The Skinny Confidential Him & Her Podcast - Jay Shetty - Aligning Values, Love & Intimacy, Human Nature, & Managing Screen Time
Episode Date: July 8, 2024#723: Today we're sitting down with Jay Shetty. Jay Shetty is a global bestselling author, award-winning podcast host of On Purpose, Chief Purpose Officer of Calm, and a purpose-driven entrepreneur wh...o has made an indelible impact on hearts and minds worldwide. Today, he joins us for a conversation about relationships and how to find somebody for the long-term. We also discuss how to nourish your current relationship, why some relationships don't work out, and the lack of connections in couples & how to fix it. We then discuss how overconsumption is causing us problems and how to manage screen time in the digital age. To connect with Jay Shetty click HERE Visit www.drinkjuni.com and use promo code “skinnyconfidential” for 20% off To connect with Lauryn Bosstick click HERE To connect with Michael Bosstick click HERE Read More on The Skinny Confidential HERE To Watch the Show click HERE For Detailed Show Notes visit TSCPODCAST.COM To Call the Him & Her Hotline call: 1-833-SKINNYS (754-6697) This episode is brought to you by The Skinny Confidential Head to the HIM & HER Show ShopMy page HERE to find all of Michael and Lauryn’s favorite products mentioned on their latest episodes. This episode is brought to you by Armra ARMRA Colostrum strengthens immunity, ignites metabolism, fortifies gut health, activates hair growth and skin radiance, and powers fitness performance and recovery. Visit www.tryamra.com and use code SKINNY at checkout for 15% off your first purchase. This episode is brought to you by Hiya Health Hiya Health fills in the most common gaps in modern children's diet to provide full-body nourishment our kids need with a yummy taste they love. Go to hiyahealth.com/skinny to receive 50% off your first order. This episode is brought to you by Caraway Ditch the chemicals with Caraway. Visit carawayhome.com/HIMANDHER to receive 10% off your next purchase. This episode is brought to you by Ritual Start a daily ritual that you can feel good about. Visit ritual.com/SKINNY to receive 25% off your first month of Ritual. This episode is brought to you by Lipton Green tea is a great ally for wellness and a simple way to up your everyday healthy habits. Try the new Lipton Green Tea! This episode is brought to you by Equip Foods Go to equipfoods.com/skinny or use code SKINNY at checkout to receive 20% off your order. Produced by Dear Media
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The following podcast is a Dear Media production.
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Fantastic. And he's a serial entrepreneur. A very smart cookie. And now Lauren Everts
and Michael Bostic are bringing you along for the ride.
Get ready for some major realness.
Welcome to the Skinny Confidential, him and her.
Aha!
You think you've lost discipline, but really you've lost desire.
Discipline is so based on desire, right?
If you've been healthy for seven days in a row yes you're
disciplined but now you're more desiring to be healthy whereas when you get into an unhealthy
place and you're eating badly every day you haven't worked out whatever it may be it's because
your desire to be healthy has dropped below your desire to be unhealthy so that one perfect day
reshapes your desire into,
I love it when I don't eat sugar. I love it when I work out in the morning. I love it when I
meditate first thing. I love it when I spend time with my wife. Let me reset my desire.
Hello, everybody. Welcome back to the Skinny Confidential, him and her show. Today,
we are sitting down with someone who I'm sure many of you are familiar with. I'm surprised
it's taken us this long to sit down and do an episode with him. And that is Jay Shetty. For those of you who are not familiar with Jay Shetty,
Jay is a global bestselling author, an award-winning podcast host of the On Purpose
podcast, chief purpose officer of Calm, and a purpose-driven entrepreneur who has made an
indeniable impact on hearts and minds around the world. Today, he joins us for a conversation about
relationships, how to find somebody for the long- term. We also discuss how to nourish your current relationship, why some relationships don't
work out, and the lack of connections in couples and how to fix it.
We also talk about some of the flawed natures of humans, what to think about when looking
for a partner, aligning values, the issue with overconsumption in society, and how to
pursue intimate connections.
We also discuss what happens when there's a lack
of intimacy in the relationship. This episode is really for anyone who wants to live better,
feel better, have a deeper connection with their partners and friends.
And we just really enjoyed the conversation. We've had the pleasure of meeting Jay over the years
and swimming in some of the same circles, but we've never actually got to sit down and do
an episode like this with him. I think this was maybe different for him as well as Lorne and I kind of maybe bring some different kind of conversations than some of
the ones that have maybe been brought to him in the past. And we really just talked about life
and got to know him. We really enjoyed the conversation. It was a real pleasure sitting
down with him. Jay was also generous enough to offer a code to any of our listeners for his
Junie brand, which we were drinking throughout the episode.
It's a really good beverage, gets you a little pick-me-up, tastes really good.
And I'm sure many of you are familiar with Juni, but if you haven't tried it,
you can check it out at drinkjuni.com and use promo code SKINNYCONFIDENTIAL for 20% off.
So thanks, Jay, for that for the audience. With that, Jay Shetty, the one and only,
welcome to the Skinny Confidential Him and Her Show.
This is the skinny confidential him and
her jay shetty i have harassed you in your dms i have harassed you in email and you're here you're
finally here why are you ignoring my wife jay what's going on i was not ignoring i replied i
was about to go to some deep i was going to pull out every card michael i'm not gonna lie i needed
you on the podcast i'm so grateful to be i'm such a fan of what you both do and congratulations on everything you've
built. It's amazing to watch. And I've been in this office a million times and been on so many
of the Dear Media shows. I'm glad I get to be on this one. And I love your team. You have great
people around you. We have former team members of mine that have joined you and having amazing
careers with you guys. So congratulations on everything. It's awesome. Thank you.
I already feel jazzed up.
I'll take all the credit.
Well, I'm going to feel jazzed up
because I'm going to have some Junie.
Is that how you say it?
Yes, Junie, yeah.
Sparkling tea with adaptogens.
I asked him if this was crack.
Definitely not.
Okay, so the first question that I am going to ask you
has to do with relationships
because I've seen so much content
that has gone viral of you on TikTok
talking about the way you
look at relationships. And sometimes I like to subtly manipulate my husband. So I'm going to
dive right into that. Before your wife, how did you look at relationships and love?
That's such a great question. I think before my wife, I looked at it through the lens of TV,
movies and music. So I had this idea that love was this big, grand gesture. Love was all about
these big moments and showing off of what you could do to pull off and how incredible it would
be. And I think I had this very romantic view of love, this idea that love was about this
perfect relationship between two
perfect people. And it was amazing all of the time and all of that kind of stuff. And then
every relationship I had was not like that for different reasons. And it took me a long time to
rewire my brain and my mind towards reality. And I think we all experience this, right? With anything in life, you're constantly
looking at two screens. One screen is reality and one screen is imagination. And the problem is our
focus is so skewed towards the imagination screen that reality is happening over here.
And we just can't seem to grasp it. It took me a long time to stop looking at the imagination screen
and go towards the reality screen.
So give an example of what an imagination screen would look like for someone.
So the imagination screen is we never argue. We never fight. There's never a speed bump.
There's no issues. The person is perfect in every possible way. They don't react too much,
but they react enough. They're not too hot, but they're hot enough. And it's like, everything's just lining up perfectly. Reality is, well, wait a minute, maybe they're like three out of 10 in this area and they're nine out of 10 in another area. Reality is, well,
wait a minute, we both went through a big life or career change and it wasn't as smooth as we
expected. Reality is, well, maybe we just ended up together and now we've realized that actually we're very different and it might be right person, wrong time.
And so that's reality. And I feel like we're so glued into living in this made up world that we can't accept the real world that the universe and the world in front of us is forcing us to reckon with. Do you think that, and this is my own experience with some of
my friends who are single, that people have gotten too curated with what they want and how they want
it almost to the point where it's anal? I think we're living in a world where you can choose
everything, right? Everything's personalized. Like you can, I believe, design your ideal baby. Like
you can choose the eye color and you can choose this and you can
choose that. And it's like, we've learned to engineer and over-manufacture everything now.
Like everything can be personally designed to fit on your wrist and perfectly for your face and
perfectly for your hair. And by the way, I'm not against that. There's nothing wrong with that.
It's just that it's led us to want to engineer people we want to manufacture people we want to
curate create design to perfection and individual and the problem is humans by nature are flawed
always growing completely shifting and pivoting at all times and so what you're trying to do in
effect is impossible because you're not going to find someone who ticks every box. You're not going to find someone who stays the same. You're not going
to find someone who lives up to each and every one of your expectations, impresses your family,
impresses your friends, and is great at home. That's just not real, but robots can do that.
AI is probably going to be able to do that. And that's a fascinating thing. I think a lot of
people are going to have AI partners in a few years because the AI partner will agree with you when you want them to.
They'll disagree when you want them to.
Fuck, sign me up, Jay.
They'll read your face.
Yeah, exactly.
We'll trade Michael for AI.
That's how it's going to work.
I heard Whitney Wolf heard talking about the future of dating, like AI will be able to date for you.
Yes.
