The School of Greatness - Why Your Relationship Keeps Repeating the Same Pattern | Gary John Bishop

Episode Date: July 10, 2026

Most breakups have one thing in common, and it's never who you think it is. You can point to the fight, the distance, the way things quietly went cold. But the real story starts years earlier, in the ...exact moment you stopped noticing the shift. Gary John Bishop, author of Love Unf*cked: Getting Your Relationship Sh!t Together, has spent decades studying why people stay stuck in relationships long after they know something is wrong. He built a career teaching people how to spot the moment they started tolerating what should have ended. This conversation gets personal fast. Bishop opens up about the 28 years he went without telling his mother he loved her, the phone call that broke him open, and the identity he had to dismantle before he could fully love his own wife. You will hear why competitiveness can quietly wreck intimacy, why blame is the anchor that keeps you stuck in the past, and why the story you tell about what happened to you matters more than what actually happened. By the end, you'll see why the real work is getting "complete" with your first twenty years. And why the best lovers are the ones who stopped looking for someone else to fix them. Gary’s website Gary on Instagram (Pre-order) Now What?: You, Your Life, and the Truth You’ve Been Avoiding Amazon Audiobook Yellow Kite GROW UP Becoming the Parent Your Kids Deserve Amazon Audiobook Love Unf*cked Amazon Audiobook Wise as Fu*k: Simple Truths to Guide You Through the Sh*tstorms of Life Amazon Audiobook Do the Work: The Official Unrepentant, Ass-Kicking, No-Kidding, Change-Your-Life Sidekick to Unfu*k Yourself Amazon Audiobook Stop Doing That Sh*t Amazon Audiobook Unfu*k Yourself: Get Out of Your Head and into Your Life Amazon Audiobook In this episode you will: Learn why blame keeps you anchored to your past and how to release it Discover the exact moment relationships quietly start to break down Overcome the identity patterns you built in childhood that sabotage intimacy Recognize the difference between overcoming a problem and truly transforming it Build the kind of authentic wealth and love that comes from bringing value instead of seeking it For more information go to https://lewishowes.com/1952 More SOG episodes we think you’ll love: Lewis Howes Solo [How To Find Real Love] Esther Perel Matthew Hussey Get More From Lewis! Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

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Starting point is 00:00:35 Again, thank you so much for being here and listening to the School of Greatness. Make sure to follow right now to stay up to date on the latest and greatest. Welcome back, everyone in the School of Greatness. Very excited about our guest, Gary John Bishop in the house, my man. Good to see you, brother. You've had a lot of success over the years with many books, but this book, Love Unfeited, getting your relationship together is a powerful one. And we were just talking about this beforehand.
Starting point is 00:01:08 A lot of people feel stuck in their relationships. Yeah. And they get in their relationships, and they'll stay in relationships for years. And then something happens with the like, it's not working, right? It's not working. Maybe it's a few years, maybe it's 10 years, 20 years. They're thinking it's not working. They're trying to control the relationship.
Starting point is 00:01:24 They're trying to change the person, trying to fix someone. And why do you think that so many people are stuck in relationships in this mindset? Yeah. I think there's a couple of things. First of all, thanks for having me. Yeah, man. But I think there's a couple of things. One of them is most often, by the time you're really struggling with it, you're now at the thick end of the wedge. So it started somewhere, though. It literally went off on a trail. And what happens with in relationships is that trail's kind of okay at the beginning. You're kind of going along. You're like, okay, I can manage this. It's not the way it was, but it's still good. There's still good things in it. We're still, you know, comparative. together, whatever. By the time you're really struggling with it, you've lost sight of where you took the turn. So a lot of the times with people, it's you got to begin with really addressing how you got where you are, but not in the kind of typical way you would explain that. Like, you know, we don't get along anymore,
Starting point is 00:02:24 or, you know, I got fired or my business went down. No, there was some fundamental shift in how you related to that other person. And once that starts to go that way, you're down the Swanee. Right. Because in the beginning, you're not in that space. You're in love or you're connected, you're having fun, or you're intimate, or you're putting your best behavior on, right, for the first year or two. But then all of a sudden, it starts to shift. Why does that shift happen for so many people? Well, at the beginning of a relationship, you're generating it. You're generating the relationship. Right. So you're bringing to the table. Right. You're constantly bringing to the table.
Starting point is 00:03:01 There is a point, though, for many people, where you stop bringing to the table quite as much. You're spending more time looking at what's on the table, which invariably becomes what are they bringing? What are they bringing to me? Right. So then that's when people start talking about, I'm not getting what I need and I'm not getting what I want. Well, it's kind of like standing in a supermarket and waiting for the groceries to jump into your trolley, right? It doesn't quite work that way.
Starting point is 00:03:26 You've got to go, you know, make something happen. It's kind of like, you know, having a check engine light on it. in your car. When the car breaks down, it's too light. You know, you should have, you want to go back and see where that thing started at. What is that flashing light? For six months, it's been flashing. Yeah, why don't you take it in? Right. And there's people who are putting black type over the top of it like, I'll pretend. There's nothing wrong. Yeah. And that is what people do in relationships. They pretend what's not working is somehow okay. They'll overcome, which all human beings are brilliant overcoming. But not great at transforming, not great at dealing with what's
Starting point is 00:03:59 actually in the way. They're great at overcoming. and overcoming it and overcoming it until it becomes too much. Or just tolerating it, right? Exactly. That's the big word, right? Maybe you're not overcoming it and transforming. You're tolerating the brokenness or the stress of it or whatever it might be. See, that's the problem with it. Whatever you are tolerating in your relationship, you'll make it okay.
Starting point is 00:04:19 You'll make that thing okay, right? It's not great, but it's okay. And human beings have a tremendous capacity for making things that don't work somehow workable. But that again comes that point where you're looking around yourself and thinking, this ain't it. There's something off here. It's where people stop investing and bringing something to the table. And then there's a level of, I guess, maybe there's some disrespectful words that are said every now and then that becomes okay.
Starting point is 00:04:49 Or there was an apology, but then it's a continuing every few weeks. And then it's every day. And then you tolerate that. And then there's some physical abuse that was once. and then, okay, well, I'm just going to let it slide this time, and then it becomes every month, and whatever it might be, or an explosion of emotions. It could be, and it could be simple things like there's no real intimacy anymore,
Starting point is 00:05:09 or you go to them all together or a movie together, and you don't hold your partner's hand. Or, you know, all those little kind of breakdowns become the norm, right? Like, there's just this kind of distance, and that distance comes from observing. So the more you're observing your relationship, I invite people to take the case you're not in it. You're actually watching it.
Starting point is 00:05:28 And you've got to get that really like in an experiential way. We spend a lot of time in our relationships watching what's going on and in an internal mechanism with ourselves about how that's doing, which includes keeping score, of course. Keeping score. Right. Is that something we should or shouldn't do? No, I mean, it's the only people who are really truly fascinated
Starting point is 00:05:52 by the scored in the game of the spectators. The people who are on the field, they're, just playing. Yeah. They're just, and I know they're aware of the score, but they're all about the next play, the next play, the next play, the next play, the next play. And that really is how it is in relationships. It's like, are you actively in it? And the one little caveat that I would add to that is a lot of people are in it and doing what they're doing expecting something different. So they're looking over, still looking over there, like if I do this and I do that. It'll shift. It'll change. This will change. Right. But they won't change. That never worked.
Starting point is 00:06:28 that way because it's not truly authentic. See, it's really a manipulation, which is, people hate hearing that word, you know, like, ah, I'm not manipulating, but if you just sit with that for a moment and say, yeah, I am doing this so that you'll be different or this will be different. And that'll never be the case. My girlfriend, Martha, who's amazing, in the beginning of our relationship when we just started hanging out, we weren't like officially together or whatever, but we were dating and, you know, seeing other people, but getting to know each other. I said to her at one point, I said, listen, I'm always good, in the past, in my relationships, based on the model of my parents and what I witnessed growing up, I repeated the model where I
Starting point is 00:07:08 tried to please every relationship. I tried to change to make someone happy when they were unhappy. And no matter how much I did or shifted or changed, they would still never make them happy, which made me feel miserable and upset and resentful and all these things. And I said, listen, I've been doing a lot of healing work over this previous, year on the inner child and relationships and all these different things, that if we get together and letting you know, I'm never going to do anything to please you. I'm never going to shift or change who I am. I freaking love it. For you. I love it. I will change or shift because I want to
Starting point is 00:07:41 improve or because I'm aware that it's for the betterment of myself in the world, but I'm not going to do anything to please you. Right. We're going to create agreements and connection and all these things. I don't have to give you my best, but if you're upset of who I authentically am, then you shouldn't be with me. Right. We're not a good match. You need to get a T-shop done. And it says it's not my job to make you happy.
Starting point is 00:08:04 That's true. And I want people to get that and it's purest sense, right? Not like you don't care for people. You don't love this person or you're not committed to this person. It doesn't mean any of that. It means, and I've really found a lot of freedom for this in my relationship to my own wife. Like where she's at is okay. It's okay.
