The Tim Ferriss Show - #363: Tea Time with Tim — How to Find Mentors, Decrease Anxiety Through Training, and Much More
Episode Date: March 11, 2019Welcome to a special episode called Tea Time with Tim, in which I solicited phone numbers and called a handful of you to field any questions that you might have.Among other topics, we discuss...:How to go about finding a mentor.The meaning of life.How to extinguish anxiety.Cocktails.Relationship advice.Training into confidence.Without further ado, please enjoy this tea-fueled Q&A!Click here for the show notes for this episode.This podcast is brought to you by Peloton, which has become a staple of my daily routine. I picked up this bike after seeing the success of my friend Kevin Rose, and I've been enjoying it more than I ever imagined. Peloton is an indoor cycling bike that brings live studio classes right to your home. No worrying about fitting classes into your busy schedule or making it to a studio with a crazy commute.New classes are added every day, and this includes options led by elite NYC instructors in your own living room. You can even live stream studio classes taught by the world's best instructors, or find your favorite class on demand.Peloton is offering listeners to this show a special offer. Visit onepeloton.com and enter the code TIM at checkout to receive $100 off accessories with your Peloton bike purchase. This is a great way to get in your workouts, or an incredible gift. Again, that's onepeloton.com and enter the code TIM.This podcast is also brought to you by WordPress, my go-to platform for 24/7-supported, zero downtime blogging, writing online, creating websites — everything! I love it to bits, and the lead developer, Matt Mullenweg, has appeared on this podcast many times.Whether for personal use or business, you're in good company with WordPress, which used by The New Yorker, Jay Z, Beyonce, FiveThirtyEight, TechCrunch, TED, CNN, and Time, just to name a few. A source at Google told me that WordPress offers "the best out-of-the-box SEO imaginable," which is probably why it runs nearly 30% of the Internet. Go to WordPress.com/Tim to get 15% off your website today!***If you enjoy the podcast, would you please consider leaving a short review on Apple Podcasts/iTunes? It takes less than 60 seconds, and it really makes a difference in helping to convince hard-to-get guests. I also love reading the reviews!For show notes and past guests, please visit tim.blog/podcast.Sign up for Tim’s email newsletter (“5-Bullet Friday”) at tim.blog/friday.For transcripts of episodes, go to tim.blog/transcripts.Interested in sponsoring the podcast? Please fill out the form at tim.blog/sponsor.Discover Tim’s books: tim.blog/books.Follow Tim:Twitter: twitter.com/tferriss Instagram: instagram.com/timferrissFacebook: facebook.com/timferriss YouTube: youtube.com/timferrissPast guests on The Tim Ferriss Show include Jerry Seinfeld, Hugh Jackman, Dr. Jane Goodall, LeBron James, Kevin Hart, Doris Kearns Goodwin, Jamie Foxx, Matthew McConaughey, Esther Perel, Elizabeth Gilbert, Terry Crews, Sia, Yuval Noah Harari, Malcolm Gladwell, Madeleine Albright, Cheryl Strayed, Jim Collins, Mary Karr, Maria Popova, Sam Harris, Michael Phelps, Bob Iger, Edward Norton, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Neil Strauss, Ken Burns, Maria Sharapova, Marc Andreessen, Neil Gaiman, Neil de Grasse Tyson, Jocko Willink, Daniel Ek, Kelly Slater, Dr. Peter Attia, Seth Godin, Howard Marks, Dr. Brené Brown, Eric Schmidt, Michael Lewis, Joe Gebbia, Michael Pollan, Dr. Jordan Peterson, Vince Vaughn, Brian Koppelman, Ramit Sethi, Dax Shepard, Tony Robbins, Jim Dethmer, Dan Harris, Ray Dalio, Naval Ravikant, Vitalik Buterin, Elizabeth Lesser, Amanda Palmer, Katie Haun, Sir Richard Branson, Chuck Palahniuk, Arianna Huffington, Reid Hoffman, Bill Burr, Whitney Cummings, Rick Rubin, Dr. Vivek Murthy, Darren Aronofsky, and many more.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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At this altitude, I can run flat out for a half mile before my hands start shaking.
Can I ask you a personal question?
Now would have seemed the perfect time.
What if I did the opposite?
I'm a cybernetic organism, living tissue over a metal endoskeleton.
The Tim Ferriss Show.
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Hello, boys and girls. This is Tim Ferriss, and welcome to another episode of The Tim Ferriss Show. This episode is not going to be a long-form interview where I distill and deconstruct
world-class performers. In fact, it is going to be nothing of the sort. It is a Q&A episode. This is Tea Time with Tim,
or Timmy or Timbo if you prefer, where I solicited phone numbers from all of you and called a handful
of you to field any questions that you might have. And I've done these before. They're always a lot
of fun for me to do. And among other topics covered in
the various phone calls that you will hear in this episode, how to find mentors, how do I think about
finding mentors, how have I found mentors in the past, discussions of meaning, Viktor Frankl, and
so on, how to get rid of anxiety or train into confidence, We talk about that as it relates to a handful of things.
Cocktails, relationship advice, we go all over the place. And I hope you enjoy this as much as I
enjoyed recording it. So without further ado, here is Tea Time with Tim.
Hello? Is this Edwin? Yes, it is. Edwin, this is Tim Ferris calling. Good afternoon. Hey, Tim, how you doing? Oh, man, I can't believe this is real.
It's real. I'm afraid. I have called the first person. You have definitely made my day here.
Well, me too. Okay.
Me too.
So let's jump right into it.
How can I help?
And I can't promise I can help, but I'll try to answer whatever questions you might have.
I appreciate that.
So my question is about mentors.