Like if there was a version of Jay,
Lauren, Michael, and our AI versions could go date other people. Okay. I've dated a hundred
people. These are the three that I think is worth your time to meet. That's wild.
Yes. And the funny thing is they'll be dating the AI of the other person. So it's so disconnected
from you that chances are, you don't even know if it's accurate, but I think we'll be dating AI. I think people will be talking to AI and interacting with AI people in order to have a relationship
that is perfect.
And I promise it will probably be close to perfect.
It's wild.
And that's why it will be really addictive.
I do check every box for Michael.
So Michael doesn't know what you're talking about.
Okay.
He has no idea.
So you were early AI?
I was early AI.
Are you?
Maybe she's an AI person.
You never know. I'm personally hesitant to give dating advice at this point only because I've been in a relationship
for so long. I almost like, I missed the whole online dating. So did I. I just don't know.
But what I will say, and I'll speak to the, some of my male friends is the older they get,
the more specific they get almost to the point of where any little tick that doesn't check a box
it's like they can't move forward and i and i see that being problematic for some of them trying to
find love because it's like oh there's to your point here's a box they check you know they're
10 out of 10 on five of them but they're two out of 10 on one gotta throw the whole thing away
do you see that happening especially when you're writing your book oh absolutely i mean even when
i'm working with couples i've i've coached couples over the last few years. I've spoken to a ton. I've
read a ton of research on the subject matter. And all we're seeing is two things. The first
is choice paralysis. This idea of we have so much choice that you're constantly thinking there's
plenty of fish in the sea. There'll be someone else who's better. There'll be someone else who
does fulfill the 10 out of 10 on every angle. So choice is confusing us. And humans, for years, studies have shown that humans make less good decisions when they have more choice.
It's like decision fatigue. and then 30 other healthy serials and then 50 other ones, you're making worse decisions because
humans are not good at that. We get paralyzed. We overthink. We overcomplicate. And on the other
end, the second thing we're seeing is what you said, where it's like we keep pushing for perfection
and it's hypocritical in some sense because we know we're not perfect and it's really hard to
be out there and say, I want everyone to match up with
this and by the way they're going to want to match with exactly who I am as well it's hard it's tough
what was your evolution from going to what you said to your wife and then when you did find your
wife what was the journey with that and how have you changed I wanted to get really practical and
tactical for I know that your community and your audience values that.
And I found that when I was studying the research,
when I was talking to people,
it came down to three things.
And I wouldn't say I knew these three things
as consciously or concretely as I do now
when I met my wife,
but now in hindsight,
I can see I was doing mini versions of this.
And so there are three things of this.
The first is, which is the most obvious one,
you have to like the person's personality. It makes sense, but I'll break that down further and I'll explain what the practical step there is. Studies show that for
someone to be an acquaintance, you have to actually spend 40 hours with them. If you consider someone
a good friend, you have to spend a hundred hours with them. And if you consider someone a good friend, you have to spend 100 hours with them. And if you consider someone a great friend, you have to have spent 200 hours with them.
So the reason is we often don't make that many friends as we grow as adults because
we don't spend 200 hours with someone.
When you were at school, you spent 200 hours with the kid at high school without even trying.
As we get older, we get less and less time.
So the question I'd be asking myself is, could I spend 200 hours with this person? Am I wanting to spend 200 hours with
this person? Am I engaging and excited about the fact that I'm going to have to work up to 200
hours to actually get to know this individual? And that's a great question to ask about the
personality point of I've got to be able to enjoy their personality for 200 hours plus,
because that's what our life's going to look like. And so if I don't feel that right now,
it's okay. Let me move on. So that's step one. The second part is there's a slight subtlety to
this second point. I have to respect their values and they have to respect mine. So we live in a
world where most of us don't know our own values. We think we do, but we don't.
And the way I tell people to think about this is write down a list of your values and then compare
it to your schedule, your bank account, and your expenditure over the month. So write down a list
of your values on one side and on the other side, look at your schedule and then look at how you
spend your money. Does that actually align? Chances are it doesn't. We spend our money and time very differently to what we say we value. For example, we may say, I really value my family. I really
value time with my family. But when you look at your schedule, you spend one day with them this
month. When you look at how much money you spent, you didn't really spend any money on them or for
an experience for them. It's a good exercise. Yeah. Do that exercise to really check whether
your values are aligned because we think one thing, but we do another. Gandhi has a great quote where he said that we experience harmony
when what we think, what we say, and what we do are aligned. For most of us, what we think
is different to what we say and what we say is different to what we do. And so most of us
experience misalignment. And so I would really check your values first. Second, you've really
got to get to know the other person's values. And just as you may have a value time and money
disconnect, that person probably has a value time and money disconnect. Make sure that they've
figured that out too. Now the hard step is, do I respect their values and do they respect mine?
I'll give you an example. My wife's number one
value is her family. She adores her family. When we got married, she said to me, her only
requirement was that we live one mile radius away from her parents' home.
Wow.
Three months later, we moved to New York because I got an amazing job offer. And then eight years now,
since we got married, we live in LA, which is a 10 hour flight away from London. And so my wife
has been the most flexible, amazing, kind-hearted human being in letting me push that way. But the
moment I got that job offer eight years ago, I said to my wife, I said, if you need to go back
every weekend because you miss your family,
that's okay. We've got to figure this out. Even if you need to live in London and come back and forth. So today my wife lives in London for like three to four months a year because she'll go
back every quarter. And to me, that allows her to get fueled up. And a lot of people will say to me,
well, Jay, wouldn't you want to be in the same place? And isn't that complicated? And isn't
that hard? And it's like, actually, when my wife's with her
family, that's why I love her. She is who she is because her family's amazing. She is who she is
because of how her parents love her and how she loves them. So if you take that away from someone,
if you don't respect that value, they won't be the same. Now you'd argue, well, wait a minute.
Well, if that's the case, what about you? What's your number one value? So my number one value is my purpose. I'm so grateful I get to be with both
of you today. I'm so grateful I get to do what I love every day. I'm so grateful that I get to
create and build and have this amazing experience of everything from my podcast to my books,
to my tour. And that is my number one priority in life. It's my deepest value.
And Radhi would tell you if she was here
that that's what she's attracted to. That's what she fell in love with. And so what we often think
in relationships is we have to have the same values. Our values have to match. And I would
argue that your values don't always have to match, but you actually have to have to respect that
person's values and they have to respect yours. I have to be okay with the fact. So when I coach
couples, I'll often sit down and I'll give them this activity. And you can do this with your
partner if you are compassionate, tolerant, and kind about it. So this is not a judgment tool.
See, if I was working with both of you- That was a good prerequisite.
Yes. I thought I'd put that out there before anyone pokes someone's eye out or something
like that. But if I was working with both of you, I'd give you both that out there before anyone poked someone's eye out or something like that.
But if I was working with both of you, I'd give you both this activity.
And I would say, out of everything in your life, I want you to rank your top three priorities in order.
So I'd give you both a slip.
You can do it right now if you want to do it for real.
You can write it down and then we'll do a reveal.
Or you could say it out loud.
Should we write it down?
Let's write it down.
Let's do it live. Yeah, write it down.
Write it down.
Let's do it live.
It's fine.
Taylor, do you even have a pen?
I didn't know we were going to do this i'm i'm just i love putting taylor on the spot i just like to see if there's any unpreparedness you could do on your phone too whatever's easy
i don't mind oh should we do it on our phone we can do it on our phone whatever's easier
thank you taylor sorry for not preparing you in advance so when it comes to family, work, yourself, health, et cetera,
what are your priorities in order?
In order of like importance?
Yes.
Top three only.
Don't look at mine.
Top three only.
I know, exactly.
Family, yourself, health, friends, work,
and just put them in order.
And obviously I would do this with a lot more depth if I was.
I've done stuff on this, so people might already know.
Okay, great.
All right.
So let's reveal top one.
Lauren first.
What do you think my top one is?
Health.
Like very in line.
It's my piece.
Okay, perfect.
Mine's health.
Mine's health.
Yours is health.
Perfect.
Okay, great.
No, you're number two.
Okay.
Lauren's number two.
Oh, you're not on my list.
Lauren's number two. No, mine is, my second one's my family. So you're, you're number two. Okay. Lauren's number two. Oh, you're not on my list. No, mine is, my second one's my family.
So you're included.
My last, my children.
No, wait, wait, wait, wait.
My second one's my family.
What's your second?
My second one's my wife.
Oh, my wife.
Okay.
I've been clear about this.
Okay.
And then my third is my purpose.
Yeah, my third is my children.
I just grouped the family.
But you know what, the way that I think think about this and then actually the mission and the business and all that comes after because i feel
like if i'm healthy and i'm in a great relationship because lauren and i've been together since we're
you know 20 years old yeah it's beautiful part of what we do part of why we do this is to do
stuff together and then children and i actually get a ton of value and a ton of purpose from the
businesses but i wouldn't feel happy. I don't
think, or as happy in the businesses if I wasn't doing it with these other things like those.
And I've talked about why I put health and I consider mental health at the top, because I
feel like if I don't put those things at the top, I can't show up for the other things.