Starting point is 00:08:22 Like if my wife's upset, it's okay. It's not the end of the world. You know what I mean? And even if she's upset at me, it's okay. She's allowed. You know, she's got the freedom to be herself. And that includes for me, I don't make it my wife's job to keep me on an even kill. That's not her job.
Starting point is 00:08:40 That's your job. Exactly, right? Because that's really the only job I can effectively do. That's really the only job you can effectively work and make it work for yourself. Well, the real balance comes in for me, and I'm going to look from my own perspective, for my wife, but where the real balance comes in for me is, like, there's so much freedom in my relationship with my wife because the pressure's off. There's no pressure. It doesn't have to be a certain way. It's amazing. And you'll see how much of that creeps in in your thinking.
Starting point is 00:09:08 Like it's supposed to be a certain way. And the real struggle is when you're caught in that no man's land from where it is to how it's kind of supposed to be in your mind. That's where the struggle is. So you're never really there for it. you're always pulling it somewhere or pushing it somewhere. And it's just a recipe for disaster. You know, we're really bad at relationships if I'm going to be straight about it. You know, we're just bad at them. We don't have the tools.
Starting point is 00:09:37 We weren't taught this growing up unless we just were modeled this from our parents. And like you said before, we either loved the model that our parents had or we hated it. Right. We said, we want to be like that or we never want to be like that. Right. And that's all you've got. That's it. Right.
Starting point is 00:09:51 So I've kind of point out why both of them are, flawed in their own way because some people think, well, you know, modeling my relationship on a good one would be a good thing you do. And I say, no, you're constantly holding your relationship to a standard. To a judgment, right? So it never gets to be itself. You never get to have the relationship you've got. And it's a failed policy. It doesn't work. It's like constantly comparing yourself to somebody else. It doesn't work. You have to be able to be yourself in relationship. And one of the things that I always kind of point people towards is say when you're in relationship, you should be aware, and this is something you and I
Starting point is 00:10:29 discussed a little bit earlier, you should be aware of whatever junk is incomplete for you from your childhood, it's coming up. Yeah. And it's like trying to keep a beach ball under the water, right? Like you can't keep it. It's common. What were the two or three biggest things that were junk for you from childhood that came up in your marriage in the last 26 years?
Starting point is 00:10:50 Yeah. So your relationship to your parents is all over. your relationship, right? And it's all over it. And why is it you can't even see? So the big one that always come up for me was, you're selfish, right? You felt you were selfish? My partner. You would say, you're selfish. Right? Because that was my experience of growing up, one of my parents, like that they're selfish. Now, that's a perspective of a child. Was it true? When I look back, no. But that's what it was like for me as a kid. That's how it felt. Right. And I had to really unpack that for myself as I got older, like, wow,
Starting point is 00:11:24 This is, it's really cancerous in my life. Like, it's a barrier between me and people. I never, and it became a big barrier between me and particularly with my mom. Like it was there between her and I through my teens that when I started to do work on myself, thankfully, I managed to get on the other side of that. And really, just loved the mom that I had, like fully and authentically loved the mother I have. And my teen years, my early 20s, that was not there. Like a possibility wasn't there.
Starting point is 00:11:54 So that was a big one for me. And then, you know, the other one was my searing independence. So I wanted to be independent. I'm always like, I'm always trying to figure out my stuff myself. I need to figure out myself. Which if you think of that in the context of a relationship, it's completely absurd. Yeah. Right?
Starting point is 00:12:14 Like, here I am, committed to you. We got a problem. You sit there, I'll work this out. You know, I never fully was able to kind of, kind of, be with my own fears and be with my own perceived inadequacies. Like these things were like ruminating in the background of my thoughts. And, you know, me being stereotypically, culturally Scottish, you know, like, you know, I'll sort of myself, which is a complete crap show, you know.
Starting point is 00:12:44 But so those elements of that kind of, like I said, this kind of driven independent and this kind of judgment of, you know, the way that you behave and, how you shouldn't be that way and you should be more like this way, had become a big obstacle that, by the way, my wife and I were just dancing around it. You weren't addressing it. No way. It's hard to see a relationship in terms of anything other than you and another person. Yeah. When you start to see who you are in it, just take a start from out and say, who am I here? Who am I? Take away all your best efforts and all your positivity and all your justifications, take away all that away, and just look at it in a cold light of day, say,
Starting point is 00:13:27 who am I here? It's hard to tell yourself, I'm judgmental and I'm cynical and I'm, but if you look, you'll see that playing out. You'll see it playing out right in front of your face. And that paradigm and that way of thinking, my wife never stood a chance. Wow. Not a chance. You have no hope against what I'm driven to do. Yeah. Until I saw what I'm driven to do. What made you wake up and see that? I'd actually started to come into terms with how one of my endearing traits, if you like, is I'm hardworking.
Starting point is 00:14:02 So I will grind at. You know, I'll just see this thing through, you know. But what I really struggled with was vulnerability and love. Like I couldn't love this woman. Fully. I couldn't. All I could do was show her that I cared by working harder. Right?
Starting point is 00:14:24 Like, you'll never have to worry about anything. I'm just going to keep grinding around and grind it. And it was myopic. It was like, you know, these blinkers on. How long did it take for you to realize you couldn't love her? Oh, I mean, I was convinced I was loving her. But she didn't feel like you were loving her. No, because, you know, she's from a very similar background and like, so culturally you're
Starting point is 00:14:44 very influenced. You know, you're very influenced culturally. And so whatever you came out of, you're either going to reflect that or rebel. against it, you're gonna be one or the other. And so I reflected a lot of that kind of Glasgow, kind of cultural, tough, you know. That's who I am, yeah. You identify, right.
Starting point is 00:15:03 You identify, yeah. Right, and the big breakthrough came for me when I realized, and it was amazing, I'll never get over this, right? And I'm, and it happened 15 years ago, and I'll never get over it. When I realized that I hadn't told my mom that I'd loved her since I was 12.
Starting point is 00:15:22 Wow. Why didn't you tell her? Because I'd went from being a player and my own family to become a spectator. I'd gone from being on the field and I'd taken one too many knocks. And I thought I'm coming at. And I didn't consciously do it. It's just kind of where I went. And so telling my mom that I loved her was like it just, I remember being a kid and telling my mom I loved her.
Starting point is 00:15:51 I remember holding her leg and I remember holding her hand and I remember all of that stuff. And then I just remember like me here, her there, and now I'm just going to kind of observe the job she's doing. And it was not a great observation. It was not a great commentary. It was a judgment. Big time, in my opinion, about what she should have been doing, how she should have been parenting me and how I should be raised and da-da-da-da-da-da-da.
Starting point is 00:16:12 And I'm just a kid, which is all fine, but it had an impact. Of course. And the impact was, I'm here, you're there and never the twine shall meet. When I realized not only that, but, how that had played out now, who had become. I realized, and this was a time in my life and I used to, I'd call my mom every week, but it was, you know, how you doing it?
Starting point is 00:16:38 You know, the neighbor's dogs barking. Right. You know, the weather's terrible. There was no intimacy, there was no vulnerability, yeah. Nothing. It was like a check, checking through the boxes. And I called her up and I said, hey, how you don't? She goes, yeah, good.
Starting point is 00:16:52 And I said, they need to talk. And she goes, okay, you know, she's completely, different to whatever the heck I'm saying. And I go, I said to her, I'm sorry. And it was like a silence. She said, for what? And I said, I judged you for the way you raised me. She's silent.
Starting point is 00:17:14 And then I said to her, I never knew what it was like for you. She's still silent. And I said, I love you. And I could, like the last word, I'm getting moved by it right now. Like the last words are coming at my mouth and like my lips trembling and she said I love you too baby Wow oh my gosh did she tell you she loved you in between this time no we had both had this kind of thing you know how old were you when this happened 40 so you spent 28 years not telling her wow and so at all I'm like sobbing I'm like well like it's all coming at and I really got like my job from that point I got how
Starting point is 00:17:58 I wasn't a loving man. Wow. That was the truth. I wasn't a loving man. I could be your partner, but don't expect me to love you. Wow. And then when I just started to gush out, like, now I could just freely love my wife. It was like the gates were open.
Starting point is 00:18:18 And I started this revolution. And my family, it was crazy. I've got three older sisters, you know. And so I called them all. I'm like, I haven't been telling you I love you and I love you and they're all like, who are you? Who are you? What's going to want with you?
Starting point is 00:18:34 And I'm like, I just go. Like, I don't tell the people in my life who matter to me how much I truly love them. Not like just, I love you. Like, you know, truly love them. And a couple of my sisters, in fact, all my sisters initially were like, something's wrong with you. Right, something's up. And one of my sisters actually said to me, I told her what had happened with my mom and she says,
Starting point is 00:18:54 what are you on her side now? Right? Right. Man. So I got, because there's this narrative, there's this story in my family about who the good ones are and who the bad ones are and all this stuff. And I just said, no, I've really got that I'm a loving man. Like I want to love people.
