smug and disgusting.
I hate myself.
I promised myself I would never be this person.
Or a healthy person.
An exercising person.
But we're trying to find unpretentious,
fun and welcoming ways for people at any size
or with any disability or any stage of pregnancy
to join us and not feel ostracized because we still i mean whenever there's a
like a plus size line for exercise workout the world goes mad so what did you want them to wear
when they were exercising you want these people to exercise and work out be healthy what do you
want to be naked in the gym the gyms are not a very friendly space so it's just about finding an alternative way to
democratize exercise and bring it back to the people it was ours it got industrialized like
a matter of decades ago and turned into this exclusive club where you have a uniform
why didn't you uniform yeah unless you're playing a professional sport honestly well you have this
uniform that's getting sexier and sexier and sexier every year for both for all agendas and and it's becoming more and
more about just becoming a billboard for other people no one's thinking about the inside it's
all very punitive it's a punitive like no pain no gain is the stupidest slogan of our generation
one-off right well it's also with men it's like you just see managers
shirtless everywhere who are just shredded and probably on steroids or human growth hormone and
so they're just like so ripped that you're just like most men are like i could never get to that
yeah but that get to happy right exactly person might be struggling with an eating disorder
or some sort of body dysmorphia or orthorex right you know you don't need to we don't know what
everyone's story is just focus on being happier in an hour than you are right now yeah feeling
autonomous so so many of us don't feel autonomous in the world because there's so much chaos and
we're doom scrolling and we're looking at how the world is falling apart and our kids are changing
faster than we were at their age and everyone feels feels so like, oh, my God, it feels like I'm in quicksand all of the time.
So it's a quick way to immediately feel like, OK, my feet are back on the ground.
And it's just temporary.
But then you do it again.
Absolutely.
And so that's a big part of what we're doing over at IWeigh is exercise culture, but also
neurology and learning that you can really make fundamental quick changes that it
doesn't just have to be medication i'm pro medication and it doesn't just having to be
access to the best therapy which no one can afford en masse there are so many ways you can rewire
your own brain and i think these people people like caroline leaf who's great podcast are
fantastic and important and they're about no longer succumbing just to big pharma, but giving the power back to the people to have autonomy in their own recovery.
Absolutely.
It's empowering.
That's inspiring.
So what I'm hearing you say is that when you started to talk to neurologists or brain scientists, you started to learn these ideas just make you happier and healthier overall.
And so you started you
know mortifying yourself by doing these things yeah and you started on instagram live yeah and
you started to see results yeah i'm happier than i've ever been i'm way nicer than i used to be
you see it yeah exactly i could feel the energy right away when you walked in here i go
something is shifted within you yeah i think you're bad before i i said it was just like
no but you had a defensive you had a more of an aggressive energy right yeah i was defensive and
i think there's nothing wrong with a little bit of female aggression but i do think that what i
had was more of a defensive energy that's what it was again i was flying so high and everyone was
congratulating me so much that i was like i was just waiting for the shoe shop and also everyone
every podcast i went on someone was trying to trap me or, you know,
and so I didn't know what you were going to be like.
Like I didn't know what anyone was going to be like.
Hopefully you didn't think I was trying to trap you.
No, you were great.
I had you on my podcast.
We had a great time.
It's just, I just didn't know anything to trust.
I knew that the other shoe was going to drop
at any moment.
And I just didn't know when it was going to happen.
And I had this anxiety.
And I think also because everything was happening so fast and because i had that anxiety i think that also accounts for some of
my worse like my poorer decisions with things that i said publicly subjects i weighed into
why am i talking about global conflict what do i know about global conflict but i felt pressured
to because people are like your silence on this is deafening and so you're like i don't want to
think i don't care i want to know i care about their country but i don't know anything about that's one of the biggest things when
people say i can't believe we're not supporting this or this or this or this and you're not saying
something means you don't support it yeah i'm like maybe i just don't know what to say like yeah
and you're expected because i know this the one thing about eating disorders i'm expected to know
everything about everything and my bad for trying to jump in when i didn't know because i only ever created more mess
and for some reason the media like i can and it can make a headline so like it like and i don't
know why like but they they they know that i'm divisive they know i'm controversial they know
that i'm not spoken yeah they they and then they further polarize me by making the headline as
egregious as possible and violent as possible.