Absolutely. Absolutely. And so I would encourage, I mean, you guys have known each other for a long
time, but I would encourage people to do this because anytime I've done it with a partner, most people have the reaction you did as a joke, but most people have
that as a reaction is most people will put their partner, one person will put their partner first
and the other person will put their partner second or third. And that person who got put second or
third is wondering, why did you put me second or third? But the person said, well, I put me first
because if I don't take care of myself, like Michael just said, who am I to you? What am I giving to you if I don't do that? And so I find
that a lot of us want our partners to put us first, but that doesn't practically make sense.
It doesn't always work through. So that's the respecting each other's values, looking at that
list and saying, I love the fact, Lauren, that you have your family on there. What does that mean
for our relationship that your family is second? Or Michael, I know that your mental health is first. What does that mean in
a tough conversation or on a tough or difficult day when I demand your attention? What does that
look like? Yeah. And by the way, I should mention that if you met me 10 years ago, this list would
look atrocious and would not paint a good picture of me because I had the priorities backwards.
I was probably putting material things and business and a lot ahead of the things.
But like yourself, we get to talk to so many enlightened and smart people that I've learned
a lot over the last decade and been able to work on myself. But, you know, I think sometimes,
I think many people don't even take the time to think about what you're talking about. They're
just kind of go along. There's a lays on fairness. It's just kind of like, oh, we're here. You're
the person. I noticed that it's like a blasé it's like what's your
vision what how are you aligned and people are very almost blasé about it do you find that
i find that we're all just so busy right we're consuming so much we're so busy and when i say
busy i don't necessarily mean productive you know if you look at the stats, actually, Annie, can you get
this up for me? Can you get the I miss you when you're next to me presentation up? It has got
some amazing stats on it that I want to share. There's this, there's so much around just how
much time is actually wasted and how much time is actually lost. And, you know, philosophers have
been talking about this for years. Aristotle famously said, an unexamined life is not worth
living. And like,
you look at that statement, but then you look at today, we don't even have time to examine.
You don't have time to assess. And I empathize with people. I don't think it's because people
are lazy or bored or wrong or it's society has been created. Thank you so much.
It's a bit self-imposed.
It's self-imposed and it's the fault
of systems. So it's both, right? So I try and look at it bottom up and top down. So if you look at it
bottom up, you're right. We don't have the tools for emotional regulation. We haven't been taught
in how to be introspective and reflective. We haven't been taught in how to think through our
challenges. And then you look at the
system. Everything you consume has been designed to keep you addicted. There's a reason why you
want to watch the next episode. It's designed with cliffhanger chemicals. It's designed to
make you feel anxious. There's a reason why everything has so much sugar in it. It's one
of the big reasons why we wanted you need to have zero grams of sugar because sugar is an addictive source. It's why everything that we're consuming is filled with it. We're
addicted to it. It's the reason why social media is switching every two and a half seconds to keep
you focused. So the system is also designed to keep you addicted and then you don't have the
tools to detox. And so both are working against you. At this stage in your life and career,
what are the things that you personally consume? You've seen a lot. You've talked to a lot of great people.
What are the things when you have a moment and you want to consume something, what are you looking
towards? I would say that I consume for a purpose. So for example, most people may or may not know
this, but I genuinely enjoy playing video games.
And I'll do that because it's-
What are you playing?
I play FIFA a lot because I'm a massive soccer fan
and I'm British, so it's part of our DNA.
I love playing FIFA.
I love playing NBA 2K.
I love playing many sports games
because that's what I enjoy.
Because that's the one time I can truly let my brain
just completely switch off.
Do you guys want to date?
You sound like Michael.
Really?
Oh my gosh.
He's like,
Lauren,
I'm in a meditative state
when I'm playing video games.
I can relate.
Your values are aligned.
Yeah,
values are aligned.
We should meet together.
Not to go on a huge tangent,
but it's one of those things
where you can relax.
It's mindless, but it's also requires active participation.
It's my real housewives.
Go on.
Yes.
I get it.
I get it.
And that's my point.
And I raise an example like that rather than saying, oh, I meditate, which obviously I
do.
But I use an example like that to make the point of, but that's purposeful time.
I have a time block that I set up for me to do that.
I know exactly how much time I'm spending there.
I know what I'm going to play and I know I'm going to feel, and that's great. And that purposeful,
intentional planning is what creates a sense of a moving in the right direction, even if it is
recreation. And I think that's where I'm getting at, where it's like a lot of us are consuming
without curation, without a plan, without intention. So for example,
if I'm trying to understand what's trending on TikTok, that's why I'm scrolling. I'm not
scrolling because I'm trying to get something for me. So I'll scroll and I'll be like, oh,
that's interesting that that trend's gone viral. Okay, that's really interesting that
that subject matter that I put out was something that resonated with people. Okay, that's interesting.
So I'm using it to learn rather than like, make me happy, make me happy, fill my time, fill my time. Stop making me bored. Stop making me bored. Like,
I think that's the kind of mindless consumption. I think it's mindful curation as opposed to
mindless consumption that we're trying to encourage people towards. Yeah, I think people,
you should look at the content that you're consuming because that is making up your life.
It's one minute every day to watch someone's Instagram story, but that's 365 minutes a year.
That's a lot of time to be looking at other people's content.
So you should be mindful about what you're looking at.
Absolutely.
I want to share this with you because I've got it here right now, if that's okay.
So check this out.
Just for time, we spend 36 hours a week on social media and watching TV.
Feel fair? That's a lot of time. 36 hours a week on social media and watching TV. Feel fair?
That's a lot of time.
36 hours a week.
More than a day and a half.
Yeah.
We spend just eight hours talking to our partner.
What?
Of which.
My husband spends 85 hours talking to me.
That's a lie.
I just don't get reciprocation.
Oh, so we are the same person.
Oh, the talking.
I'm like, how much is this?
So you're the one who wants to communicate. Yeah. Oh, we're the same person. you're the one who wants to communicate
Yeah oh we're the same person
You should date my wife
Okay so we spent just 8 hours talking to our partner
Of which 1.5 hours
Is wasted bickering
Huh
Couples spend 4 times
4x more time looking at the screen
Than each other
That's sad that makes me actually like feel sad.
Really sad. Listen to this. I'm going to break down a few more. This was from a presentation
I gave at South by Southwest a couple of months back. Three in 10 complain they don't have enough
quality time to spend with their loved one, even though we spend four times more looking at screens
than our partner. Almost a third of those living with their partner argue with them over unimportant things
debates over what to cook leads to 23 of couples falling out every single week of the year i don't
have that problem because lauren doesn't cook i do i do other things okay one in 10 argue over
room temperatures at least five times a week which is. Everyone has different body temperatures. 69. Yeah. 67. Yeah. 67. I like a
good 68. That's pretty good. A fifth fallout over what to watch on TV twice a week or more. That's
me and my wife every night. We can't decide. You got to get separate iPads. Oh, so you just watch
two separate things at the same time. Yeah. So that's usually when I end up playing video games
and she watches TV. One in 10 bicker at least four times a week
over washing up.
And 28% of those living with their partner
openly admits to giving their pets more attention
than their other halves.
Jay, you better turn this show back around.
These are some depressing stats.
You're going to bring us home now.
So how do we rectify this?
How do we fix this?
What are your tips on this?
So the solution is we have started to see screen time as time together. And most of the time,
screen time is five screens. You have your phone and an iPad or a laptop. They have their phone,
an iPad or a laptop, and then you have the big
screen in front of you. That's five screens. So your independent attention is divided across
three screens each, let alone the other person to add to that. And I feel that one thing that
I propose and what I encourage people to do to flip this around and give people recommendations
is entertainment, i.e. watching something together
is the lowest form of intimacy and connection. The only way it's made more intimate or better
for connection is if you discuss it afterwards, if there was a point that really stood out to you,
if there's a story or a character that you both are diving into and you're having a conversation
about it. Apart from that, you're both consuming something and it creates no connection this way.
The fact that you're both looking away from each other is partly a great narrative as
to why it's not connecting you.
So entertainment is what 99% of couples do together, but it's the lowest form of intimacy.
So we need to change our point of connection.
So let's take an easy one.
Experiences, the obvious, date night.
Let's go out and do something together. Let's get away
from the screen. Even if we're indoors, let's play an analog game. Let's break away. Let's do
something else. Let's have an experience together. Maybe we will cook together. Maybe we will do
something around the home together. Maybe we'll want to plant something together. Whatever it is,
what can I do that's actually engaging us in an experience together? Beyond that is experimenting
together. This may not be, again, by the way, this is not every week. Some of this will be once a
month, once a quarter. Let's do an activity where we both don't know what's going on. One of the
things I find is we often do something where one person's the expert and the other's the novice.
Someone says, I'm going to take you to play golf and I'll show you how to play golf. Someone says,
I'll take you to tennis and I'll show you how to play tennis.