So what guidance do you have for finding a mentor to kind of help maybe gain a better understanding about an industry?
And I think more importantly,
how would you, or what guidance do you have for asking someone to be a mentor? How do you approach them? How do you kind of break that or make that initial contact?
I can actually answer this one. So the first rule of thumb is that I would highly advise
against ever asking someone directly to be a mentor in using those
words. Because the people you generally will want as a mentor, unless they're retired,
are probably quite busy, and will hear mentor is unpaid part time or a full time job forever.
And therefore, you want to approach it somewhat indirectly. And there are
a few different ways to do that. There's also a resource I can recommend, which is a book
called The Third Door, which I think does a very good job of exploring real-life case studies of
communication that works and communication that doesn't work when you're reaching out to people who are where
you'd like to be or who could be possible mentors even remotely by what they write and so on.
So I would suggest checking out that book.
You know, I'm actually, I have it in my hand. I heard your interview with Alex Benayan on your
podcast. And man, I have to say, I am a fan. It's gotten me through some hard times.
And that's where I initially came across this book. And I'm right around that chapter,
maybe like 60, 70 pages in. And I just read the part where it kind of goes into the intro,
how he kind of talked to you. And so I think that's where that question came from.
Oh, perfect. Great.
Yeah. So I'm just trying to break into this and I'm trying to kind of not
repeat those mistakes
that he highlights in the book, you know?
Yeah, so let me take a stab at saving you from some pitfalls.
The way that I first connected with people
who later became mentors, in a sense,
when I landed in Silicon Valley in 2000 was through volunteering. So I highly
recommend volunteering. And the reason for that is that many organizations, including
entrepreneurial or entrepreneurship focused organizations, that could be the EO, the
Entrepreneurs Organization, it could be Young Presidents Organization, YPO. It could be any
number of others. There are many of them. In Silicon Valley, I volunteered at Thai,
which is the Indus Entrepreneur, even though I'm clearly not Indian, and volunteered at
S-Vase, which at the time was the Silicon Valley Association of Startup Entrepreneurs. And they, given their location
and given their focus, were able to get media to attend to cover speakers, meaning to feature
speakers in articles and so on for Forbes or Fortune, whatever it might be. And that meant
if I were to volunteer, even if I were simply taking tickets or refilling water glasses, both of which I did, I would have an opportunity if I overperformed, which is easy, in fact, in most volunteer capacities, because the people who show up very often have the attitude, I'm not getting paid for this, so I will do the bare minimum that they ask of me. So if you are proactive in asking for
additional responsibility, or is there anything else I can help with? I finished X, can I help
with anything else? If you are proactive and really responsible and get things done on time,
you'll very often find that they will be more than happy to give you additional responsibility.
And that is how I ended up ultimately sitting in on
planning meetings and volunteering to act as a speaker liaison for an event, which allowed me
to reach out to people I wanted to get to know, like Jack Canfield, who is the co-creator,
is the co-creator of Chicken Soup for the Soul, which has sold hundreds of millions of copies, the person who commercialized Creatine first, Creatine Monohydrate, that is,
the creator of the Pet Brock. I had a very motley crew of folks I wanted to assemble.
And there had to be something in it for them. And what was in it for them was speaking in front of
an audience of entrepreneurs with media in attendance to cover them.
So I was not asking them for any favors.
In fact, I was asking them if they'd be willing to receive media coverage, in effect,
and also interact with other people at their level.
And during that event, I wanted to do one thing,
and it was not ask them if they could be a mentor. It was to demonstrate to them that I was very,
very good at doing my job. So I wanted it to be the smoothest speaking experience they've ever had.
I wanted it to be an event to remember. I wanted to ensure that they had the media contacts they wanted to have, interactions that is. And following that event, I later, much later, maybe a month or two later, reached out after thanking the speakers, each speaker separately and as a group, to say, ping, I think it was Jack Canfield at the time. And I used an approach that was similar
to what I outlined in the four hour work week, when reaching out to experts who are above your
pay grade. And in effect said, you know, Jack, I really enjoyed our interactions. I hope we get to
meet again. And if it's okay with you, I'd love to very rarely, but if the occasion calls for it,
send you a question that overlaps with your deep experience. If I'm totally stuck after
trying to figure something out. And it was along those lines. And Jack, then, I kept in touch with.
Now, it's important for me to qualify what that means.
Keep in touch with does not mean pester.
It does not mean send him quarterly updates.
It does not mean clog his inbox.
It means that maybe once every six to 12 months, I would send him a legitimate question, and I would indicate what I'd already tried to do to
answer the question. This is really important. So if you reach out to a potential mentor or someone
who has more life experience and you say, hi, Tim, I was just wondering, I'm studying this in
school. What should I do? That's a terrible question because it doesn't reflect if you've
actually tried to figure it out on your own,
or if you're using me for your personal Google.
It also does not lend itself to a specific answer.
So you have to ask yourself,
is this a question that this person could answer in four lines or less?
And if you look at the question and realize it's going to take them a half hour to answer it
because you're asking them for the meaning of life and to explain their trajectory and how they grew their career, then it's a bad question.
Because you have more time than they do.
And you should be aware of that from the outset.
So generally the question I'd love to ask you is, X, here are the things I've already tried.
My tentative plan is this.
If you have any other thoughts,
I would really appreciate them.
And if you're too busy to respond,
I totally understand.
So give them an out
so that they feel comfortable not responding
and completely unpressured.
This is very important
and perhaps counterintuitively,
that'll get you more answers.