Starting point is 00:19:11 I don't, I'm not interested in who's right anymore. I don't care. Wow. And that I love you. And so one of my sisters was like, she would stop picking the phone up to me, right? And so she didn't have a cell phone or anything. It was only her home phone. you know, and I remember like one time I called the woman next door.
Starting point is 00:19:33 I called her neighbor because I had that like an emergency contact. And I told her to go in and tell her there's an emergency because she wouldn't pick the phone up to me. And she had to go in the neighbor said, she's like, yeah. I go, it's me. She's like, you know, what do you want? And so I told her at the time, I said, you know, you have no saying whether I love you or not.
Starting point is 00:19:51 And you're not allowed to fall out with me over this. And she was like dumbfounded, you know? She's like, what do you mean? I can't fall out with you. I'm like, no, it's not allowed. I love you and that's it. And so now, after all that time, telling the people in my family that I love them
Starting point is 00:20:07 and them telling me that is a regular occurrence. And it's spread through the family like wildfire. I literally, you know, I talk about it like I started this love revolution in my family. Yeah. You know?
Starting point is 00:20:19 And it's real for me now. It's like real for me with my wife. It's real for me with my children. It's real for me and my work. Like I authentically. love people. It's not something I have to muster up. It's a self-expression. What shifted for you after that? What did you start to experience in your life in the last, I guess, 15 years since you started that journey? My life works. It works. I'm guided by something. I'm not a skin bag of
Starting point is 00:20:45 feelings. Like there's some purpose to my life. Before where there's no purpose? It's just hard work, you know. Just work, work, work, work, work, work, work. But there's no me in it. There's only this. identity that I've become. And the identity that you become as a human being is a function of all the little subtle decisions you made all the way there. So there's these little movements. You have no sense as a human being of consciously constructing this self. But you did. Right. That's the reality. You made this machine. Yes. Now you don't know you made it, but if you can do that kind of work where you start to see like, oh, I did that. I changed. my thinking there. I did this. I did this. I've become this. When you're in that kind of thought
Starting point is 00:21:33 process, there's nobody to blame. It doesn't matter what happened. Like it matters to the degree that it matters to you. But if you're really interested in freedom, and I mean like legitimate freedom. Inner peace. If you're interested in freedom, you'll look at the incidents. Okay. But what you should really be looking about what it was you decided after it. And that's where it turned. The challenging thing is most of us don't have the tools to understand how to process them. Right. Right.
Starting point is 00:22:05 Until we figure out those tools. And that might be breakdown after breakdown after breakdown. It might be, you know, getting injured or losing relationships or loss of job over and over. Or just feeling like, why is my life feeling stuck and something's off consistently? We're like, okay, I need to find some solutions. Unless we're taught this at an earlier age, it's like, we've got to go through this the hard ways. Yes, for sure. There's only two changes you'll ever make in your life. It's the ones that you've discovered for yourself or the ones that you're forced to make. That's it. There's nothing else. It's either what you've seen for yourself and what you're forced, it's kind of getting shoved in your face, right? Like it's right there, which is a lot of my work. I present people with something that you're either going to try and escape from or you're going to push through. But you should not. that if you're trying to escape from it, it's still there.
Starting point is 00:23:00 You know, like, it's amazing how folks, when you confront something as serious as this, they will fight for their misery. Absolutely. They'll fight for it. They will argue with you for it. Like I'll say something like this, I'll say, it's not what happened to you is what you decided after. And they'll say, no, no, no, it's what happened to me. And I'll say, no, it's what you decided after.
Starting point is 00:23:20 And they'll say, no, no, it's what happened to me. Because if that hadn't happened, then I wouldn't have had that thought after. And I'll say, well, no, those 50,000 thoughts you could have had after. You had that one. And you held on to it. And you held onto it. And you held onto it. And you constructed from there. The benefit of you seeing something like that is, oh, I made the beast.
Starting point is 00:23:42 Now, if I made the beast, then I can, at the very least come in terms with a beast. But I could create something else. Like, I have a profound ability to create who the heck I am. You can't get there until you confront and deal with the impact of who you've been. If you can't confront and deal with the impact of who you've been, then it's just like Shalak on top of nonsense. Yes. Like that. You'll never have the breakthrough that you really have to. How did you deal with the impact at that age?
Starting point is 00:24:18 Well, it was devastating because it's carnage. Yeah. It's carnage. Like, what did I do? Right. Who did I heard? or how do I impact people in a negative way? Right, right.
Starting point is 00:24:28 And then so if you're not fully responsible in that stage of things, you'll take yourself down another rabbit hole. You got to be like, you got to kind of be flat about it. So one of the ways that I did it is this whole notion of who's to blame. So it's a massive part of our makeup as human beings. So if you start with the idea that blame is the anchor to the past. So you'd either blame and. yourself or somebody else. And that thing, this thing about who's to blame will ruin you. Like it will
Starting point is 00:25:06 ruin you. Right. And I just got like, there's nothing to blame. There's no one to blame. Everybody was doing what they were doing at the time given their logic. And I responded in a way that I responded given my logic. I'm not making that okay. Right. I'm not making a case for any that, I'm just getting, and that's what so. And when I could get it that flat, like, that's what's so, I noticed there was no charger on it for me. Yeah. Like nothing.
Starting point is 00:25:35 Even people who have done quote unquote really bad things in my life, like really bad things. That was their logic at the time, as flawed as it was, as messed up as it was. Yeah, not saying it's okay. No, I'm not. I wish you experienced it again. Right. No. And, you know, like I went through like a similar thing in my childhood, you know, where there was
Starting point is 00:25:54 sexual abuse involved. It didn't happen like a ton of times, but it happened. And I look back in it like when I could see that person's humanity, you know, I wasn't making an excuse for them. I'm not making that okay. But suddenly like they were no longer the devil. Yeah. And I think it's figuring it away, like you said, not being emotionally charged to a thought or a memory. Because when we are charged emotionally or triggered to a memory or an experience or event or we see something that reminds us of that, it pulls us back.
Starting point is 00:26:25 into fear as opposed to, you know, leading us into love. Right. Leaning us into a vision greater than the pain or the suffering or the hurt. Right. And we have a decision every moment. Do we want to be triggered by our past experiences or do we want to be healed of the past experiences and focus on a mission greater than the past? Right.
Starting point is 00:26:44 That's great. I mean, if you really sit down and write all the stuff I have and it filled 10 pages, yeah. There's probably only three things in it that are what has. The rest of it is your interpretation of how. Your extrapolation, your interpretation that can adjust that gets added to it. Most of what's got you is all that stuff. The what happened.
Starting point is 00:27:11 They're like that thing, that thing, that thing. The story about what happened is what kind of holds us back. Well, yeah, because, you know, you're inextricably linked to that language. So however, you've captured it for yourself, Europe. And there's lots of different fields that would break this down for you. But the connection between what you say and how you feel is just there. Right. Right.
Starting point is 00:27:31 And so you are tied to all of that language, right? Like, I used to say, there was this kid at school who bullied me, and it was relentless, and it was incessant, and it was every other day, and it was cruel, and it was da-da-da-da-da-da-da, right? And then I went with, well, there was this kid who used to say things. Which is just, because that's actually why. You can even believe what he was saying or you don't have to believe it. All the damage was in how that was kind of captured for me in language. Yes.
Starting point is 00:28:02 How you held on to it. Very good. So then I got to the point where like I really realized how attached that'd become to the narrative, like attached to the narrative because it justified this. That narrative justified and explained this. And so I was no longer able to get free of this. because I was so attached to that now. And so when I broke that down for myself
Starting point is 00:28:28 and was able to get a little bit of space about it and really bring a sense of nothingness to it, like, you know, as cruel as it might sound, so what. Yeah, exactly. You know? Why do you think it's so hard for us to be 100% authentic in relationships? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:28:47 If you would ask somebody about your characteristics, like your personality, for instance, what your strengths might be, That's what you've come across that you feel as if is a good machinery to make it in this life. Right. So this is like, you know, maybe I'm charismatic. Maybe I'm hardworking. Maybe I'm analytical.
Starting point is 00:29:06 Maybe I'm, you know, competitive. Maybe I'm these ways. Somewhere along the lines of your life, you realized this would be a good thing. And this gets me a little further forward. It gets me a result. Yeah. Very good. So then there I am in life being this way.
Starting point is 00:29:22 and the more successful it is, the more I'm going to be this way. So now I'm more and more and more like this, to the point where there's no distinction between this thing and me, like we're the same now. There's no line anywhere. It's just all how you would explain yourself now. What you also realize, though, was that those ways don't work everywhere.
Starting point is 00:29:42 And so what people call imposter syndrome is basically just the realization that your stick don't stick. Like you're like, my stuff don't work here. And so people are like, oh, I feel like I'm an imposter. Well, you are in many ways, but not in the way you might think. You are an imposter. There's a you there doing another you. But behind that you really is you.