That experience actually doesn't create intimacy because one person doesn't have to drop their guard. Only the person who's new has to drop their guard. What you want is an activity where you both
don't have a clue what you're doing. So me and my wife went for a surf lesson. We've both never
surfed. We grew up in England. You don't get to surf out there. We're surfing. And it was ridiculous because we're both horrendous. We're falling
over. We're both being silly. I'm seeing a new, I've been with my wife for 11 years now. I'm
seeing a side of her that I've never seen before because it's ridiculous. She can't control the
version that I'm seeing of her. And it's fun because we're both new at something. It's like,
we're both children again.
And that idea of, do I ever get to see my partner not be predictable? Do I ever get to see my
partner where I actually don't project what I know that what they're going to do? And most couples
have been together for enough time will say, I know what my partner's thinking and I know what
my partner's going to do. And that's because we haven't done any new experiences with someone.
So what I say to people is if you've known someone for a long time,
learn something new about them.
And when you meet someone new for the first time,
try and find an old connection that you have with them.
So if we just met today, I'm going to try and find,
like, do we have any friends in common?
Did we have an old city that we both lived in?
That's a way of finding connection.
But with someone, you guys have been together how many years now?
600.
No, I mean,
we've known each other
since we were 12.
So I mean,
we've known each other more
over 20 years.
Over 20 years.
So you've known each other
for over 20, 25 years.
So everything can feel like
I know everything,
but the goal is
what can I discover new
and what do we need to add
in a new way
to show me a new side
of this person? I do have a different personality every day. I like to switch it up. He never knows what do we need to add in a new way to show me a new side of this person?
I do have a different personality every day.
I like to switch it up.
He never knows what he's going to get.
But I will tell you, we started playing tennis together.
And we both never played.
I'm better.
But it was like, just to see him learn how to play tennis.
And I'm still learning too.
I get what you're saying.
It was like seeing a different side.
It is endearing. like seeing a different side. Yeah, it's endearing.
It is endearing.
That's a great word.
Yeah.
You know, I would like for you to talk about
how the disjointedness of being on the phone
and when, let's say Michael,
let's say I'm on the phone
and Michael's feeling like
I'm not giving him full attention.
I believe that that trickles down into my children.
And I believe that there's a lack of intimacy that my children are getting when I am on the phone.
How are you seeing that lack of intimacy go into the family?
Absolutely. It's such a great question.
Just to validate that experience and for everyone, I always want to make sure when we're having these conversations,
these are real issues that all of us are facing.
This isn't something that, yeah, this is not just like you or me, this is everyone.
And so I don't want anyone to feel any shame, guilt, or pressure for any of the stats I
shared because it's common.
It's what we're all experiencing.
I did this, I had a dinner last year with some of my friends in London, and I like to
help my long-term
relationships go deeper.
And so I had one question that I asked everyone at the table, which was, how can I help you?
Or how can we help each other?
So everyone had to share a highlight of the year, something that was a challenge of the
year, and then how everyone at the table could help them.
And the majority of people at the table said, my phone is disrupting my intimacy with my partner
and my connection with my kids.
I feel that.
And it's just pushing me away from them.
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Caraway, non-toxic cookware made modern. I think what's hard and you can relate to
this is that you and I and Michael and most of everyone in this room, we work off our phone.
Yes. So to me, I look at my phone as work. And when I have something that needs to get done,
it does feel, and I really notice it, that it's taking away from the intimacy with my partner
and my children. So at home for the family, I would recommend, and again, getting practical
and tactical, set no technology times and no technology zones. So what I mean by that is there
are certain times in the home where the phone isn't used in a particular way. So it's like saying
7 to 8 p.m. every day
when I'm with the kids. I'm making this up. I don't know what time your kids sleep. 7 to 8 p.m.
every day. I'm with the kids. There is no phone time during 7 to 8. 6 a.m. in the morning to 7
a.m. in the morning, there is no phone time because that's when I'm working out. That's
when I'm meditating. So you're setting no technology times. And then this is one of my favorites,
you're setting no technology zones,
which is saying that the dining table and the bedroom,
there are no phones because it's more fun
to eat and sleep with people, right?
It's not as fun to be on my phone.
So I'm gonna set these-
I like those rules.
And I will literally imagine a laser beam
around the kitchen as I'm walking in,
let me just go, oh my gosh, if I walk through this
with my phone, I'm going to get lasered. We have a meditation space in our room where we both
meditate every morning. It's our sacred spiritual space. And we made that rule. We were like, no
matter what time it is, if we're in that room, the phone cannot enter past just the few curtains that
we have in front of it. It's like, it can't go through there because that disrupts that energy
of that space. And what I find with most people is that we're eating where we're meant to sleep we're
sleeping where we're meant to work and we're working where we're meant to sleep hold on you
have to say it again we're eating where we're meant to sleep no more sleep in the bed lauren
fuck i eat in the bed we're eating where we're meant to sleep a piece of sourdough toast in the
bed don't fucking lie guys you're tempting me now as well but but you're eating where we're meant to sleep. A piece of sourdough toast in the bed. Don't fucking lie, guys. You're tempting me now as well.
But you're eating where you're meant to sleep.
You're sleeping where you're meant to eat.
And you're eating where you're meant to work.
Like we've mixed up the energy of all the spaces in our home or in our apartment.
And that's why we can't sleep in our beds.
It's why we can't work at our desks.
And why we can't eat in our kitchens peacefully.
Going back to your priority of peace. Because we've disrupted and mixed up all the energies. I always say to people
that time has memory and location has energy. When you do something at the same time every day,
your mind makes note of it and it becomes easier. And when you do something in the same space every day,
your mind makes note of it and it becomes easier because that energy, there's a reason why it's
easier to meditate in a monastery in India than it is on a subway in New York City, because for
thousands of years, people have meditated in that space. There's a reason why hiking a trail in LA
where we are right now is more beautiful than hiking a trail randomly somewhere where I grew up, because that's what people have done there. People have used it for that reason. So I think for me, that's no technology times and no technology zones is a lifesaver. Even put up cute little signs in your house with, you know, like a stop sign just to remind you whatever the visual cue is. Hold on. I want you to promise on air, live,
that you're going to do this. I like this
rule. I'm going to take it from you, Jay. I'll give you credit.
I'm taking it from Jay. You swear? No, I swear.
I'm going to put up a thing that there's no
phone in the kitchen and there's no phone
in the bedroom at all. Can you do it?
And I will put up a sign that says no sourdough
in the bed. No crumbs in the bed.
You're going to miss. Deal.
You're going to miss the crumbs. Shake on it. No, I think even if you tell the kids they'll like that too which is this is like a
no phone zone yeah well my daughter says to my husband she goes no phone in the bed dad because
when he gets on the phone in the bed the bed to me is for sleeping and fucking and eating sourdough
now it's now sourdough is off the list sourdough is off the list. Now sourdough is off the list. Sourdough is off the list. But no, it's exactly what you both are saying.
And it's also this idea of, okay, if I am going to now pick up my phone for work,
I have to walk out of the room.
I think it's really genius.
I do have no tech times.
I bookend my day, but I've never thought about no tech zones.
I think that's genius.
So in your home, tell us what your exact boundaries are about your times and your zones.
So if we're sitting at the dining table, no phone, bedroom, no phone and meditation space,
no phone. And do you really do it? And well, no, I mess it up all the time. Like as in like there
was literally a couple of months last year where I was taking my phone into my bedroom again.
Actually, I would say, I would argue that I got too comfortable with it. And I started taking my phone into my bedroom again all the time. And it became so bad that I had to reset
this habit. And so my phone is one room away now. It's kept in a separate room at nighttime and
I'll go there and I'll plug it into the charger and I'll check the last messages and then I'll
get into bed. But hey, with all of these habits, you're going to break them. You're going to break
the zone. The laser is going to cut your head off. You're going to break them. Like you're going to break the zone.
The laser is going to cut you, you know, cut your head off.
Like you are going to walk in, laser beam goes out.
It's going to happen.
But the point is, it's better to have a good standard and try and stick to it
than it is to have no standards.
And I think that's what we're all saying.
Like when you said to me, like everyone who listens to this podcast
is trying to be better, trying to grow.
All we can do is set better standards and keep rising
towards them. Whereas if our standards are low, then we'll keep breaking them anyway.
I also think it's interesting to see how your nervous system relaxes to when you do apply
these boundaries to when your nervous system is in fight or flight, bringing that phone in
the bedroom. It's interesting to pay attention to. I was going to ask you, Jay, after everything you've learned over the years, when you start
to feel a little off or like maybe you're getting a little derailed, what are the things that you
ground yourself in? How do you get yourself back to center? Say you're just starting to feel
overwhelmed or stressed. You're starting to feel like you're burnt out or you're tapping into maybe
habits you don't want to tap into. What are the things you do to kind of like recenter yourself?
I usually try and have a day that weekend where I can totally flip the script.
I'm quite an extremist and this is partly self-awareness.
Like I think, you know, some people are eat the frog kind of people.
I do the hardest thing first.
And some people I need to start small and get better, right?
And you've got to figure out which one you are.
I'm an extremist.
So I'm like, eat the frog.