Because what many younger go-getters will do
is they'll send an email and they'll finish it with looking forward to your reply or i have
tuesday at 2 p.m and thursday at 1 p.m central open which one works for you and it's so presumptive
yeah and aggressive that the no matter what the content of that email,
the person receiving it will be likely to think to themselves, well, shit, if I, if I reward this
person with a response to this email, I am encouraging them to send me 20 more of these
emails. And I don't want to do that. So I'm not going to respond. So that's one approach.
And I would also encourage you to look for a South by Southwest talk that I gave, which, funny enough, coincides with South by Southwest starting right now, today and tomorrow in Austin, Texas, in early March. But the talk is titled,
How to Build a World-Class Network in Record Time, or something equally hyperbolic. In any case,
it is, though, an accurate reflection of the talk. And you may be able to find it on the podcast.
So there's a chance that I took the audio and put it on the, on the podcast. But if you, if you Google how to build a world-class
network in record time and Tim Ferriss, something will pop up, whether it is a video recording
of the presentation at South by, or it is audio on the podcast itself, which I do think
I had repurposed the audio for. So those are my thoughts. If you're
reading The Third Door, I think that will also complement a lot of what we're talking about. So
I hope that helps. Does that fill in some gaps, hopefully, or give you some direction?
Yes, definitely. And I mean, I must say it's one thing to read it in a book or to hear it on your
podcast, but kind of to hear it straight from you, it just adds a little more weight to it. And it definitely just makes it sound doable. So I really appreciate it. And I thank you for your time. And I just, you know, your show definitely has been a game changer for me. So thank you for that and keep doing what you're doing. And I really appreciate it. So thank you so much. Thanks so much.
My pleasure, of course.
And I should point out one other thing, which is when I mentioned Jack Canfield, for instance,
I said it once every six to 12 months.
That's a long time.
So that is an indicator that I'm playing the long game, right?
The question you shouldn't be asking, and I don't think you are, but the question you shouldn't be asking is how can I find a mentor for the next 12 months? If you're
looking for something like that, it's going to end up being somewhat transactional and you're going to
have to force something within a context of a group like the entrepreneurs organization,
where people are going there explicitly for that purpose to learn from one another, to teach, and so on. Otherwise,
I would encourage you to reframe the question in your head. So the question isn't, how do I get a
mentor? The question is, how can I encourage people I aspire to be like, who are 10, 20,
30 years ahead of me, to respect me and want me to succeed? That's a better question. How do I get people, say,
five, 10, 20 years ahead of me, whose paths I might want to emulate, how do I get those people
to respect me and want me to succeed? And if you do that, that's a precursor to them helping you in ways that resemble those of a mentor. But the word mentor is probably
a word that will never come up, even though in practice, that's what they will be doing for you.
Does that make sense? Yes, it does. And I think that's, it's one of those Tim Ferriss hidden gems.
And I think that's the exact answer I was hoping for. That's the exact type
of answer I was hoping for. And it's, yeah, I think you answered it perfectly. And so just a
last question here. So what do you think about the handwritten follow-up notes? Sometimes they
say, you know, emails are better. Sometimes they say, you know, handwritten, you know,
thank you notes for even just, you know, asking these questions via, you know, a handwritten
letter or what have you. Do you have any thoughts on if one is better than
the other? I don't think a handwritten letter is necessary. And a lot of people, myself included,
do not want to give out their mailing addresses, even if it's a PO box. So I would say it's
unnecessary. Giving someone a handwritten note at an event is a different story
and i do recommend that but you can listen to the talk that i gave on that topic at south by
southwest and on the podcast which i mentioned earlier and that will get into details on that
all right my man. Thank you.
I will leave you to it. Good luck and nice chatting with you.
Thank you. You too. Have a great day.
All right. Bye-bye.
Steve, this is Tim Ferriss calling. Good afternoon.
Oh my gosh. How are you doing? I'm doing great. I am doing fantastic. It's a beautiful day. And I am excited to attempt
to answer any question you might have. So I am happy to let you take it from here.
Well, this is amazing. And I'm so excited to talk to you. I actually had two different
questions. I didn't know if you wanted more of a kind of meaning of life question
or if you prefer like a job kind of question.
I would say pick, if you could only get one of them answered,
pick that one because that may be the case
because I want to make sure that I am able to call more than a few people.
So I would say pick the one you would most like to have answered if
you had to choose one. And then if it goes quickly, then we can consider a second one,
but we'll try one. Okay, great. Well, so recently I've read Man's Search for Meaning,
and it was just a great book, and it really made a big impact on me and made me think a lot about purpose and finding meaning in life. And I guess my question for you is, you've reached such a level, how do you continue to find purpose in
your life? Has it evolved? You know, what would you say your purpose is right now?
This is a good question. Big question as well. I would say that I'll try to tackle that in a somewhat meandering fashion. So, the first thing I would say is my approach
to book writing, my approach to the podcast, my approach to the television shows I've been
involved with has had a common thread that is very, very simple. People might even consider it simplistic. And
that is, if I have a pain or a problem, or if I have a desire or a goal, I assume it is very
likely that many other people have the same pains or problems or desires or goals. So most of what I do is scratching my own itch with the expectation
that if I can figure out how to navigate any of those things well and take good notes and
test a lot so that I can try the hundred things to filter down to the one or two that truly have a disproportionately
good outcome, that that is a straightforward way of adding value to the world and not just
consuming oxygen and eating resources. So that is my general process, which is a way of backing into your question about what is giving me meaning right now.
What is giving me meaning right now is looking at some of the traumatic experiences I had as a child,
looking at the repercussions of that and the behaviors or thought patterns that are impossible to explain that I still have in some cases without
looking in the rearview mirror and somehow metabolizing or integrating what happened
to me that never had a sense of closure.