Starting point is 00:30:12 So how do we get behind that you? How do we break down the thing that's been working for so long, but maybe won't continue to work in the next revolution? If I'm, for instance, competitive, right? And it's a trite of mine and it's stood me in good stead. And I've created a life from that and maybe some success from that. Or in my case, hardworking, right? But it could be other things.
Starting point is 00:30:34 Could be analytical. And it could be. And this is obviously a kind of, these are ways of being. This is an ontological element, right, or the element of being a human being. So if I'm competitive, I can point to all the places where that's really done me, done me well, right? Sports. Maybe or maybe I'm in sales, right? Or maybe I'm, you know, like I'm building my own business, right?
Starting point is 00:30:57 I mean, these are, this is a strength here, right? Yeah, try taking that home. In relationships, it doesn't work. It's a crap show, right? Like, it's like, this is not going to work for me. You know, it's fascinating. I would say I define my identity, a piece of my identity, most of my life as a competitor.
Starting point is 00:31:14 Yeah. Right? Being in sports and using sports as a tool to make myself feel better, to prove the bullies wrong from childhood, all those things, and say, I'm going to make something on myself. I'm going to win at all costs and sports and things like that. I started early in my 20s to translate that into business, and it worked in a sense. Yes. But it left me feeling more, I don't know, against people than it was with people. All right. Can I ask you a question? Yeah. Right. So there you are. And you were having an experience that that's competitive
Starting point is 00:31:50 actually wasn't working for you. Right. It was getting results in some way, but not results in the other ways. Right. So you're starting to see something there though that's really interesting. I mean, that is here you are being yourself, but hold on a minute. Is this myself? And why am I suffering inside and why am I going through these challenges?
Starting point is 00:32:11 Right. So I want to know is what's the thing that's suffering then? Like what's that? Yeah, I guess it was the identity that. that this isn't working, like who I am or the way I'm being isn't working fully. It's working partially to get certain results, but it's not creating peace inside.
Starting point is 00:32:30 All right, so I would flip it the other way. I would flip it the other way, look at it from the other direction. That is, it's fine for this competitive expression, but not okay for you. Absolutely. And it's the you, that you, that I'm interested in. I'm interested in that, because that thing right there, What matters to that thing?
Starting point is 00:32:52 And so you actually pointed to it. So the thing that mattered to you then was people. Absolutely. But you see how like that competitiveness was now the barrier between you and people. And when I learned the word collaboration and fully like was like, oh, you can thrive and accomplish and improve and make an impact through collaboration more than through competition. Yeah. And you can feel more connected through collaboration and you can experience more love and support as opposed to it's me versus the world type of feeling.
Starting point is 00:33:29 I really just got you there. I just really got you like your trajectory. I really got it. Like that was what a burden you've had to carry. Oh man. It was a wait for so long because it was working in a sense of it was getting results. But then at the inside I was like, why am I still suffering or feeling pain or feeling stress or anxiety or why can't I sleep at night.
Starting point is 00:33:52 Yeah. So it wasn't until I hit about 30 when I learned the idea of collaboration. Right. And shifted from, I need to be number one and the best and grow the fastest and the biggest to, to I want everyone else to shine. Right. With me. Right.
Starting point is 00:34:06 How can we all rise together? And that's when I started this show and I said, I'm going to put the light on everyone else. Right. What's interesting about what you're saying, though, is what's now driving you is who you really are. Yeah. Service.
Starting point is 00:34:18 which always comes down to that. Absolutely. I don't care who you are, what you're doing. Everyone's purpose is to be of use. Can I be of use? Yes. Right? Like, can I, well, I die and say, I made a difference.
Starting point is 00:34:32 Absolutely. Right? And I don't care what you're doing, how you're doing it. If you can't take all the layers away and get to that and you need to get to it because it shapes everything you're doing. Yeah. And if, and, you know, to use a well-used term, that I ask this kind of like the, ego.
Starting point is 00:34:49 Ego wants what it wants and what it needs and what the, and you might get some success with that, but you will never be happy with that. You'll never be settled with that. And it's your job as a human being to actually disappear. And I really mean it like that, like to disappear your addiction to that. And it get grounded in you. Where's your true north? Like, where are you?
Starting point is 00:35:14 What's your expression? If you take away all the fear, if you take away all the. armor that you've built and realize that what needs to get out is way more powerful than anything you've put up to protect yourself. Right. What needs to get out, meaning what? You. Right.
Starting point is 00:35:32 The you that you started with. See, look, when you started this life, like all human beings like me, like everybody watching or listening to this right now, if you go around a two-year-old, they're a three-year-old, they're a five-year-old. They're tremendously robust. Yes. like robust, like they get upset by things, but then they're like, bro, okay, next thing, right? Like, when you get to 30, you're like wounded, you're like, oh, for the love of God, you know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:35:58 But when you're little like that, like if you've ever been around kids, are like two, ontologically, that is, their self-expression, their ways of being are vast. Yes. And they can be lots of different ways, like, and it's crazy. You watch them, like, flip from one, and you're like, oh, my God, that's manic, you know? But you used to be that way. Used to be that like fully there. Over time, one decision after another,
Starting point is 00:36:25 it's getting narrower and narrower and narrower such that by the time you reach your late teens, you're pretty much just heading there now. And a lot of what I've done with people is to get them back to that spot of like unabashed aliveness. You know, like I'm just here to be alive. Which is what the philosopher Alan Watts said, you know, the meaning of life is to be alive.
Starting point is 00:36:51 There's nothing else. It's just to go and run with this meatbag, you know, and make it do some wild things. And then it's over. You know, and people have got their views about the rest of that stuff. But really, for me, that's it. It's like to realize first the constraint, what am I constrained by? What am I locked in by? And it's not people.
Starting point is 00:37:12 It's not circumstances. It's not that. It's you. What about you? And then beyond that is a life of wonder. And it's not like it's all like, oh, you know, this is amazing and I'm amazing and you're amazing. No, there's still trials and tribulations and all that other stuff and problems. And yeah, that's all part of the deal.
Starting point is 00:37:31 But what's different is who's now doing it? Right. Who's doing it? Right. And how are you showing up? Right. Very good. How am I showing up?
Starting point is 00:37:38 Which part of you is showing up? Right. Is it the junk or something else? Yeah, exactly. Right. You've been in this marriage and relationship for 26 years, right? How long were you dating before? No, I literally asked my wife to marry me after just a matter of weeks.
Starting point is 00:37:54 Wow. Yeah. It was radical. Year later, we waited a year. I'm curious then. You've been in the relationship for a long time, obviously, 27 years total now. I'm assuming you've met a lot of people who have been married and who've been divorced. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:38:08 And I'm also assuming you probably have some friends who've been married for 20, 30, 40 years that you're in contact with. What do you see is the difference maker for healthy, long-lasting love for decades versus those that stay married long time but aren't happy and those that eventually get divorced? I think the statistics are something like 50%, right? So 50% of all marriages end in divorce. The illusion is that the 50% that are left are happy. No, they're not. No, they're not. Maybe 15% or something. Maybe, right? And we don't really know. I mean, You went and polled everybody, you might be even shocked. It's 5% or you know.
Starting point is 00:38:48 Maybe, right. Gosh, why are they so challenging to be healthy and happy a long term for so many people? Well, I think part of the deal is the bar's very low. So the bar's something like we get along. Right. Like, that's it. I've got t-shirts I get along with.
Starting point is 00:39:01 Right. You know? Yeah, yeah. So then what's it really all about? If that's the struggle, if the struggle is to get along, like I said, that's a very low bar. Get along with lots of,
Starting point is 00:39:13 people. Right, right. I mean, I get along with a person who, you know, makes my coffee at Starbucks, right? You know, I mean, but really what I've found to be the case. And it's not, I'm not looking at, like, particular people for examples, right? But I'm going to look at, like, what keeps a human being involved in anything, right? So, like, why does somebody, like, so I love to play guitar. Why? Right? Why? Because I engage with that thing. I'm curious about that thing. I want to get better at that thing. I like how it feels when I accomplish. something in that thing. If you take that in any aspect of your life, the same thing holds true. So my relationship with my wife is a function of who I am in it. And I need to keep bringing that to it. There's no time when this is a done deal. You know, I have to keep showing up here, not for like for longevity, which is, I think, where a lot of people get messed up. People look at the relationship like, well, I can't do this for the rest of your life, the rest of my life. And I'm like, well, you don't have to. Just do it today. Right. Like, right? It's like being on a diet. I don't need to go on a diet for three months. I just need to be on it right now. Yeah. And it is moment to moment, a moment, a moment, because that's really all you have. But so what I do notice is that the areas of life where you are flourishing most, there is some profound relationship you have between what you say and what you do. There's a profundity at play. So if you look at any area you're successful, you are literally
Starting point is 00:40:43 doing what you said you would do, even when what, I don't feel like it. Yeah. Right. Marriage is the same. Marriage is the same. Marriage, and I talk about this in the book, I say, especially in the Western world, but you look at, and I'm using marriage as kind of a model, but I apply to all relationships. Yes.