So it's always Jameela.
Jameela slams.
And often I've just said a really thoughtful thing with like a love heart.
Not always.
Right, right, right.
Sometimes.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
What did it feel like to you when, you know, you had people that were maybe seemed like friends or acquaintances,
but when you were going through your stuff in the media and people, you know, went against you or just stopped talking to you for a period of time,
how did they make you feel? And how is your relationship with certain people like that
once they started to come back around? They'll never be back on the inside ever.
And I think it can be helpful in moments like that, as heartbreaking as they are,
because it was heartbreaking. Yeah, I know the feeling.
You felt very like, you feel very betrayed and you also like judge your own sense
of judgment you question yourself which is never a nice it's a shaky feeling when you when you can't
trust your gut instinct but um truly it's also an extraordinary magnifying glass of clarity that i'm
so grateful for because i have this extraordinary pool of people now left who I know have got
my back, who don't care, who don't look at the internet, who challenge me when I'm wrong
with grace and love.
And they maintain the most fundamental quality that I think we all need, which is to have
the benefit of the doubt.
100%.
It's the benefit of the doubt is going to carry us to a better society. Yes,
it is. We have lost the benefit of the doubt, especially for women. We have reserved quite a
lot of it for men, but even then we assume people's worst intentions and that's not the
world that I grew up in. Yeah. And if we're modeling this to our kids, what do we expect
them to do? Have great values and you know the open a conversation
what's a great value the values that are correct keep changing so what's a great what's a great
value what does inclusion look like what does diversity and friendship groups look like
debate is the is the foundation of democracy we've stopped that disagreement rather is the
foundation we've stopped debating yeah we just said no, rather, is the foundation of democracy. We've stopped debating.
Yeah. We just said, no, I'm not going to listen to you.
Yeah. I was going to yell at you and not listen to you.
Yeah, I just,
like I said, I've done it before.
Got me nowhere. Didn't make me feel good.
Made me feel really lonely and sad.
And alienated me from people.
And I don't want to be alienated from people.
I want to be friends. I want us to be
together. Yeah, I don't want to have children
but this work is my way of of making the world easier for my friends who are having children
if i can make it a safer world for their kids then that makes up for the fact that i refuse
to be called mother really i'll tell you what i'm'm inspired by just the journey you're on.
I'm inspired that you got to experience so much in the last six, seven years.
You got to experience a rise of fame quickly, and you did some things that you were proud of,
but also things you weren't proud of, and you learned from them.
I'm glad you got to experience people for you and then against you, because you learn from them. I'm glad you got to experience people for you and then against you because you learn
from them.
And I feel like you're a better person because of that.
And you have more perspective now.
And at the end of the day, you've got a lot of grace for yourself and grace for others.
And it sounds to me like you want people to come together.
You want people to be open-minded.
You also want people to be accountable for their
actions and you want people to focus on their mental health and their optimizing of their own
mental health optimizing their own physical body and their spiritual health so they can have more
peace and grace for themselves and others that's what i'm hearing you say yeah we talk about mental
health so much now in society and it's a big part of the zeitgeist but i still think we're talking
about it from not quite the right angle we're still talking about it as though like this
would be a good thing to have on an individual basis wouldn't it be nice if you had if you could
make your mortgage payments and look after your kids and take them to all the practices and do
all of this for everyone but then also not want to kill yourself it's definitely still seen as a
surplus whereas actually it should be the foundation of everything that we are going to.
I can't believe mental health is not free in this country.
I cannot believe it's not free in every single country.
It is in many countries.
But this is how we increase our GDP.
People can work healthier.
People can be healthier.
They will be in the hospital less if they are happier because stress and loneliness and all these different things are huge factors as to what destroys people's health and immune systems.
It would change the amount of people having to go in psychiatric care.
It would change the amount of homelessness there is.
It would change the way that we treat each other as a society.
It would change everything.
That's where the money should go.
All the money should go there. If we could all as a world put the money instead of in the military only into mental health,
if we could take some of those trillions and put it towards making the people and the children
happier and having children have access to mental health, we wouldn't need so much military.
There wouldn't be so much war.