And that then ties into a lot of the research I'm supporting related to treatment-resistant depression, related to long-term demoralization in, say, AIDS survivors at UCSF, and a lot of what I'm hoping to do with universities and other groups, including Johns Hopkins at the top of the list. And
for me then, it's assuming that right now, for me, that everyone is fighting battles we know
nothing about. Like, literally everyone. There is some degree of suffering, whether it's minor or major, chronic or acute,
that everyone walking around you see. I mean, I'm looking out a high rise right now,
down at the ground, so I see these hundreds of ants, which will soon be thousands and tens of
thousands with South by Southwest, and assuming that every one of those people has some type of suffering,
past or present tense, that is affecting how they make decisions, how they interact,
how they view themselves. And if I can provide any tools whatsoever to decrease that suffering
and to allow them to help other people who are suffering, then I view that as time very, very well spent. So, that's how I'm
thinking about it right now. But I'm not wedded to that, and I think it can fluctuate. I do think the
Filling the Void chapter in the four-hour workweek, which is probably the most neglected
yet most important chapter in some respects in that entire book, towards the tail end,
ties into a lot of the observations that you would read in Viktor Frankl's book and books,
for that matter. And so, there are certainly complementary chapters and books that you could digest. But when in doubt, I would say,
instead of trying to save the world, look at how you can save yourself or help yourself in some
fashion. And by doing something that seems very selfish on the surface, you're actually being very practical because you are scratching your own
itch in such a fashion that you're not purely speculating. You're dealing with the real world,
even if it is limited to you, which I can pretty much guarantee you, if it's any type
of suffering, if it's any type of desire, there's a very, very high likelihood, probably 100%,
but let's just call it very high likelihood,
that there are thousands at a minimum and probably millions of people in the world with
some close cousin of that, if not the exact same thing in their daily experience.
So, that's how I currently am thinking about it.
But I should also say that there's no one right answer here. your set because you've carefully crafted this art to change the emotional state of people who
are sitting within 50 feet of you that and if that gave you meaning uh and certainly i think that's
uh i think that is meaningful i think that's very meaningful uh even though other people who
might sit on the sidelines and judge, which is usually the people
who judge, by the way, it's not the people in the arena who are actually scraping their knees and
getting things done, but the peanut gallery on the internet and on the side, criticizing you,
saying that you should be spending your time a different way. There is no should. This is,
we're not dealing with, you know, the natural laws or physical, hard scientific laws that are sort of,
I mean, we can get into a conversation of objectivity, but let's just call them objective
truths for the sake of this thought exercise. We're dealing with your perception of what matters.
And your perception of what matters, I think,
though you should listen to other people, and I encourage you to talk to other people about
how they think about it, your perception of what matters is your perception of what matters. And
you can own that, and you can consider it valid. I would say that it's helpful as you're walking around in the world as a perceiving machine to perhaps read or listen to certain books like Awareness by Anthony DeMello would be one recommendation that I would have.
But I'll stop talking in a second because this is a long answer,
but I can't give the meaning of life, but I can tell you where I think my most leveraged
point of focus is for creating meaning as I feel it today. And it's not a purely cognitive exercise, I should say. It's not
that I think about it and sit down with a spreadsheet, although with some of the
investments and donations I make in science, I do think about the downstream effects of certain
landmark studies, for instance. So, I do use an analytical side to it. But the
analytical is more, in my case, these days for the execution. So I really try to feel with what do I
get a whole body yes to that makes me and other people feel better, or that in some fashion solves a problem or helps me or others to get what they're hoping
to have, or gives people hope, then enables them in some fashion, you know, what, what is the
feeling that I want, right? So instead of saying, how do I find meaning, say, like, what is the
feeling I hope to have, when I find meaning, or sort of an antecedent, or if you can kind of diagnose what you need
by looking at the symptoms, the side effects,
which would be how you would feel.
Like if you were doing something really meaningful,
what would that give you that you don't currently have?
And then try to map that
as you're talking about different ideas,
different topics, different ways you could spend your time.
Like when does that feeling come up? And then if you use that as one criterion for deciding
where you might want to focus to create meaning, then you can use the analytical
to build a plan for executing on everything we just described. But that's a long answer to a short
question. Hopefully that wasn't completely word salad. Did any of that make any sense whatsoever?
That was incredible. And thank you so much. That's extremely helpful in my situation. And
I just really appreciate you taking the time to answer my situation. And, um, I just really appreciate you, um, you know,
taking the time to answer my question. And, um, it's super helpful. Thank you, Tim. And,
and I just feel like I need to say thank you for everything that you, that you do and that you've
done. Um, I know you hear this all the time, but you know, I've been following your work for a very,
very long time. And, uh, you know, you know, you've made so many impacts on my
own life, and I know you've made impacts on so many people. So I just want to say thank you for
being you, and I really, really appreciate you. Thank you, Steve. I appreciate you as well.
Honestly, it's like I wouldn't be here able to do this if I didn't have listeners and readers
who've been so incredibly supportive of this accidental career I've ended up having.
So, it's a real blessing to be able to do this in any way. And it means a lot that you would
even fill out the form to allow me to call. So it's, of course, my pleasure.
And I should emphasize, too, I'm still figuring this out.
I'm still making it up as I go along and testing.
And at the end of the day, for me, whether it's looking for meaning or trying to create
meaning, which I think are two different approaches that can be very complimentary, trying to figure out early stage investing or any number of dozens of other things I might
get my hands into, rather than trying to debate in your own head or with other people what the
best approach might be, what the best next step might be out of, say, three or four or even more things.
I just try to test them.
So I look for low-cost tests with limited downside that I can throw out into the world
to see what happens, to see what sticks and what doesn't.