Starting point is 00:41:03 But in a marriage, there's this ceremony. It's this coming together. Or you make an agreement, a commitment. Very good. And you use words. And it's a vow. Yes. Right.
Starting point is 00:41:11 And I talk about the bankruptcy. of the vow in a marriage because nobody vows anything anymore. Or they vow it, but they don't live up to the... Well, because they don't have a relationship to a vow. So we're not going around a life going, I'll vow to meet you at the o'clock. Right, right. Nobody's saying that.
Starting point is 00:41:27 But 200 years ago, when you vowed something, the American Declaration of Independence is just people vowing. They brought something in the existence on the strength of what they said. Yes. There was no fighting. Well, there was some fighting. But they created a nation.
Starting point is 00:41:43 from words. Right. I mean, that's what that is. That's like, well, it was a declaration, right? We're declaring we're independent. What do you mean you're independent? We just declared it, so we are. And we vow our lives and our sacred honor.
Starting point is 00:41:57 And most of those people literally gave the life for that. They literally gave the life to that promise. I bet they were scared. Absolutely. I bet they were intimidated. But their word was greater than that experience of themselves. That's the same in any area of your life.
Starting point is 00:42:15 You have to start realizing that what you say is a big deal and what you say to yourself is a big deal. A lifetime of constantly bending, shaping, and breaking your word to yourself will leave you with a diminished relationship to you. You'll never do great things because somewhere in there you think you're full of it. Because you've broken your word to yourself so many times.
Starting point is 00:42:39 You've got of integrity with yourself. Very good. There's no power to those words. What happens when we are out of integrity so consistently with ourselves or even one time with our word? What happens to ourselves? Well, I mean, you got to start relating to what you say like it's important. Just like it's important. Start there.
Starting point is 00:42:58 I said I was going to, and this is important, not because the thing's important, but what I said to myself and my relationship to that thing is what's important. Yeah. So any area in life, like I said earlier, where you're powerful or successful, you'll see you have a very strong relationship to what you said. Very strong one. Sometimes... You're committed to that thing. There's just no question for you. Like, it's on like Donkey Kong, you know, you're just doing it. Why is it easier in some areas of life than it is in others to be consistent with what you say and what you want to do? Right. And that's eventually, it's great that you kind of put it out way because that's the path you'll follow. But the real strength of you, is when you can say something. Like, for instance, when I was in my mid-40s, you know, I said I'm going to produce authentic wealth. What's the difference between authentic and inauthentic? Yeah, I'm doing it for that, not for anything about me. Which was wild for me because everything up to that point about money
Starting point is 00:44:00 was all about fixing something about me or my wife. And I was just doing it to see if I could do it, which I'd never done before. And I'd never fully given it that attention. Like just for that. And so I put a number on it, which was a crazy number for that time in my life. Like crazy number. Like- For your 40s of what?
Starting point is 00:44:20 How much you want to make? I was 45, yeah. And I said, I'm going to do it. I'm going to use my 50s for that. And I'm going to produce it, right? I produced it by the time I was 52. And I only really started when I was 48. So I did it really fast.
Starting point is 00:44:36 The amount of money that you wanted to make. The amount of money that I said, but it was wild because I had no attachment to it. What do you mean? Like there was no emotion in it for me. There was no like desperation, no like I gotta do it. No burning. It was just like I said I was gonna do it and I'm doing it. So I ended up with this really kind of flat relationship between my words and my actions.
Starting point is 00:44:55 Like it was flat. There were days when I felt like doing it and there were days when I didn't feel like doing it. But the interesting thing for me was when I declared it when I said I was going to do it, like the Declaration of Independence, I had no idea how I was going to do something like that. No, you just think. Like, I don't know how you even, I'm not a money guy, you know, I'm not. But now it's game on because I created the top of the mountain in my speaking. So I spoke the top of the mountain in the existence.
Starting point is 00:45:24 And then you figured out how along the way. But that's now the game. People say, well, you know, how do you even do such a thing? Well, that's the first question. How do you even do such a thing, you know? And you might have to engage with that question for two years or three years or four years. you've got to be actively resolving some of that stuff for yourself. Well, it's the same in love. Like, I'm committed to the most loving, passionate and adventurous relationship that's possible.
Starting point is 00:45:52 That's the top of the mountain. The top of the mountain speaks to me every day. It's, it's, I can tell whether I'm walking that path or not. That influences this. It's not even necessarily about that. It's more about what that does with this. Well, how does that? shape me today? How does that? Am I lining up with what I said or not? And if I'm not, I might have a lot of reasons, excuses and justifications for that. But at the same time, am I going to treat that like it matters to me? Or am I going to just be like, well, you know, so far, so good, or it's been a tough week or, you know, it's a lot in my mind. Or, you know, or you're being a jerk. Why am I loving with you? Because I said I would. And that's what matters to me.
Starting point is 00:46:39 That's what matters. That I said, I would matter to me. Someone once told me that the key to his success in relationships was 80% of it was who you choose. Yeah. 80% of the relationship, success is, you know, how you match well with the person you're choosing. Yeah. You only spent, I guess, a year with the person that you chose. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:47:04 Did you know that when you were choosing this person? Do you were like, okay, I feel like we're going to be in a great alignment with our values and our vision and our life. style or was it more of just a feeling that you felt connected to this person and you decided? I did what everybody does, right? What everybody does is they get in a relationship because he feels as if this person resolves something about themselves. That's what I did. And so there was something about this woman that I thought, wow, like being with her, everything seems right. Like, I feel good about me. Right. Right. Like, there's something getting fixed here. So no, I'm not that pragmatic.
Starting point is 00:47:42 And I think most people aren't that pragmatic. And I think there's an illusion out there that somehow you'll find the one. And really, I feel as if the job is to explore what's possible between you and this person, whoever that person is, and their potential and your potential. And so it was less about finding something that matched up with me, which I don't know if that would work for me. It might work for some people, but I don't know if that would work for me. What was really captivating for me at the time was being with her had me feel a lot better about me. And I think, I really fundamentally believe that that's what most people go into relationships for.
Starting point is 00:48:22 Is that the right thing to look at or is it? No, that's an absolute. It's a recipe. Because then you're always relying on that person to make you happier. Well, because whatever that thing is that they satisfy for you was something you haven't sorted out for yourself yet. Right. So eventually you're going to have to do that. otherwise you're always needing that from someone else.
Starting point is 00:48:40 Right. So you go in there and they're the solution and you end it with the notion that they were the problem. Ah, wow. And what's consistent in all of that is you. Right. I mean, I don't know if anybody's ever noticed us, but in every crappy relationship you've ever had, it's got one common denominy.
Starting point is 00:48:59 That's you. Right. It's always you. It's a big awakening I had after my previous relationship ended. I was like, man, it's been. 10, 15 years of relationships that started and then that crumbled in somewhere that fell apart. And the core of all those things was me. Right.
Starting point is 00:49:17 Was my choices? Was my getting into, attracting those relationships? Was this commitment to those relationships? Was the unwinding those relationships? And so why was I choosing these types of relationships? What was unresolved within me that I get to take a look at now? or I'm going to keep repeating this pattern until I address the thing inside of me. Right. So what's great about your kind of pathway, if you like, you can't, first of all,
Starting point is 00:49:47 you've got to be able to look at that distinct from blame, right? And I know a lot of people just heard what you said and thought, well, but what if it is them, right? I know a lot of people, people sitting there right now going, dang it, I did say that to myself. And I say, well, if you take away, like, who's the blind? Yes. And so sometimes people say, say stuff like, why do I keep attracting these kinds of people? And I say, well, what if it's not attraction? What if you are literally looking for them? What if it's you're seeking something about that person that initially solves what you're dealing with, right? But will allow it to keep perpetuating. Like it keeps showing up and showing up. I call that an identity relationship.
Starting point is 00:50:32 There's something about you. And it's the same for the thing. the other person that when you get past all the stuff, whatever's incomplete, will keep getting activated there or keep showing up. So when you start to see it like, oh, these are just two human beings doing what human beings do, then it's not personal, which is radical when you get it like that. Like it's not personal. It's not personally them, personally, me. Like, these are just two beings trying to work this out. and work what out, well essentially work themselves out. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:51:09 So that's why I insist with people, the greatest work you'll ever do you'll ever do is to get complete with your first 20 years of life. So true. First 20 years. Because everything after that is a reflection of it. I spent 26 years in Glasgow, 26 years. I've been longer here. Right.
Starting point is 00:51:32 And I still identify with that like it's me. But I've been longer here. And it's some of the colloquialisms and the traditions. Like I identify with that because it became so imprinted. In my second book I talked about, you're the little magic sponge. And you're not soaking up all of life. You're soaking up the bits. And then when you hit a bit 20, that little sponge just hardens.