I'm like, take a day off and figure everything out. So for me, if I'm having a tough week, I'll cancel all
my social plans on Saturday, anything I have to do. And I'll say, Saturday is my reset day.
This day is about reshifting to every habit that I want to live. So let's say I've been going to
bed late and waking up late and missing my morning meditation. Saturday is my day to make sure that
the moment I wake up,
the first thing I do is meditate.
Let's reset those habits into motion.
I feel like I haven't been reading enough lately.
I haven't learned anything lately.
You know what?
I've picked a great book.
I'm going to sit with that book for 30 minutes to an hour on Saturday.
If I get lost in it, that's even better.
Let that be the reset I need.
I haven't spent enough time with my wife in the last month.
We've both been traveling.
She's on planes. I'm on planes. I've got a podcast. She had a book launch. Okay,
this Saturday, let me make sure that we spend three hours together. So I try and find that one
perfect day. And the reason for that one perfect day is not that I'm trying to replay that day
after day, because that's never going to happen. But it gives me back the glimpse of why I love
those habits. It gives me the feeling of falling in love again with all of those habits. And that's
why that one perfect day bleeds into the others when I'm not feeling as enthusiastic, when I'm
not feeling as energized. But that's self-awareness for me. That's what works for me. Someone else may
say that and go, well, I don't want the one perfect day. I'd rather have this method and that's okay. But that for me is my one perfect day reset.
And I'll really get into the minutia and the detail of how do I engineer that? Because I find
that what you're really saying you've lost, you think you've lost discipline, but really you've
lost desire. Discipline is so based on desire, right? If you've been healthy
for seven days in a row, yes, you're disciplined, but now you're more desiring to be healthy.
Whereas when you get into an unhealthy place and you're eating badly every day, you haven't worked
out, whatever it may be, it's because your desire to be healthy has dropped below your desire to be
unhealthy. So that one perfect day reshapes your
desire into, I love it when I don't eat sugar. I love it when I work out in the morning. I love it
when I meditate first thing. I love it when I spend time with my wife. Let me reset my desire.
There's this book, The Greatest Salesman in the World, and it says it's very similar to what
you're saying with like the habits that you make create pleasure, which is why you want
to keep doing them. So what you're really looking for in a habit is the pleasure. So you keep coming
back to it. What are your micro habits that you do on a day-to-day basis? Some non-negotiables
that you do in the morning or the night, or maybe midway through the day. You're so busy. I would
like to know just as a high performer. Absolutely. So I have these habits that are non-negotiable five days a week,
not seven days a week, because I find that in order to sustain them five days a week,
I need two days where they're a bit more negotiable. And so for me, it comes down to
five core habits. And the first one is thankfulness. And the way I practice this is very clear. I think for a long
time, people have said we should journal about what we're grateful for. We should be more
thankful. We should be more grateful in the way we live. And when I was looking at the science of it,
studies showed that thankfulness and gratitude can be really powerful. And actually, when you're
having a thankful thought,
you can't have a worry-filled thought at the same time.
If you're having a grateful thought,
you can't have an anxious thought at the same time.
Both those thoughts can't rent space in the same area if you're having one or the other.
They're almost like two tenants that are competing.
But in order for gratitude to work that way,
it has to have three qualities. And in order
to do that, I want to ask one of you a question. Who organizes the parties at your home if you
ever have a party? Me. Okay, fine. All right. So Lauren, could you name two of your best friends
that would be invited to this party, not family members? Yes. Right now? Please.
Weston and Gillian. To your name, you're going to get a lot of pushback. A lot of the other friends are going to chime in now.
You can make up names if you prefer.
Moose Knuckle.
Moose Knuckle and?
No, Moose Knuckle and Weston.
Oh, I thought you were going to say Moose Knuckle and Moncler.
Moose Knuckle is one of my best friends.
I have a friend that I call Moose Knuckle.
Oh, I thought that was the brand Moose Knuckle.
No, no, no.
It's not the brand Moose Knuckle.
Okay, okay.
So which names are we going for?
Moose Knuckle and Weston.
Moose Knuckle and Weston. Yeah. Right? Okay, great. Fine are we going for? Moose Knuckle and Weston. Moose Knuckle and Weston.
Yeah.
Right?
Okay, great.
Fine.
All right.
So Moose Knuckle and Weston, two of your friends, which would be invited.
Now I'm going to ask you a hard question, which is why I'm glad you made these up,
is who do you like more?
Oh, it depends on my mood.
Okay.
If you had to really pick and decide in your best mood.
In a party mood?
Yeah.
Moose Knuckle.
Sorry, Wes.
Okay. Okay. Moose Knuckle. Sorry, Wes. Okay.
Okay.
Moose Knuckle.
All right.
Are you sure you're happy with these names?
We can retake.
I'm sure I'm happy that Jason
and Moose Knuckle
over and over on the show.
Okay, fine.
All right, great.
So now based on that,
these two people come to the event,
Moose Knuckle and Wes,
and come into your party.
They have a great time.
And the next day you get a message
from both of them.
Moose Knuckle, who we love,
sends you a message that says,
Lauren, thank you so much for having me.
It was so fun spending time with your friends and your family.
The food was amazing.
The games were great.
The music was awesome.
I really needed that.
Thank you so much.
Okay.
Right?
Sounds like Moose Knuckle?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Now you get a message from Weston.
And Weston's message is, thanks, Lauren.
That's it.
That's actually really, that tracks.
That tracks?
That's accurate.
Great.
Yeah.
So Weston, who we don't really like, says just thanks, Lauren.
Now, trick questions aside, which one makes you happier?
Moose knuckles.
Perfect.
Right?
Do you know what a moose knuckle is?
I don't.
I don't.
Do you?
I have no idea.
Taylor, what's a moose knuckle?
Oh, interesting. I had no idea. Which is what's a moose knuckle? Oh, interesting.
I had no idea.
Which is why I kept laughing when you were saying it.
That's hilarious.
Go ahead.
I thought it was that brand.
That's the only clip they're going to pull is Jay Shetty saying the moose knuckle.
I thought it was that brand.
Our friend that she was referencing, he just wears these tight pants.
Who invented that?
He has a huge penis.
He invented it.
Don't pull this out of context.
I think it is an answer to the camel toe reference.
So you have a friend called Moose Knuckle for real?
Well, his penis is so big,
every time he wears shorts, it's in my face.
Got it.
So you gave him this name?
Yeah, he's fun.
But yes, I appreciate Moose Knuckle's response
more than Weston's.
So now, jokes aside.
Well, no, I look forward to meeting Moose Knuckle.
He will actually be in France.
Really?
Yeah, we'll bring him to Canada. You'll recognize him from the tight pants, but let's keep going in France. Really? Yeah. We'll bring him to Canada.
You'll recognize him from the tight pants, but let's keep going.
Okay.
Well, yeah.
You'll see him from stage.
Hey, Moose, how's it going?
Hey, he showed up to this IRL event we did here in Austin, and these girls were like,
Moose Knuckle.
That's amazing.
So what's interesting is not only does it make you happier, Lauren, receiving that message,
Moose Knuckle is actually happier giving that message.
So the gratitude studies show that when gratitude is expressed, when it's specific,
and when it's personalized, that's when it has the effect of not letting anxiety or not letting
worry take that space. So if you're just writing gratitude in your journal, it actually doesn't
have the same effect. It has to be expressed, it has to be specific, and it has to be personalized. And that's why Weston doesn't
get that benefit and neither do you. So what I try and do every single day is I choose one person
personally and one person professionally, and I'll send them a voice note, an email, a text message,
a video message, whatever it is, two minutes, it doesn't need to be long. And I send them a note of gratitude.
It's expressed.
It's specific.
It's personalized.
It's not false flattery.
It's not like a cheap admiration word here or there.
It's legitimately how I feel.
Every single day, that's my practice of gratitude.
It's not a journal.
It's not a thought in my head.
It's sending a message.
And you change the person just depending on-
I sent you some nude photos this morning
and you did not send me a message of gratitude.
It wasn't good enough. I'm going to need you to morning and you did not send me a message of gratitude. It wasn't good enough.
I'm going to need you to go back.
I'll give you a message of gratitude tonight.
And reply to those pictures today.
That's a really good tip though.
It makes total sense.
It's almost like when you're writing in your journal,
it's like, it's to nothing.
You know what?
Like when I heard a similar reference to this,
maybe you sent me,
and there's my kids the
other day were playing with just super answers, playing in the yard with a hose. And when I start
to get stressed or anxious, I just think of that moment and it like completely washes out the other
because I'm just so grateful for that moment. That's exactly kind of what you're talking about.
Absolutely. Absolutely. And it has to be shared, right? I think a lot of our daily habits now have
become very personal and very isolating and like you do them on your own and it's like well most of our joy is felt when it's expressed and experienced and
imagine that person by the way i'll send this message to someone that i haven't talked to for
ages and when i say professionally sometimes i think about like like we we're all sitting here
today and and yes you you harassed me in the dms or whatever and that's how we're here but
sometimes i'll think about someone I'm friends with today,
and I'll be like, wait a minute, who introduced us?