So that's all I'm doing.
And I'm certainly learning from lots and lots of people around me, including people like yourself.
So I'll let you get back to your day,
but thanks very much for taking the time yourself.
Thank you so much, Tim. I really appreciate it.
All right, man. Take it easy. Bye.
Hello, Heather speaking.
Hello, Heather speaking. Hello, Heather speaking.
This is Tim Ferriss speaking.
Good day.
No, it's not.
It is.
I'm afraid so.
I just sound like you.
I listen.
Well, hello.
Why hello?
How's the weather?
I said Heather.
How's the Heather?
I suppose we could speak that way as well.
How's the Heather and how is the weather surrounding Heather at the moment?
That's how kids get to learn my name and remember it, because it rhymes.
Indeed.
The weather is very cold in Toronto.
I was going to say, it looked like you were calling, or I should say I was calling a Toronto number.
Fine city it is.
Some fantastic friends and fantastic startups also in that lovely city of yours that does get a little chilly.
What might I be able to attempt to answer for you, Heather?
So I'm a late bloomer and I have started taking karate. I've been invited to take my,
I'm so nervous, black belt test in the spring.
Congratulations.
And thank you.
But I'm so nervous, just like I am now.
And I'm a bit of a choker.
Take your time.
There's no rush.
I'm not going anywhere.
I'm just sitting here with my tea and a computer.
Thank you.
So I know that you do all kinds of these.
And I'm just wondering what your method is for staying focused and calm.
So the short answer is that I like to simulate the test environment as much as possible beforehand.
That can include many different factors. So for instance, if I'm going to be
speaking on stage somewhere, whether that's TED or a different venue, I will go, I will always
make sure that I have a chance, ideally the day before, maybe the day of, to go spend time on the
stage and to test all the technical equipment and to know exactly where
I'm going to have breakfast the next day if it's a large conference that I don't have to worry about
there being any hiccup in the logistics, right? So I would map out the entire day that you anticipate
or versions of the day that you anticipate on your test day and look at all of the things that could stress you out, potentially.
Look at all the things the night before that could stress you out or cause issues.
And then do two things.
Number one is try to set up a system so that you run into
the fewest number of those things as possible.
And then secondly, practice the screw-ups beforehand
so that if they do happen,
you aren't going to be as reactive and thrown off,
if that makes sense, right?
So that could include going to,
and using visualization is fine for a lot of this, but let's just
say that there's a possibility, I'm making up this example, right?
But if there's a possibility that at a specific speaking location, I don't do a lot of speaking
anymore, but let's just say hypothetically, I'm going to go want to get a coffee and I
think the coffee shop might be completely overrun with people. And I don't
like crowds. Even though I can speak in front of crowds, I don't actually like being in crowds.
So two things. Number one, I'm going to come up with contingency plans, right? So maybe I
buy my own coffee machine at Target that I can replace or return two days later. Maybe I get some instant coffee from Starbucks.
Maybe I decide to use room service
and have backup plans that I don't have to do that.
And then I could also go in a number of times
when it's really, really busy
and visualize that it is the day of my speaking gig
or the black belt test
and practice calming yourself down.
I think part of the mistakes
or one of the mistakes, excuse me,
that folks make is they practice skills
like meditation and mindfulness in a vacuum, if that makes sense.
Not under stress.
That's exactly right.
So they will meditate in the morning when it's completely quiet, before anyone's gotten
up, on their special cushion in their special room, and then they go to the DMV and they
completely lose their shit because they haven't practiced the skill in the
environment that most demands it or the type of environments. Uh, so for instance, uh, a few years
ago I went on my first, uh, well, it was not my first caribou hunt. In this case it was an elk
hunt. And I don't, I don't hunt very much, consume everything that I hunt, but I do hunt occasionally. And I went on an elk
hunt, did not end up harvesting any elk. But in preparation for that, because it was going to be
a bow hunt, I was practicing in upstate New York with archery and I hired a coach. I was doing all
sorts of technical training, which you've done already for your black belt test, right? You've done the technical practice. I was doing technical practice.
But then I realized a few things. When I travel, in this case to Colorado, I'm going to be going
from sea level to something like between 7,000 and 11,000 feet of elevation. So my heart is automatically going to be beating a lot faster
just to oxygenate my blood properly, or oxygenate my tissues, I suppose, more effectively.
Second, I am almost certainly going to be extremely nervous. I, at that point, had never even seen
a bull elk. And they're gigantic. They're like horse with these
enormous antlers. And they make these really incredible shrieking sounds. Sounds like a woman
like being thrown off a cliff or something. They make these incredible sounds. So I assumed
if I run into an elk, which is the objective, and I have a, whatever the draw is on the bow, pulled back and my muscles
are super tense, and I've been wondering if I'll screw it up all day long, I'm probably going to
feel like I've had, you know, three double espressos. Okay. If that's the case, I should
practice under those physiological conditions.
So what I did is I did a number of things.
I would do, say, 20 or 30 burpees or 40 or 50 kettlebell swings,
and then I would pick up the bow and take one shot.
And I did this when I was practicing in New York
because I wanted to get my heart rate well over, say, like 180.
So I would do whatever necessary to get very physiologically
what I would consider off baseline and then to attempt the skill, right? And you want to be safe
with this, of course, but I would mimic that. And I also did that when I was preparing for my TED
talk, I would down a bunch of double espressos
and then go in to give the presentation
because I'm giving a presentation
as a rehearsal in front of a familiar crowd.
Ultimately, when I'm blinded by the house lights
or the stage lights rather
and unable to see people in the crowd,
my body is going to react very differently.
So I want to mimic that.