We wouldn't need the police as often as we do.
We wouldn't need as many drugs or as many different things that we have now to try and numb the pain and help people escape from the pain.
I agree.
We wouldn't be sewn to our phones.
And a lot of people who make a lot of money from us doing that know that.
They don't make the move to improve our mental health.
And so we have to do it ourselves.
And people like us have to tell people.
I'm loving this message.
I'm inspired by this message.
I think it's the most important thing in the world
and it's still treated as like a luxury
rather than a fundamental.
And it should be the same as brushing your teeth
or, you know, getting out in the sun or whatever.
Sure, sure.
As opposed to eating good food.
So I'm like...
We didn't know what we were going to talk about i'm just i keep
them inspired by this because you know i just love seeing the journey i didn't know this is where
you're at fully so for you coming in i was just like wow this is really inspiring i have a couple
final questions for you um that i think well i know i asked you the first time on the show and
so i'm really fascinated to hear what the response
is to them and if it's the same or if it's changed since the last time i don't remember what i said
so you'll get yeah we'll we'll make that backed up so people can see the last one also but um i'll
ask that in a second but i want people to check out your shows you got iway you got bad dates which
is hilarious um you're on social media jam Jamila Jamil on Instagram, TikTok,
Twitter, everywhere, iwaycommunity.com. How else can we follow or support you with what you're up
to right now? I think just join me at iway or join me on my social media, join the mental health
movement. I think that we really have an opportunity to change the future of marketing and mental
health and include more people. Listen to iway. it's a great podcast on neurology and mental health that offers you the autonomy to
take it into your own hands listen to bad dates if you want to feel better about your own romantic
life it is the most disgusting and filthy and funny uh podcast with extraordinary comedians
who give way too much information about their personal lives and sex lives uh and again it's
the much-needed escapism i'm able to provide information about their personal lives and sex lives. And again, it's the much needed escapism.
I'm able to provide information and the sad stuff
and then the escapism.
So I hope people listen to it
because it is just an amazing vacation for your mind.
That was great.
It's purely simple.
And we need comedy.
Yeah.
Comedy is one of the best medicines, you know?
100% saved my life.
Yeah, that's great.
Okay, so both those shows, Bad Dates, I Weigh,
I'm inspired.
I want to hear these final few questions.
Before I ask the final two questions, I want to acknowledge you, Jamila, for, again, the
journey, transformation.
It's really more, not a transformation, more the awareness that you have about yourself
and who you've been, where you're at now, or where you're going.
And I really just love that you have that awareness for you, that you've been on a healing
journey, that you're able to see things from a different
perspective. And for me, that's really inspiring. I think it's inspiring when I can do that and
anyone can do that. So I'm inspired by the journey you're on. And it's really cool to see you right
now in this space because most importantly, you're happy and you're healthy. And that's for me,
really inspired to see you in a space like that it also speaking of cancel culture goes to show that like when people criticize you some good can come from
it even if i didn't always make a public notes apology statement about everything i was listening
yeah i was listening when people pulled me out and so i make this tweak sometimes privately
because sometimes it's easier to make change privately we need to become aware that it's okay
to have a learning journey privately.
You do not have to share every single thing.
I'm not going to have a pap smear on live IG.
I need to look after my brain privately
with space and mess.
You don't need an opinion from every person
on everything you do.
No, and everyone doesn't have to be privy
to every single thing about all of our lives.
It's a very big misconception about how we're supposed to conduct ourselves because of how much some people choose to share on social media.
But I'm listening and I'm changing.
But also the people who spoke to me constructively were the ones who got in.
And the people who almost pushed me over the edge and killed me or made me so angry that I didn't want to fight for anyone and give up with the people who abused me I didn't need to be sent death threats or rape threats or threats that
I'm going to be ostracized or that people are going to boycott me or call for me to be fired
I didn't need that to change the people who spoke to me kindly and with peace and with the best of
intention who had the who believed in need to change are the ones who changed me. So criticism can be fantastic.
I'm a product of that criticism, but from love.
Conscious criticism.
Those are the people that helped me.
The other people did nothing but cause me stress and almost make me give up on everything,
including my own life.
I hope you enjoyed today's episode and it inspired you on your journey towards greatness.
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