Starting point is 00:52:00 And whatever's in there, that's it. Yeah. It's in there. And that's what you use. Right. That logic. And until you awaken to that and realize that all of that that's there is really only a potential year.
Starting point is 00:52:19 There's so much more. If you think about it like quantum physics, right? Like multiple universes, endless universes all happening at the same time, multiple potentials. Well, that's every second of your life. every second of your life, there's a myriad of potential use that could be talking right now. And what you typically do is the you that you did the second before, and the second before and the second, and so it perpetuates until you get aware, until you start to be like, oh, I'm not stuck with this.
Starting point is 00:52:53 I could literally be somebody else. When? Right now. Right now, I could be somebody else. Right now I could say something else. How many things did you realize in your first 20 years of life that you needed to deal with or face or integrate a healing journey? I think all of it.
Starting point is 00:53:10 I really think all of it. I think I had to come in terms with, like when I was really young, I felt as if I was too small. Built in underneath with that was I'm not strong. Right. I'm weak. I'm not enough. Very good.
Starting point is 00:53:23 Yeah. So there's all of that. And then I'm not lovable. And then there's a whole. And then for me it was I'm not smart enough. That was one too. never be smart enough. See, that's the thing with these things. At that part of your life, it's not that I'm not lovable or I'm not smart enough, but I'm not strong enough. It's that
Starting point is 00:53:39 I'll never be that way. I'll never be that way. It seems daunting like you'll... Right, right. So all of your persona and your personality is designed for you to overcome that. But that can't go away. Because if that goes away, if you've based your whole personality on that... Yeah, your identity is based on that. Now you're just facing a crisis because now it's like everything that I base myself on. What if it's not true? Then who am I? And people go nuts with that stuff. And I say, well, take a breath and think of it like who you are is a moment of time. And in any moment of time, there's the possibility of you expressing something new that you've never expressed before. Right.
Starting point is 00:54:27 Something that's not based on anything other than the moment you're in. It's not based on a previous logic. It's not based. It's like literally an opportunity for you to show up as something new of your own creation. Everybody has a possibility. Everybody has the opportunity for that. And it is a way of living life.
Starting point is 00:54:48 And it's not like, oh, this guy's found a secret to everything. No, I'm a human being too. I'm wired a certain way. It's there now. The question is how aware of that am I and how responsible can I be for that playing in my life? Am I going to own that or is that going to own me? Yeah. And that's that's the space we all want to be on.
Starting point is 00:55:13 It's a space called choice. Yeah. And it's a real choice. What do you wish you would have done differently in the first few years of your relationship with your wife? Would you have had different conversations? Would you have created different agreements? to cause less kind of friction or pain or stress in the first decade, I guess,
Starting point is 00:55:31 until you started to unwind your identity and tap more into this loving being as opposed to this hardworking being that cared for her. Well, in the first few years of my life, it was very passionate. So I was crazy about this girl, you know, like it was very passionate. And this was the time of my life when I was a musician. So, you know, I'm playing in a band. And there's this beautiful woman who loves me. You know, like life is.
Starting point is 00:55:56 Life is good, man. You know, we've got three sons now, but the first eight years of our marriage was just my wife and I just having a brilliant time together. This is great. And we were like the antithesis to like married couples. You know, we were like happening. You know, this is all great.
Starting point is 00:56:12 But now when I look back on that, there really was no look down the road. There was no like, what's this about? You know, it's just, it was all very much riding that particular roller coaster. Living in the moment of fun and- Right, but the problem was nothing is getting created. There was no, this is what we are up to.
Starting point is 00:56:33 There's no vision coming to life. Right, but that was in a very personal level. Like, there was no, there was no thought in my head like, so where does this go? You know, it was just like, well, let's see. As there shouldn't be, by the way, when you're in your 20s and 30s, there's no like, what would it be like
Starting point is 00:56:49 when I'm 40s or my 50s or my 60s with this woman. You know, it was all just about making my way through where I was. The brick wall that I had, like I said a little earlier, was med till 830s and I'm like, I don't work anymore. Like this. How did you know you weren't working? Was it a feeling? Was it a stress? Was it a lack of mission or purpose? Was it a lack of love for yourself? How did you know, like, I'm not working? Yeah. There was this kind of very fundamental experience of dissatisfaction. Like, no matter what I did. It doesn't matter what I do. In the results, in the success. It was wasn't, you weren't satisfied.
Starting point is 00:57:26 It's funny because, and there was kind of earlier parts of my wife, and I assert this is true for all human beings, you think the next thing is going to solve it. And then you get there and the problem's still there. And you might not fully afresh that at that problem yet, but you know it's there. Like if you look back in the accomplishments of your life, like when you hit him going for it, you're like, what I do it? And then you hit it and you're like, mm-hmm, now what, yeah. Right, now what, right?
Starting point is 00:57:57 No one. And then if the next thing, you do six of them. Like, huh? I'm not feeling what I was supposed to be feeling. Right. How come I'm not feeling it? Because it never resolves whatever the thing was. And so if there was anything I wish I'd really identified,
Starting point is 00:58:14 and I don't mean this from a space of regret, I really don't. But would it have been kind of neat to identify the hole that I was trying to fill? You know, it would have been neat to see what I'm doing? I'm just happy that I did that. identify it. People go through their whole life and never, there's no introspection. Right. There's no like an introspection is a funny thing because you can do too much of that too, right?
Starting point is 00:58:37 You can go too deep and your belly button, right? You need to just kind of relax sometimes to live life. Right. You got to be like, well, it's kind of like, the way I've always related to it since I started to work on myself is, okay, that's a good little insight. How am I going to use this? Yeah. So I'm always using it for some thing in my life, for some good in my life. are the people that I'm at the impact. Because you can start to kind of get off on that.
Starting point is 00:59:02 Like, oh, that's a great discovery. Oh, yeah, that makes a lot of sense. But it doesn't actually show up in the reality of your life. You got to make it show up. Yeah, I guess that's the only real thing. Like, what was the whole I was trying to fill? Because if you could have done that earlier, then what would you have done in those first 10 years?
Starting point is 00:59:17 There's that kind of force for life that you have when you're 20, you know? There's a, which gets you by. Yes. I guess you overcome a lot of hills, you know, a lot of mountains. There's just a kind of forward trajectory that maybe had I used it for something else. You know, maybe it would have been. But then when I look back, I think the context that I choose for that time now when I look back on it is like I really had to go through the darkness to realize that that wasn't the light. Right.
Starting point is 00:59:47 Because when you're in that, you think this is like, I'm going somewhere. Yeah. You know, and then there's a, like, I'm going nowhere. I'm going nowhere. And so the context that I choose for that now is it was a brilliant learning process for me, real life learning process. I told you before that I always wanted to in relationships, start a therapeutic coaching, counseling experience in the beginning of a relationship,
Starting point is 01:00:18 as opposed to two, three, five years in when there's some challenges, and let's try to solve something or resolve it and get back to a place of love and peace. And so I'm creating that in my current. relationship. It's a beautiful thing because there's not like an issue or a problem. Right. And I was asking our coach and I was like, how many people come to you when there's no issue? She was like, it almost never happens. Right. It's always when there's like a big breakdown or something. Yeah. And so it's kind of build this foundation from the beginning. It's trying to learn from my mistakes of the past 15 years and do it in a different way. Yeah. Approaching a different way. How do you wish you would
Starting point is 01:00:50 have approached it differently or how did you do it that was successful for you that you would recommend as someone going into their their 40s or even in their 20s going into the 30s, but a new decade, how would you approach it? You've got to make it about something. Like a mission. It's got to be about something. If it's not about something, you're wasting your time. It's got to be about something, right?
Starting point is 01:01:11 And I think that's a great way to split it up in the decades like that. And you can start your decade at 33. Right, right, right. But if you make it about something, like this is the decade of, right, personal discovery. This is a decade decade of making a difference. This is a decade. Like, for me, it was authentic wealth, right, for that decade. In your 40s?
Starting point is 01:01:29 My 40s was all about making a difference. This is about my wife being about somebody other than me. In your 40s. In my 40s. And I devoted myself to that. And I still do, right? What was the 50s now? So the 50s was supposed to be about this authentic wealth, which I had screwed through
Starting point is 01:01:49 that in two years, you know what I mean? So in your 40s, did you build authentic wealth then? No, no. I was already in the middle. I'd already said. So it was like the kind of middle of my 40s, tailing it out, setting half. And I'm like, my 50s has got to be about authentic wealth.
Starting point is 01:02:04 Because I'd done so much work on myself, I saw so much of what this identity wanted to do that was inauthentic. It was to fix the identity. It wasn't about me. It was about it. And so then, to say to myself, I'm going to make my 50s about this.