How far out is your black belt test right now? They haven't set the crowd, my body is going to react very differently. So I want to mimic that. How far out is your black belt test right now?
They haven't set the date, but I've made first evaluations in May.
Okay. So you have, you have something like two months. So do you do, do you do any type of
performance in front of crowds? Do you, have you done any public speaking
or sports competitions,
things of that nature in the past?
Many moons ago,
I used to perform in front of people.
It's been a few decades.
So,
I just find that I'm overwhelmed with the idea.
Yep.
What is,
what is,
what is the format of the Black Belt test?
Is it going to be the class watching you?
Is it going to be in a familiar location, a new location?
What does it look like?
From what I understand, there are two main testing locations,
and there's sort of more of a formality gathering, but none of them are
in locations that I typically, that I would get to practice at on the NOR
like they're not at the dojo.
I think they're far out and big. There are quite a number.
What are your concerns? What are you worried
could happen?
I'm worried that I will blank.
There was a time where I was in another competition,
and when it came game day, I just got so nervous,
I couldn't find my feet.
With nothing to do with martial arts, but still.
And so I have that fear that it's going to happen again.
And it's ridiculous.
No, it's not ridiculous.
I don't think it's ridiculous at all.
I really don't think it's ridiculous.
It's a response that your body and psyche are having to a past experience to protect you.
Right. you're having to a past experience to protect you, right? So, subconsciously, you're trying to protect yourself to prevent what happened from happening again. That makes perfect sense. So,
the way you overcome that is, in my experience, not by expecting that on game day you're going
to be able to summon self-talk that is going to be
a hundred times more effective than any of your self-talk in the past.
It's by rehearsing what you fear. So you have two months, which is great news.
So I would think about other things that make you nervous, that would make you specifically
nervous about blanking, right? Whether that's getting up on stage and talking in front of people. If that's an example, then find a local Toastmasters, for instance,
and get up on stage and start doing that because you will then begin to develop more confidence
in your ability to either not blank or to blank and recover from blanking. Does that make sense? So I would look
for other circumstances that would provoke the same fear and practice those as much as possible.
I would also find out ahead of time what the locations are, and I would spend time at those
locations. Because the fewer new variables you
can have on the day of testing, the better off you'll be. I would never, for instance,
when I was competing 1000 years ago, I would never ever set foot into a competitive arena,
or on a mat or anything like that for the first time when I was about to compete or do some type
of testing, I would always do recon ahead of time. And I would know where the bathrooms are.
I would know where the main entrance is. I would know, I would have an idea of what the process
is going to be. For instance, when I did my black belt test at the Kodokan in Tokyo, in Japan, when I lived
there from 15 to 16. So when I was in Japan, I was part of the judo club, which is the judo team. I
mean, judo, really, but it doesn't translate particularly well into English, but judo team.
And that's where we did our black belt test. So I did recon even
then to know exactly what the process would look like, what the format would look like, and to
actually attend a few practices in that facility, just so that I would have a familiarity with,
say, the temperature of the mats, right, right, which it can vary tremendously in judo from
location to location. I'm sure for other things as well, but the kind of plastic, rubbery tatami
mats that they use in judo could be freezing cold in one place and really, really warm in another,
which affects the hardness or the relative hardness or softness, right? So, all of these
things I would want to be exposed to
before it matters, before it counts.
There's also a very good book I can recommend
that has helped me a lot.
I've read it over and over again.
It has a rather cheesy title,
but the content is exceptional and very, very practical.
It's by Dale Carnegie, and it's called How to
Stop Worrying and Start Living. And it may seem like a dramatic recommendation for this particular
example that you've brought up, but the fear of blanking and how that can be self-reinforcing, if that makes sense, right?
Like the fear of blanking makes it more likely that you are going to blank.
So that is a psychological, it's a question of psychology and mindset, as well as skill set.
And this is, I think, the neglected component that I've been
alluding to, since I started rambling in response to this is that if someone asks me, and I do get
asked this pretty frequently, like, how do I build my confidence? Like, what should my self talk look
like? How can I develop confidence? And my answer is, you don't develop it in a vacuum. You develop confidence by systematically exposing yourself to discomfort and things that you think are just outside of your capabilities or just outside of your comfort zone. to better tolerate stress, and to take what you previously would have considered risks,
even though now you recognize them as very achievable, trainable objectives.
And that's how you build confidence. You build confidence by doing these things,
because at the end of the day, your inner critic, your inner voice is going to know the truth, right? You can listen to all of the motivational audio that you
want, but if you haven't put in the work and you haven't set foot in this arena, if you haven't
subjected yourself to similar situations that would provoke this fear of blanking,
you are going to know on a deep level.
On the flip side, this is the good news.
If you've done those things, you show up and you know you've done everything you could
have done.
And the self-talk is, I've done all of the preparation.
Like I have prepared more methodically than anyone else who has taken this test.
And therefore, all I need to do now is simply let come out what I have been technically practicing for X number of months, X number of years. I have turned over every stone I could to prepare for
this. And that is what makes it far less likely that you're going to blank, or I should say end,
gives you the confidence that if you blank, which has happened to me dozens of times on stage in
front of big audiences while I'm speaking, like literally like just poof, gone, do not know what
the hell comes next. And once you've learned kind of how to tap dance with that, you develop confidence,
not just in your ability to execute on a plan,
but your ability to improvise.
And those would be some of my thoughts,
but really it's remove as many unknowns as possible.