Like, how do I even know this person?
And someone's become a really good friend.
And then I realized the person who introduced us,
I haven't talked to them for seven years.
But because of them, I now have this really great friend.
I've messaged those people, and the responses you get are just amazing.
Because that person's like, wow, I can't believe you even remembered that.
Like, I can't believe I even came to to your mind people like to be acknowledged absolutely what are other micro things that you do on so that's the first one i've got four more the the
other one is and again like that takes 30 seconds to two minutes the second one is insight or or
inspiration and what i mean by this is a lot of us live in a world where, well,
research shows we have 60 to 80,000 thoughts per day. And 80% of those are negative and 80% of
those are repetitive. So let me give you an example. You wake up in the morning, you probably
look at your phone and you go, oh, I'm so tired, right? Very common first thought of the day. I'm
so tired. I wish I didn't have of the day. I'm so tired.
I wish I didn't have to get up. By 9am, you're having your coffee or whatever. And you're going,
gosh, I'm still so tired. You make it to midday and you go, I'm going to have to skip lunch.
I've got so much work and I'm so tired. Third time you've had that thought. You make it to the end of the day, 6pm, you're like, I'm still going to have to work a couple of hours. I'm so tired. You've
had that thought four or five times today. Then at 10.37 PM, randomly, you get the courage to click next episode on Netflix and watch a new
show. And then the cycle continues. So you keep saying, I'm so tired, potentially for a week,
a month, maybe even three months, maybe even four, maybe more. And so that thought has kept
repeating itself. I find that I have to find inspiration or insight that
kind of acts as inception on thoughts that I don't want to have or thoughts that I want to add to.
So I'll give an example. I am tired today and I'll go to sleep early tonight. I'm tired today
and I'm going to cancel my social plans on Friday to make sure I recover. There's a way of saying,
what is that inception point? What is that insight? What is the thing I'm going to shift to do in order to solve that repetitive thought? So what I often ask people is, what is your most repetitive
thought? Audit it throughout the day, write it down. What's the thought that you keep having?
It could be, what does my boss think of me? What does my boss think of me? What does my boss think
of me? It could be like, is my wife mad at me? Is my wife mad at me?
Whatever it is, whatever that thought is.
And then you're finding the insight and the inspiration
to go and shift that
because that thought's not just going to disappear or go away.
If anything, it's going to get stronger.
So it's like having a low vibration thought
and then counteracting it with something better.
Absolutely.
And not counteracting in the sense of like,
oh, I'm so energized today because that's not going to work. Like it's not lying to yourself.
It's figuring out the act or the behavior that will solve that thought and allow that thought
to leave you naturally. So it's not saying instead of I'm so tired today, oh, I feel great today
because that doesn't work. It's saying I'm so tired and I'm going to do X, Y, Z.
If someone's like, I'm stressed about money and I'm going to go and do this thing to fix
it or to earn more, to save more.
Absolutely.
It's not just, I can't just get, I'm stressed money over and over and over.
Totally.
The repetitive thought of I'm stressed about my money.
I'm stressed about my money.
I'm stressed about my, that doesn't solve it.
Are you going to be able to not ruminate?
I don't know what I really ruminate on.
I'm actually being serious.
I don't know what I ruminate on.
We'll talk off air.
And for people who are like, okay, well,. I don't know. What did I ruminate on? We'll talk off air. And for people who are like,
okay, well, maybe, I don't know.
One of the ways I would do this is at one point in my life,
I listened to Steve Jobs'
Stanford commencement speech every day
for nine months in a row.
And not only did I know all the words off by heart,
the words really rewired my brain.
Like, I think a lot of people think
I have to find the new next thing.
Sometimes I just find like doubling down on one thing that speaks to you. When I interviewed Matthew McConaughey on
my podcast and any interaction I've had with him, I said to him that I listened to his Oscars
acceptance speech. It's only five minutes when he won it for Dallas Buyers Club a few years back.
I used to listen to that every day for 30 days in a row. It starts to rewire the way you think,
because guess what? You're just repeating a thought anyway. So why not repeat another thought? I listen every single night to Louise Hay evening
meditation. And it's, it's the same. It just does something to me that like fills me up before I go
to bed. And you're so right. The repetitiveness of it, even if sometimes I'm not even listening
to it, it's like seeping into me. I think people can do that
with good books too. Like I always think if you find something that's amazing, like you don't
have to just read it once and be done. Totally. Right. One thing that I always take that's
essential is a multivitamin every day. Easy. And the multivitamin that I take is clinically backed.
It's clean, it's bioavailable,
and you can also trace all the ingredients, which I appreciate. And it is by Ritual. It's
called Essential for Women 18+. I also took their vitamin when I was pregnant. There's a pregnancy
vitamin that they make that's really great. So if you're pregnant, I would definitely check out
their pregnancy vitamins. Everything is such high quality. They have nine key nutrients
in a two delayed release capsule per day. So you take two a day. It's gentle on an empty stomach.
I take mine in the morning. It has like a minty essence in every bottle, which is enjoyable. I
don't want to take a multivitamin and feel like it's like coming back up. That's so gross. And
ritual is so easy to take, which is a
big selling point for me. But most importantly, they really focus on vitamin D and omega-3 DHA.
These are two things that a lot of women are low on. And I actually had my levels checked before
I took Ritual and those were the two things I was low on. And now I'm not low anymore. So thank you,
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One thing that always has to be by me when I'm podcasting is a hot cup of tea. I just feel like
I'm talking on a mic so much all day long that it's really important to support my throat and I need a hot
cup of green tea. So today I'm drinking Lipton's green tea. This is absolutely amazing because it
has flavonoids in it, which are amazing to support your health. I really like that this green tea is
a little bit lemony. I'm a big lemon fan. You guys know this if you listen to the podcast,
but my favorite way to have this
is actually not hot. It's in a pitcher. I get like a clear glass pitcher and I put tons of ice in
there. I throw in some mint from the garden, some lemon, make sure it's Meyer lemon. That's even
better. And then I'll do some sliced ginger and throw it in there with a couple of bags of Lipton
green tea. And then I'll put it in the fridge for a couple
hours and it's absolutely delicious. It's so hot in Austin right now, so it's really versatile.
I like that I can have this when I'm podcasting, but then I also like it that I can have it when
I'm cooling down. I'm someone that tries to monitor my coffee intake. I think one cup a day
is the max for me, or I'm like shaky and strung out. So having tea like throughout the day gives me something to do with my hands.
It gives me something to sip on that isn't just plain water.
If you haven't tried Lipton Green Tea, you have to.
It has 100 milligrams of flavonoids.
It also has zero calories and zero sugar.
Try some of this delicious Lipton green tea today. I have recently lost 60 pounds
and a huge part of the way that I've done that is weightlifting and the other part is protein.
I completely upped my protein. I got so serious about eating protein before anything at every
meal. And when I'm on the go or I don't have time or I'm
running out the door or I'm recording a show, I always will have like a protein powder on hand.
So there's this protein that I was sent. It's called Equipped Foods Prime Protein.
And what I like about it is it's made with grass fed beef. This is amazing. I just love grass-fed beef in general. I eat so much steak. And to know
there's a protein powder that is actually grass-fed beef protein is insane. It is filled
with amino acids. I think this helps grow my hair, my nails. It has all nine essential amino acids in
it, which is amazing. And it's 20 grams of protein.
So what I'll do is I'll do a scoop, a scoop and a half, sometimes two if I'm in a jam,
and then I'll put some fiber powder in there. And sometimes I'll put a little bit of chocolate
raw milk in it and I'll froth it up. It's so good. If you are looking to up your aminos,
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What are your other micro habits? So the next one is mindfulness or meditation.
And the way I describe this is a bit simpler.
So of course, I have a daily program on Calm
where people can meditate with me seven minutes a day,
every single day of the year.
I like that.
I've listened to that before.
It's beautiful.
Thank you.
That's so kind.
Yeah.
And it's been one of my favorite things we've done.
We've literally created a new piece of content
five days a week, every day of the week for the last two and a half years now. Oh, that's a one of my favorite things we've done. We've literally created a new piece of content five days a week, every day of the week
for the last two and a half years now.
Oh, that's a lot of work too.
It's a lot, but it's been beautiful.
And so of course you can pick up a meditation practice.
We could talk about so many,
but to me, meditation starts simply
with a scheduled five minutes at the beginning of your day
and a scheduled five minutes at the end of your day.
It's in your calendar
and you just check in with yourself. At the beginning of the day, you check in with yourself
and you just sit there for five minutes and you ask yourself, what do I need to do today
to make it a great day? What's the one thing I need to do today to make today a great day?
That one thing could be to call your mom. That one thing could be to have the uncomfortable
conversation at work. That one thing could be to tuck your kids in tonight because you haven't been able to do
that. What's the one thing that's going to make today a great day? Just sit with that question.
And at the end of the day, ask yourself, how does it feel if I've done that one thing today?