Starting point is 01:02:23 And it was radical because when I took away all their needs and the wants and the attachments and the emotion, and it was such. it was such a clear pathway. So what was the shift? I guess you started this at the end of your 40s you said. What was the shift from doing something beyond yourself in your 40s of being in service to saying, okay, now how can I do this and generate an abundance of wealth? Right. What shifted in you? And then when did it start flowing? Yeah. With this financial, was it your ways of being was different? Was your thoughts were different about money? Was it just your efforts? Your energy was
Starting point is 01:02:55 different. Well, remember, you can't create a breakthrough in something until you come in terms with what's already there. Right? So you have to see what's already there for me. And so everybody has a relationship to something like money. There's already something there. The question is what is it? And were you good at making money before? Was it like? No, it was terrible at it. Yeah. And it never even, because it was never a thing for me like, it was never an authentic thing for me. It was all they fill a hole. To like buy something. going to feel better about yourself. Right. And, you know, I feel better.
Starting point is 01:03:27 That money's in the bank. And then I started to think, well, what if it's just a transaction? What if I took me out of it and it's just a thing? You know, it's just like a way to make something multiply. Like, how do I do that? And so what I realized with at the time, well, two things. One was I lived with a lot of mystery about money and just avoided it. Like, you know, that sounds like a lot of work.
Starting point is 01:03:51 You pay attention to it. Right. Like, I don't need to know that, right? and looking for lots of short circuits and how to do things. And then the other thing that was pretty massive for me was I realized that, and this is true in all areas of somebody's life, but if you start with the financial aspect, you're always operating in some paradigm.
Starting point is 01:04:08 You're always in some network of thinking. And so identifying what my network of thinking was, like, what was it? And so I realized that there was, believe it or not, a number, that I thought that if I did that number, that was, I've kind of done it, right? You feel good about yourself. Right, but it wasn't even like, in any sense of the word, a massive number, but I thought like, that's the number.
Starting point is 01:04:33 When you kind of peel back some of that, you'll realize that the number is what you think you can do based on other things. Based on your life and experience and your skills. And other views that you have yourself. So I had this magic number. And again, it wasn't like a crazy number. But it was big for you.
Starting point is 01:04:50 It was like, okay, this is something I've never done. before and make me feel good about myself. I did it. What I found myself doing is I'm sitting in front of a laptop and I've got the Excel spreadsheet up and I'm looking at the number and I'm like, where did that come from? How did I end up with that?
Starting point is 01:05:05 You know? And I was about to give the next year of my life to it. To that number. To that number. And every thought and every strategy and everything was about that number. And then I thought, well, what if I doubled it? And I was like, you know, I can't even be it.
Starting point is 01:05:20 You know, I can't even be it. with that, you know, like it was so crazy. And I thought, but if I doubled that number and gave my word to it, that number would demand something of me. Like it's now telling me that what I'm doing ain't it. Man, that sent me off on a pathway, like a vein of thinking, what I started to realize, like everything is happening in this kind of network of conversation that I'm in with myself. And when you change the outcome, it completely short-circuits the thinking. That thinking can't produce double. It can't. It won't do it. You have to change the way you think. I have to change the way I think, and I have to, I have to really challenge what I think is possible. Like, really challenge it. And I noticed, like,
Starting point is 01:06:06 there's a massive emotional attachment to that. Like, oh my gosh, so significant. Like, it can't be done. Guys like me can't do that. I don't have the education. I don't do that. So I started to think from the future. I put myself there. In the future. And that's what a visionary does. A visionary doesn't see the future. A visionary is coming from it. They're coming from the future.
Starting point is 01:06:30 And they're standing here and looking at what they're doing right now and asking themselves, is what I'm doing right now aligning with that? And if it's not, I need to stop. Stop. Even though they're like, well, no, no, this could maybe turn it. If it's not aligning with that, stop right in this moment. And so at the beginning, it was a series of that of stopping what I'm doing. And, you know, you've got an attachment to what you're doing because it'll produce that other number, which ain't bad, you know? Right, right.
Starting point is 01:07:03 But when I doubled it, the first time I ever doubled it, because I did the first year or two, I doubled and doubled. And when you start, you hit that cycle, you know, you're realizing, like, it's all, the only thing is limiting you is what you're thinking. Right. Right. Because. So what allowed you to double it then? What was the shift internally or the execution that was different? It all begins with the right kind of thinking. No thoughts. It's the right kind of thinking. What's the right kind of thinking? Right. You got to be able to hang with an idea without
Starting point is 01:07:32 getting attached to it. Right? And that includes the ridiculous. The ridiculous, yeah. You got to be able to hang with the ridiculous. Why? Because what you've already determined is ridiculous is based on some other logic that got you where you are. So you got to you got to re-investigestion. the ridiculous. You gotta kind of go in and be like, well, hold on, hold on. And you got to allow yourself to kind of be with it. So one of the things that I think I've gotten pretty good at is hanging with something without letting go of the need to answer it. You mean to think of an idea that's ridiculous and not needing the answer on how to make the ridiculous come true. Right. And so what happens is when I do that, if I do that for a week or maybe two weeks, lots of stuff will come up in my
Starting point is 01:08:18 thinking, I'll wake up with ideas. Like, oh my gosh, I never thought about that before. Oh, what about, I never thought about that. And then, so the more that I got into it, the more that I, the more I was kind of getting outside of my own logic, my own thinking, which really allowed me to step into things that my identity would not be comfortable with, like not comfortable with at all. One of them was, for me, was doing big speaking engagements, right? So I'll, you know, I'll get two, three, five hundred people, that's fine.
Starting point is 01:08:52 25,000 people, maybe not so much. So I started to kind of put myself out there. And I started to, you know, I started to talk to the right people, right, which was a big shot. I didn't know anybody. You know, I'm like a, especially at that time, one-man operation. I don't know anybody. I'm just making a difference.
Starting point is 01:09:12 How do you? And so I had to knock down some, it wasn't knocked down their walls. It was knocked down my walls about them. And that process I started to really get connected to my doing this has got nothing to do with them. I'm going to make such a compelling case that they have no say. They have no saying this. I'm going to present what I need to present here in such a way that they're like, okay, just give the guy the microphone and let them.
Starting point is 01:09:42 go. Yeah. That is actually what I did. I ended up doing, like, you know, massive speaking engagements, you know, people like Arnold Schwarzenegger and Tony Robbins and blah, blah, blah, you know, and I'm out there like 25,000 people, like it's nothing, all inside of being of service to them. But in the background includes my commitment to creating this environment of authentic wealth for myself. And never the twine shall meet. It was never like that this thing here is getting switched to, never. It was always grounded. than making the difference that I'm out to make. Yeah, authentic service for authentic wealth.
Starting point is 01:10:18 Right, very good. Anywhere that I sense or experience that this is more about the money than the difference that it can make, I'm not doing it. Wow. I will not do it. And I've had, my gosh, so many opportunities,
Starting point is 01:10:30 so many people present me with, oh, if you would only do this, and I won't, because when you mess with the integrity of what you're about, there's no substance to it. There's no substance. So all of it is guided by, yeah, but does this make a difference? And that includes the people that work with me, like the agents that I have, the people that are involved in my, you know, my little team.
Starting point is 01:10:55 If you're not here to make a difference, we're not doing it. And I won't do it. And I refuse to do it because you're selling out on what it is that makes this thing real. Yeah. And it's got to be real, not for me. It's got to be real for people. Right. You know, because ultimately, like we talked about a little earlier, it's got to be it,
Starting point is 01:11:16 but making some kind of different. Absolutely. And if it can't, then I'm not doing it. And how did your relationship evolve as you started to bring more money to the relationship and the family? Because a lot of the people struggle in marriages or relationships with money conversations. Did you see an improvement of the quality of relationship? Did you see challenges and talking about money?
Starting point is 01:11:40 How did you guys address money when it's such a big factor for breakup, divorce, stress in relationships? Somebody once gave me this little nugget, and I believe it to be true, when somebody said, what's the difference between wealthy and not wealthy? And somebody said to me, it's just better hotels. Right, yeah. Niceer flights. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 01:12:03 And that's basically it. For me, like I never made it mean anything. You know, my three boys, like, they're very grounded. You know, they're not in any way enamored by money or anything like that. Like my 10-year-old thinks if he could spend 10 bucks on his next game of FIFA, like that's a big result. You know, it's like, yay. You know, I just bought that FIFA pack for 10 bucks.
Starting point is 01:12:29 It's a good day. And I don't shower them with stuff, you know. We don't do that. It just seems kind of ridiculous. us. As a family, we're very much about our experience of being alive. And whatever money we might have or not have is always about that. Like, it's always a bit enhancing that and embracing that and exploring that as a family. I wouldn't say I'm a particularly flashy guy. You know, I don't really do anything like that. It's not really my thing. Like, for instance, I give a little
Starting point is 01:13:02 example. So when I started to do the speaking engagements with those big groups of people, I rarely stay up on the platform, right? I go down and I go to the back and I talk back there. And I'll go hang out with those folks. Why? Because I've been in those seats. I know what it's like to be back there and unseen. And I want you to be seen.