If you have what if this, what if that,
go practice that what if in
some capacity. And maybe that's asking to go to a different karate school with people you don't know
to participate in a class or to do a demo. Would you mind? And you could explain to the teacher,
like, I'm not coming in here with a lot of swagger. I'm trying to prepare for my black belt
test. I'm really nervous. I'm going to blank. I'm working with my teacher. But one
thing that was recommended to me is getting into unfamiliar environments because that's what the
testing environment is going to be to actually perform so that I have less fear of blanking when
it matters. And I'm sure that you could find, you could even ask your instructor if there's another instructor he or she can recommend who would be open to hosting you in a way, right? So there are ways to practice this stuff.
That's a great idea.
Yeah. So that's, which was taught to me, right? This is all stuff that I picked up from other
people who are really, really seasoned competitors in most instances.
I am not that.
Yeah, yeah.
So these are just bits and pieces
that I've picked up over time
for inoculating yourself
against sort of nebulous fear.
And there's another exercise
that I would very, very strongly recommend
you go through, because you may realize, like, even if I blank and this doesn't work, doesn't happen, I can retest three months later or six months later, right?
And there's a thought exercise that you can go through, which involves some writing.
So, I guess it's more than just a thought exercise called fear setting, which if you haven't seen it, or even if you have, it may be an opportune time to revisit. This is something I do very regularly,
probably at least once a quarter, uh, maybe even once a month. Uh, and you can find that
at tim.blog forward slash Ted, since I also discussed the process in, in my last,
I have, uh, I've listened to all of your podcasts
to a point where I think it's gone to other people.
I'm familiar with it.
I might have heard you mention it once or twice.
Yeah, so I would go and print out that blog post
and just run through the exercise.
Even if it seems in some way academic.
I think that it will also alleviate a lot of unnecessary pressure or fear that you're probably imposing on yourself that may not be extremely well defined.
And that book, How to Stop Worrying and Start Living, will also chip away at that with different tools and recommendations.
And that was Dale Carnegie.
That's right.
Okay. Okay. Thank you.
One small question.
I hear quite rigorous more so than our regular training.
And I don't know if I should leading up with have more rest time or more
like go at it and give her leading up to it to to practice what do
you what do you recommend i just i'm not athletics is not my my background it's not my talent
necessarily and so um i'm looking to get through it and and try to do so as gracefully as i can
but i hear that it's quite a long day, and by design, it's exhausting.
Yeah, I would rest quite a bit in the week before the actual test,
particularly in the few days beforehand.
But since you have two months, I would strive to make your training harder than the test day.
Right.
By design.
Right.
And if you've gone through things that are harder than the actual fight, so to speak, you will come in with a very, very well-earned high level of confidence that you
are physically capable because you've already stress tested those circumstances. So I would,
I would absolutely, you know, within safe boundaries, of course, make your training
harder than your competition slash certification, for sure. 100%. And i think it was arca locus one of my
favorite quotes is we do not rise to the level of our expectations we fall to the level of our
training right so hope and uh since i'm uh high on t right now and want to use quotes, I'll also say, you know, there's a longer quote by James Cameron, the director, Terminator, Avatar, etc., Titanic, which begins with,
hope is not a strategy. Hope is not a strategy. So, condition yourself by making your training,
at least at a few points beforehand,
physically more demanding than the test day.
And figure out ways to do that.
And it doesn't necessarily have to be karate,
but it should be something that is physically more demanding than the test day.
I would simulate it as closely as humanly possible.
Okay. Thank you very much.
You're welcome.
I'm going to consider getting a trainer.
Yeah, you should.
So best of luck with your black belt test.
Very exciting.
Thank you very much.
Yeah, congratulations.
You made my day.
Have a good one.
You too.
Bye-bye.
Justin?
Justin, how is it in California,
or at least on a California telephone?
This is Tim Ferriss.
Tim Ferriss, you know, I was expecting your call.
Well, here I am. Not to leave you hanging.
I appreciate that. Everything's great. I'm down here in Los Angeles.
How is Austin, Texas is presumably treating you? It's fantastic. It decided to brighten up and offer the sun just as people are arriving for South by Southwest,
which it always does to seduce everyone.
But the weather is actually generally very nice, but it's been cold for the last week
or so.
How can I be of assistance?
What question might I be able to answer or attempt to answer?
Well, you know, this is more of a personal question.
And I read the blurb and I said, what's an interesting question that I could ask Tim
Ferris?
Because he is generally in charge of interesting questions.
And I thought, if Tim, Tim, if you had to identify as a type of cocktail, what would
that cocktail be?
And why would you identify as a type of cocktail, what would that cocktail be and why would you identify as it?
Huh. If I had to be a cocktail, you know, the first thing that came to mind
was an old fashioned, uh, just because I feel like for me, there should be certain constants in life.
You should have, for instance, consistency with values and how you make decisions with your values as an operating system, effectively.
For the go, no-go decisions, do, not do, spend time with this person versus avoid this
person type of decisions. On the other hand, past the basic ingredients with, say, an old-fashioned,
you then have, as a bartender, quite a bit of room to improvise and add your own flair.
And it can vary tremendously from place to place. So I think that then offers
the flexibility to reinvent yourself with respect to projects, with respect to career, with respect
to how you manifest those values and priorities that guide you day to day on a more operational level.
So that is the first thing that comes to mind when you ask about cocktail. There's like some
consistency and a bedrock foundation that you can rely on and expect,
and then you have the room to improvise and be creative
and reinvent as needed with all sorts of other types of adornments
and highlights, subtle or over-the-top, as you see fit.
That was a fantastic answer that exceeded all my expectations.
I'm glad you liked it. That was a pretty quick one. Do you have any other questions,
or would you like to leave it at the cocktail? Sure. Since I have you, I don't know when the
next time I'll be able to get you on a phone call is. I'm 27 years old.
I'm a gentleman I consider myself.