And if I haven't, how am I going to shift that tomorrow? How am I going to be able to break
that? And so meditation to me just starts with having time with yourself. That's really where it begins. And I think if a lot of
people actually put that in their calendar, they won't miss it. I always say to people, if it's not
in your schedule, it's not going to happen. I live and die by my schedule. It's all planned out,
whether it's rest time, meditation time, eating, whatever it may be. And it's life-changing because
you don't have to think. The fourth one is obvious.
It's exercise. I have to exercise every day and I try and make exercise entertaining. I believe
that workouts become easier if they have two qualities. If they are competitive, I like working
out when it's competitive. So I play a lot of pickleball right now and that's my cardio that
I'm getting from being competitive. And I like it when it's collaborative.
I like it when I'm doing it with someone else.
I like it when I have someone else to go on a hike with or work out with, whether that
be a trainer or a friend.
And so exercises are non-negotiable for me every single day.
And then the final one is sleep.
For me, I need to sleep and I don't have kids.
So I totally empathize with someone who can't follow these patterns.
But for me, I have to be asleep before 10 p.m.
Ideally, me and my wife are getting into bed at 9, 9.15.
And then I'm getting eight, eight and a half hours of sleep in a great day.
So that's T-I-M-E-S.
It's thankfulness, insight, meditation, exercise, and sleep.
It spells times.
And those are my five habits that are non-negotiable five days a week.
I love that.
Times. And you can do them all for free. All free. And you don't have to learn anything. times and those are my five habits that are non-negotiable five days a week i love that time
and you can do them all for free all free how and you don't have to learn anything how do you
as a business person and an entrepreneur think about time like like even like down to like your
meetings so that's such a great question i have so much to say about i'm so glad you asked me that
no one ever asked me that so i like i love stuff. I think people don't realize you've built massive businesses and a massive brand for
yourself.
And that's not by accident.
It's not because you learned-
No, and tell us every little tip.
You didn't learn to meditate in a cave and then just become-
I love talking about time.
Yes.
So I will write, so first of all, I define our work as entertainment and education.
So entrepreneurially, that's how I see my work.
I have an entertainment side of the business and we have an educational side of the business.
The entertainment is everything from social media to books, to podcasts, to anything we do that is
like forward facing in the public. And most of that's absolutely free. And then the educational
sides are programming, courses,
certifications, et cetera, which is the educational side of building those skills now that you've heard about. And for me, what I try and do is what is my big goal for this 12 months in each of those
areas? Like what is my number one goal? Then what I'll do is I'll break that goal into four sub goals
for every quarter of the year. Give us an example. So my example
would be, let me choose one that I've done in the past, which is easier. Maybe the podcast.
Yeah. So fine. So let's take, well, let me not take the podcast. Cause I feel like that may be,
I may be too far away from that now. So let's take a book. I'm working on my next book. That's,
that's the best one. I'm working on my next book, my third book. And so my big goal is by the end of this year, I should have a clear plan, intention, and direction for the narrative
of this book. And I should have begun writing this book. That's what I've done at the start
of the year. Now I'm going to break that down into four subsections. So for quarter one, I'm
going to spend quarter one focused on what I think the book should be about
and planning and reflecting on the direction. So I'm going to be researching. Quarter one is all
research. Quarter two is now reviewing and compiling my research to make my hypothesis
clear. Quarter three is pitching to my editors and my agent to see if they vibe with it and then
editing it and reviewing it and to make it better.
And then quarter four is finalizing the plan and the deadline and everything else that
comes with it.
Now, inside each quarter, I'm breaking down that goal.
So if the first quarter is research, I'm breaking down research into what is the goal for each
month.
So in every quarter, there's three months.
What is the goal for January? What's the goal for February? What's the goal for each month. So in every quarter, there's three months. What is the goal for January? What's
the goal for February? What's the goal for March? And how many of these projects do you take on at
once in each section? We always have everything running all at the same time. Like our podcast
runs when social media is out there, the book's out there, but I have one big goal in each area
that I'm building that isn't something that's carrying on from the past year. I think it's so important that you talk about this because I think you are one of,
you're an individual that people look to for a lot of things, spirituality,
getting your mind right, all sorts of things, inspiration. And I think sometimes people think
that you can just manifest your way into success. And we're just talking about this on the podcast
where that's part of it, but you have to have the actionable, tangible plans in
practice that you can do every single day, every single quarter, every single year in order to
attain those goals. You can't just think big. You have to actually do the things.
I couldn't agree with you more. And I'm so happy that you both are being proponents of that message
because I feel like so many people have been confused or misled by this idea that you just
create it in your mind. And then all of a sudden it just functions and even building teams. And, you know, I mean, you guys have built an incredible
brand here at Dear Media. Like I said, I'm such a fan of so many of the shows you have. And it's
like, I can, I can only imagine and empathize with how much effort that takes. Yeah. I mean,
I just, I I'm a proponent of talking about it because I think people maybe look at someone
like yourself or Lauren and they, you know, they
see the success on the outside, but I don't think that people really talk enough about
all of the tangible steps and planning and execution that takes.
Yeah, for sure.
What I would say is like, this is the fun part.
Sitting down with you, this is the fun part.
But all the other stuff to get to this part is the stuff people don't see.
All the planning and the coordinating and the teams and all of that.
And I wish more entrepreneurs and creators would talk about the grittier parts because
you want to give people hope and inspiration, but you don't want to give them false hope and
inspiration. I want people to talk about what it actually takes. To me, what changed my mind,
and I highly recommend everyone does this. I'm not affiliated with this company. It's called
Gallup StrengthsFinder, and it's an online test you can do. I've used them for years. We used them when I worked in the corporate world.
And what it does is it helps you rank your top 34 strengths in order. It's a 60 minute test.
I recommend you do it as 60 minutes. Don't try rush through it. Really take your time with it.
And you answer these questions. And what it does is it ranks your top 34 strengths in order.
And I always
thought up until that point, my strengths, and a lot of us may even think we know what our strengths
are. Like I thought my strengths were communication and ideation and those were in my top five,
but my number one strength was strategy. And I was just like, I looked at that. I remember this
was years ago now. And I looked at that and I was like, gosh, I didn't even know that. And I was
like, I wasn't really aware of that. And so I didn't even know how to use it. And it's almost like you have a tool in your
toolkit, but you didn't know it's there. It's like at the bottom of the kit. So you haven't
even used it effectively. And ever since I saw that, I just went all in on that. And I've realized
that for me, art and strategy are the two things that need to go together in order to create impact.
So if you're only strategic and you're not artistic, it may not be that fun.
Like this is the art part, right?
This is the art, like sitting on a podcast, having a conversation, like
writing a book.
But there is strategy of you being on this podcast because there's assets you can
pull, there's, you can distribute it in different ways.
So it is mixing art and strategy, what you're doing right now.
Correct.
But it's why I think many, and I'm just gonna pick on some creative people or people that deem themselves as creatives get frustrated because
to your point, maybe they're missing the strategic part. Like why is people, why aren't people loving
what I'm doing and the work I'm putting out there? So, well, if you're not being thoughtful about how
you get it seen and how you get it out there. I thought about that. I mean, you know, I think
when I first started creating work, I maybe wasn't as strategic because I don't think you are in the
beginning. You're just creating something that you find beautiful and magical and interesting and fascinating.
And I used to do events in London where a couple of times zero people showed up because I didn't
let anyone know that it was happening. And I just assumed that someone would see a random poster.
And I'm talking about like physical posters, not even online. And I remember where five people
showed up or like 10 people showed up. And I did that for years. And what I realized is I'm the same person I was then. The only difference was
that I had to learn the value of strategy. And I agree with you, by the way, if you're a creative,
who's comfortable with the idea that someone may never see your work until you die or until after
you die, that's amazing. Like I commend you. That's beautiful. If you have that mindset,
I don't, I want to create stuff that people see and they consume and it helps amazing. Like I commend you, that's beautiful. If you have that mindset. I don't, I wanna create stuff that people see
and they consume and it helps them.
And I get to partake in that experience
and I'm not scared to admit that.
I think that's okay.
And I'm just being honest with myself.
And so to me, getting strategic is really, really important
and strategy to make it simple for someone
is the people that are winning at something
are because they've deeply studied what they do.
I often give the example of Mr. Beast.
Mr. Beast isn't the best YouTuber because of anything else but the fact that he has
studied YouTube more deeply and intimately than any person on the planet.
It's just fact.
He's a practitioner.
He's a practitioner.
He has studied and practiced and tested for longer and harder and deeper than anyone on the planet.
And that is why he's the biggest YouTuber in the world. It's not because he got lucky. I'm sure
there's luck involved. Of course there is. It's not because he had money to start off with. It's
not because of something else. It's because he studied. And so I think when you're looking at
an industry you want to be great in, go and study the greats. And I think we don't do that. We
always think like, oh, they just got a lucky shot and, oh, they had a random TikTok that went viral. And it's like,
yeah, sure. But how did someone use that to build as opposed to that luck?