Starting point is 01:13:31 Wow. Like that matters to me. That matter. The people who bought the $1,200 bucks, to sit at the front, you're good. Right, right. You can turn around and watch me at the back a while. And I think it's that authenticity, that grounding that has never really allowed anything
Starting point is 01:13:50 like money to kind of get in the way. I'm still, I still really relate to it. And even you can look at any dedication that's in my books. I always dedicate them to people who are maybe at the bottom of the ladder right now. Like they don't feel as if it's working for them. I think my first book it was like single moms and unemployed. I dedicated this book to the single moms and the unemployed fathers. You know, like the people who are having to gut it at.
Starting point is 01:14:18 Yeah. And I still had that, because that's most people. Right. Most people are wrestling with something. They're not all sitting at the top of the tree and joining bananas. So I just have never been somebody who, like I'm where I'm at and it's great. I want to relate to people who are in the race. Absolutely.
Starting point is 01:14:37 Yeah. What do you think is the overall key from everything you learn to having a fulfilling relationship then? It's got to be grounded in what matters. I realized that two things that mattered to me in life were love and adventure. I realized that that was now my job in my relationship to bring it, not to seek it. And to bring it because it's who I am. When you take away the notion that you're seeking it, it's a whole lot easier to actually
Starting point is 01:14:59 be in relationship. Because a lot of people say I'm looking for love, if they're single. I'm looking for love. I'm looking for adventure. but if you be love, if you're being love and you're being adventurous, you will be it. You won't need to find it. You're are it. Right.
Starting point is 01:15:14 And you'll attract other people who are it as well. The interesting thing about my wife and I, which was really has been brilliant since I took on this kind of perspective is she's not always looking for what I'm expressing what I'm expressing what I'm expressing. She's expressing her expression of what it is to be in relationship, which is sometimes really different, you know, like. She's got a different expression of love than I do. But I'm not sitting there like, oh, you know, feed me that. I'm more like, this is an opportunity. This is an opening in my life. This is an opening in time for me to get this out.
Starting point is 01:15:49 Yeah. You know, and she's giving it her version, you know. And it really isn't 50-50. It's not like that because I don't, like I told her, you know, I don't need you to be anyone but yourself. You know, just be yourself. What happened when you shifted that? It was just like this massive release of pressure.
Starting point is 01:16:08 You know, it was like, oh, we're okay. You know, we're okay. Like, you can just be you. You don't need to control something. You don't need to fix something. You don't need to change something. Nothing about this woman. Does that mean like it's all, like if I look at my wiring and the way that I'm wired?
Starting point is 01:16:25 No, I got hooked and I get triggered and I get like. One of the things that we did, by the way, that I think is important is we made it okay to argue. It's okay. Even if it's a stand-up argument, fight, and she called me some and are I called her something? It's okay, right? This isn't all adding up to the exit. It's not. It's like a moment in time.
Starting point is 01:16:50 It's like something happened. Okay. Being forgiving is a massive part of my wife and a massive part of my relationship. I don't, I'm not going to string you up for something you did or said. like I'm not. You're a human being too. In other words, there's a lot of space that I'm continually making. I make a lot of space for my wife. I make a lot of space for my children. So whatever way they are, it's got a lot of room. I'm not like pressing on it and compressing it and you should be in control. Now, let me just back off and let that be. It'll dissipate. It's okay. And so there's a lot
Starting point is 01:17:28 of that in our relationship. But you probably have to be okay with who you are and comfortable with your own skin in order to create the space of whatever emotions or environment happens, right? You've got to be dealing with that healing journey continuously so that you're not reactive to it. That's a critical part of it. Like, you have to give yourself the room to be a human being. Stop holding yourself to some ideal. You're not always going to be perfect.
Starting point is 01:17:53 There's going to be times in your life when you look at it like, oh, did I even, you know, I was a real jerk there like, oh, my gosh, like, I wish I could. take that back. And I'll initially go there and then I'll be like, hold on a minute. I'm a human being too. And I think that's one of the things that's drawing a lot of people in my work. I'm not professing to have every answer. And I'm not floating around here like, you know, Gandhi or something. You know, I'm not like, this isn't, I'm not a perfect kind of human being on one hand. Right. Or maybe I am.
Starting point is 01:18:33 Yeah, exactly. Maybe this is what it is, you know, to be a human being. It's all of it. It's all the things. It's, I really believe you're just a vassal for experiences. Absolutely. Some of them are great. And some of them are kind of crappy.
Starting point is 01:18:48 And it's okay. You know, it's the more you try and fix it or shape it or move it, you're kind of nailing it done rather than land. It just pass it out. This is powerful, man. I've got a couple final questions for you, but I really love this conversation in your book. Love on getting your relationship together is out. People can buy it on Amazon or wherever books are sold.
Starting point is 01:19:10 We'll have it all linked up as well in the description and the show notes. But where are you on social media the most? Or how can we connect with you beyond the book? And I love the short but packed books because I can read them. So I appreciate this. No, that's good. I love that you said that too because I really feel as if, to value in my books is in the thinking you're going to have to do. You know, it's not necessarily
Starting point is 01:19:35 like you're going to take something out of there linearly. Yes. But yeah, I'm on, I'm everywhere, but, you know, Instagram's like a favorite of mine. I like, you know, obviously I spend a lot of time on there. I love to give people stuff that they can think about and chew on, you know. But I'm also on Facebook. I'm on Twitter and obviously my website, garyjohnbishop.com. There you go. And you've got all the information of your books there and everything you're up to at garyjohnbishop.com. Yeah. Love this man. I got. I got a question for you. This is called the Three Truths question,
Starting point is 01:20:02 I ask everyone at the end. So imagine hypothetical scenario, it's your last day on Earth many years away. You live as long as you wanna live. Okay. You are the vessel that experiences life to the fullest and you accomplish what you wanna accomplish. But for whatever reason, you gotta take all of your work
Starting point is 01:20:18 with you on the last day. The books, the content, this interview, for whatever reason, gotta go somewhere else. So it's not left in the world. Okay. But you get to leave behind three lessons with the world. Three things that you know to be true from your life experiences. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:20:33 And this is all we'd have to remember you by. What would you say are those three truths? The only truth is the one you've agreed with. The second one would be you are an unlimited potential, whether you believe that or not. Mm-hmm. And be kind. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:20:50 I want to acknowledge you, Gary, for a moment, because you've had an amazing journey, and you've dedicated this, I guess, second phase of your life to service. to service right to using your experiences your thinking your challenges the pain and creating work that inspires and serves and educates and I really acknowledge you for showing up consistently with your perfect imperfections and and just sharing what you know sharing what you've learned and putting it in ways that we can understand it that might be confusing at times so I really acknowledge you for
Starting point is 01:21:23 showing up big the way you have and I think shifting a identity that you you were so stuck on from the way you grew up. And being okay with letting it die and also holding on to some of it and transforming, I think, it's so hard for so many people. I know it's hard for me. So I really acknowledge you for shifting that
Starting point is 01:21:41 and being constantly in a reinvention phase of your life and in service to so many people. Well, thank you for that generous acknowledgement. That was really brilliant. One of the things, I'm gonna acknowledge you for a second if you don't mind. Sure. So I think you're a brilliant example,
Starting point is 01:21:57 like a truly brilliant example, of what it is to be vulnerable. Thanks, man. And it screams. Thanks, man. In a really great way. Thank you. Appreciate it.
Starting point is 01:22:06 Appreciate it, man. I think, yeah, the last eight, nine years, I've really opened up and allow myself to be vulnerable at any moment. Great. I get it. It's not easy. No. It's not easy.
Starting point is 01:22:17 But I think the more I embody vulnerability, the more my heart is open to receiving people, to having intimate conversations, to being able to share things that are, sad or scary or whatever might be coming up for me. So I appreciate it and I receive it, man. Yeah, good. My final question for you. And again, I want to make sure people get the book. We'll have it all linked up. But my final question, Gary, is what's your definition of greatness? Oh, that's a brilliant question, right? So it's the triumph of the human spirit.
Starting point is 01:22:50 It's the opportunity for somebody to go beyond, whatever that might be for you. And sometimes it's a simple thing like going beyond some old hurt or pain, but sometimes it's going beyond a situation or a circumstance. I really do believe in the possibility of people living great lives. And so it's always comes down to the triumph of the human spirit. There you go. Gary, appreciate you, man. Awesome. Thank you so much.
Starting point is 01:23:19 I hope you enjoyed today's episode, and it inspired you on your journey towards greatness. Make sure to check out the show notes in the description for a full rundown. of today's episode with all the important links. And if you want weekly exclusive bonus episodes with me personally, as well as ad-free listening, then make sure to subscribe to our greatness plus channel exclusively on Apple Podcasts. Share this with a friend on social media
Starting point is 01:23:45 and leave us a review on Apple Podcasts as well. Let me know what you enjoyed about this episode in that review. I really love hearing feedback from you and it helps us figure out how we can support and serve you moving forward. And I want to remind you if no one has told you lately that you are loved, you are worthy, and you matter. And now it's time to go out there and do something great.

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