Yeah. And you've been doing this long enough where I'm sure you've seen, like, we have
many people kind of come and go that have those viral moments. But what I look to now is like,
who's really had staying power and longevity and built upon a foundation that started as something
and then gone to something else. Absolutely. And your first play will always be organic. Like your first
video won't get a million views. Your first video won't get a hundred thousand comments. It won't
get the most amount of likes and it will just be art. And that's beautiful. But if you want it to
be what you do all day and you want it to be a real thing, you have to get strategic about it.
I love the story of the three little pigs. Like you have to build a house of brick.
Everyone should go read that story again
because I was reading it to my kids.
It's like, what, do you want to build a house of hay?
What's the other one?
A house of...
Hay sticks and stones.
Yeah, sticks and stones or hay or the bricks.
And if you're building a house of bricks,
it's laying it brick by brick.
What is something that the audience wouldn't know about?
You have so much content out there.
What's something that would be surprising for them to learn?
That's such a great question.
Usually I talk about my PlayStation addiction,
but I'm trying to think of something that...
It's hard for me too to think of this.
Because we talk about so much stuff.
Maybe you're like, I lay it on the line. I do. I say a lot. It's hard for me too To think of this Because we talk Because we talk about So much stuff And maybe there's nothing
Maybe you're like
I lay it on the line
I do
I say a lot
I'm trying to think
And maybe Annie or Elena
Can help me out
You guys know me well
I'm wondering if there's
Something that
You think people don't
What?
Go on
Disneyland
I'm addicted to Disney World
I love Disney
Didn't you get the
Platt Tours or whatever?
I love Disney
I'm like
I think it was because
I went there as a kid
And for me it's the It's the idea that you just walked into someone's mind.
Like the fact that this existed in Walt Disney's mind.
It's wild.
I think about that every second.
It's insane.
It's wild.
And so when I'm there, it's not like, oh, I love the rides.
It's the fact that he's just created.
And I've drunk the Kool-Aid.
Like it is the happiest place on earth.
Wait, but did you know that the brother was the strategy?
No, I did not know that. So he has but did you know that the brother was the strategy? No, I did not know that.
So he has art and strategy, but the brother was the strategy.
What is the brother's name?
Roy.
Disney released, I think, a documentary when they released Disney Plus.
Is that what it's called?
The stream of Disney Plus.
Yeah.
How do they like that plug?
But the guy just butchered it.
But it was kind of cool because they showed all the hardships that they went through and
how the brother kind of like saved the financing and the funding and helped him execute
on the vision you're inspired by the house of bricks that yeah they built absolutely but it
is insane to go there and see the detail and be like this came out of someone's mind it is wild
and this time i went i took my friend for his birthday and it was the first time i'd ever got
a tour guide and i just want to give a shout out to Lexi, who's amazing. I absolutely love her.
And she was, she knew every detail of every little hidden meaning.
Obviously, like she's, you know, she like, you know, she's an expert in Disney.
And I was just like geeking out.
I was like, I can't believe the amount of detail and level and texture that's gone into this.
I would give a shout out to the tour guide we had, except he ate my big pickle.
So, yeah, I'm still salty about that.
Six pickles for six people. And I gave his pickle to the plaid.
And it was fine.
He needed the pickle.
By the way, the big pickle at Disneyland, have you had it?
No, I haven't.
You got to get the big giant pickle.
It looks like a moose knuckle.
And also then you got to go to the Dole Whip stand.
Have you had Dole Whip?
I don't know if I can.
I'm plant-based.
I don't know if it's...
Oh, I don't think you can.
Yeah, I don't think I can. It's pretty good. Speaking of plant-based,
your wife wrote a book that she sent me that's beautiful on a plant-based diet. You eat plant-based
too? Yes. You both eat plant-based? Yes. And how do you like that? Tell us all the positives that
you've seen. So my wife has been my health coach. I would say I knew very little about the human
body. I was very fixed on the human mind when I met her. And so I've always been like fascinated by the mind and
meditation and mind control. And she's always been fascinated. She's a nutritionist and dietitian by
education. And so she's always been fascinated by the human body. And so really anything I'm
about to say is things she's taught me. I ate meat growing up. I became vegetarian when I was around 15, 16 maybe,
and then became plant-based when I married her eight years ago. And so I have felt lighter,
better, healthier. I think I had to really figure out protein intake, which was the only thing that
I had to solve for, which was slightly challenging or I had to be more thoughtful about, but really
I'm spoiled. I'm married to someone who cooks amazing food.
Beautiful food.
I don't have to really think about it
and I depend on her a lot for it.
And thankfully she loves cooking too
and it's her thing, so.
Tell her to come on here.
We can talk about it.
Yeah, I'd love that.
That's so kind of you guys.
Michael can live vicariously through you
because I'm about,
I don't home cook anything.
Well, maybe if Jay's wife comes on,
she'll inspire you to cook.
Maybe.
You don't like cooking?
No, I like cooking some things. Not Maybe. You don't like cooking? No, I like cooking some things.
I don't like cooking at all.
I'll get on the grill once in a while.
I'll cook some breakfast.
He makes a mean French toast.
Listen, I make a mean French toast.
Nice.
What is next for you?
What are you working on?
Where can everyone find you?
I would highly recommend everyone go get Junie.
Is peach the best flavor?
Peach is my favorite.
Peach is my favorite. Peach is my favorite.
Yeah, peach is my favorite.
I'm not going to lie.
This would be good with tequila.
Ooh.
Yeah, if we drank,
then that would definitely be a...
I would have definitely done that partnership.
No, I haven't drank for...
Long time.
Oh, yeah.
A long, long time now.
We don't drink that much anymore.
That's good to know.
I had two margaritas last night.
Oh, you did?
I love that.
I love that.
Yeah.
Tell us what you're working on where everyone
can go shop. Today happens to be an exciting day. We have, um, I have a partnership launching with
match.com. Uh, we wanted to pair people up based on their values. And so it gets that awareness
out there. So you can go to match.com forward slash J the goal was to create an alternative
dating experience and help people date differently. I found that it's a tough space out there. It's
difficult, but if we can go out there with this awareness about respect for each other's values,
it would be an awesome thing for people who are serious about dating. I'm working on my new book
right now. I went on tour last year, which was amazing. I want to thank everyone who came out
and supported me. I'm sure many of your audience was there. So I want to give a big thank you.
We did nearly 40 cities. It was across the whole world. Went and did, you know,
we did three shows at the Sydney Opera House.
We went Brisbane,
Melbourne.
We went London,
all across England,
15 cities in America.
You needed your Saturdays,
It was,
yeah,
I needed my Saturday reset.
Yeah,
you needed a couple Saturdays.
It was amazing.
So I want to thank everyone
for that.
And right now,
we're just working on a lot
of new exciting podcasts
coming out.
We've had some amazing guests
on recently that I've learned
so much from.
Kim Kardashian?
I'm on fire with the guests.
Yeah,
Kim came on last year,
was it?
That's cool.
Yeah,
Kim came on last year.
She was amazing.
Yeah,
you get some
incredible guests, man.
Thank you, man.
Thank you.
It's been a real,
we've been very fortunate
and very grateful
to have some amazing
relationships offline
and love recording them.
We were going to get
some good guests
until we made this
whole episode
about moose knuckles
and now we're going
to scare everyone.
Where can everyone
shop Junie?
Junie now just went into 1,500 targets around the United States,
so hopefully a target near you.
It's also in 400 sprouts across the U.S.,
so you can get it at Sprouts.
And it's at Air One if you're a California person,
so Air One as well.
And we also went into Gelson's.
We went into Amazon, of course.
We're pretty much everywhere now,
so please, please, please go and check it out
we hope that it can boost you for a happy mind it's it's my uh midday pick me up when i'm
recording it's delicious it really is it's not like you know what i like about it it's chill
it's like it's what's the word effervescence effort effervescence yeah that it gives that
it's it's not like overwhelming i don't like having a drink that's overwhelming.
I like something that's just like a little essence.
Do you know what I mean?
I love that.
Yeah.
This was part of my education from my wife.
When I met my wife, I literally relied on sugary sodas and a chocolate bar every single
day or a sugar heavy energy bar every single day.
And she was trying to train me off my bad habits.
And soda was the hardest one to kick
because a sprite or whatever it may have been would have been my go-to so we made this with
zero grams of sugar only five calories it's got lion's mane reishi mushroom ashwagandha green tea
we wanted to introduce people to all of these adaptogens juni stands for just you and i cute
it was a way of reminding us to have more moments with the people we love. Junie, Jay Shetty, thank you for coming on.
Come back anytime.
I could have asked you a whole other.
I just have so many questions.
I'd love to come back.
You guys are the best.
That was so much fun.
I'm surprised it took us this long.
We're going to see you in France.
Yes, I love it.
And I love how you led me on about Moose Knuckles.
That was genius.
I will have Moose Knuckle in the audience.
You'll know exactly who it is.
Okay, I love it.
He's in a pastel short.
He'll wave his Moose Knuckle at you from the audience.
I hope this is to have a wonderful friendship, honestly.
It was such a joy sitting with you both.
Thank you, Jay.
You're awesome.
Thank you so much.
Thank you.
Appreciate you.