I'm constantly trying to learn, and I'm a huge fan of the podcast,
and I can't express my gratitude enough for everything that you do for myself
and everybody else.
I'm somebody that generally struggles with finding my purpose,
and I don't want to go square peg, round hole,
as far as trying to force myself down a walk of life that, you know, maybe isn't exactly fit for me.
Was there a time that you felt that you were particularly stagnant and maybe you weren't
fitting in where you thought you should have?
And was there something that maybe helped you get over that?
I've had that feeling at many points in my life. So the first thing I would say is that
it is a normal experience. And in fact, at your exact age, I was having that feeling.
27, I would have been in the process of traveling, trying to figure out what I was going to do next.
So I would have been bouncing from place to place, living on the cheap, whether it was Ireland or
Berlin or any number of other places, wondering what the hell am I going to do with my life?
So I was at the exact same point in some respects that you are, it sounds like,
from what you're describing. So the first thing I would say is don't panic.
Don't view it as a personal flaw, a defect.
Don't think that you are somehow uniquely unfocused
and that the universe of 27 year olds outside of yourself has this
figured out because that's generally not the case. And I've had that feeling at multiple points,
and I expect it to come up. And I don't dread it, because I've learned to view it as an indicator that something is not working, right? There is
something that I need, or something that I want, or something that I want to give to others or to
the world that is not being accomplished right now. So I try to view it as a simple indicator
to zoom out to 30,000 feet and try to reassess where things are. In terms of what you do after
reassessing, and one way to reassess, by the way, is to get a book like the 80-20 principle.
And the last name, it's Richard Koch. It may actually be pronounced cock. I have no idea. K-O-C-H. I never know how to
pronounce it. I'm going to go with Koch. The 80-20 Principle, The 80-20 Way, I think Living
the 80-20 Way. There are a number of books that he has written which focus exclusively on the 80-20
Principle, which I view as very helpful from a diagnostic perspective. If you're just looking at first
establishing a baseline, right? Where are you expending energy? Where are you allocating your
time? What are the results that are coming from the various categories of activities?
And what type of emotional payoff are you getting or not getting from those things?
What are the things you want to get rid of? It's another way to,
from a sideways angle, get to what you want is to also identify what you would like to subtract.
What are the things you're doing, the people you're spending time with, the things you're
committing to, et cetera, that you would like to remove that are causing negative stress as opposed
to positive adaptive stress in your life? So So I would suggest those books or one of them for diagnostic purposes.
And then after that, the natural question that comes up is, well, then what?
What do you do?
Hopefully through that assessment process, you'll have some indication of tests that
you can run. And I say tests or experiments because it is a
very low pressure labeling to use. You're not at 27 making a decision for the rest of your life,
right? And it's important to frame it that way because if you view a decision as a five or 10 year commitment, and there are paths where that
can be the case, say in medicine, but outside of a handful of areas,
you can look at, and even in the case of medicine, there are experiments that you could run. So for
instance, would it be possible if you were considering traveling a medical path
and thought that might be something you'd want to pursue,
that you could sit in at a medical school
and audit a class and ask a professor
who has a great reputation among students,
and that's easy to figure out
with online course rankings and so on,
who's won specific teaching awards, could you sit in and audit a class because you're considering
pursuing medical school and a career in medicine? Is that something that you could use as an
experiment for two weeks to sit in on these classes to give you more information and to pay attention to how
you emotionally respond to that to see if it feels like a fit. Could it be a fit or not?
What other experiments could you run? Well, what you could do after you've done that or alongside
it is try to figure out if there is a way for you to shadow someone, say, at an emergency room.
And this is something I've actually done.
And there's no harm in figuring out how to ask how you might do something like that,
even if you are ultimately not granted permission.
So even in a case that is particularly seemingly difficult like that, there are experiments you can run. And the upshot of this is that you are going to need to try a book, ever. I was not planning on writing the four-hour workweek. I had had
very difficult experience with writing my senior thesis as an undergrad, and I'd sworn to myself
I would never write anything longer than an email ever again. So if you had asked me at age 25,
or even 27, probably, if I wanted to write a book, if I wanted to be an author the answer would have
been absolutely not hell no
but
in the process and I did this
accidentally but you can do it by design
in the process of teaching
classes
related to entrepreneurship
and getting a very strong
response from students
who are undergrads and
master's students from certain aspects of my talks, I began to think it could make sense to
give a separate guest lecture. This was at Princeton at the time, focusing on something
that I struggled to label, but nonetheless ended
up calling lifestyle design as opposed to how to build a fast-growing bootstrapped business and
how to engineer that to function. And it was through that seemingly unrelated practice and brainstorming that the content
for the four-hour workweek before the title ever existed came about.
And then someone else suggested, in effect, just like added a snarky comment to a feedback
form at Princeton, which is not rare, which was, I don't understand
why you're teaching a class of 40 students. Why don't you just write a book and be done with it?
Which I don't think was a serious recommendation. It was just a dickish response from a dickish kid
who's been trained to think that's awesome at Princeton. But nonetheless, that stuck in my head and I took notes on possible chapter titles, headlines, content, etc. so that I could
get to sleep because I gave insomnia. And then only had conversations with agents and so on after
someone made introductions without really asking me if they could make them or not.
And then the book was turned down by 27
publishers, right? So it's almost like that entire path was something that I turned away from
multiple times. And nonetheless, it has turned into one of the greatest gifts I've ever received.
Certainly, that experience paved the way for everything, including the podcast.
And failures can also offer you tremendous opportunities, right? After The 4-Hour Chef, which really completely burned
me out. It's a very difficult book to put together on just a suicide deadline. If I had not been
burned out by The 4-Hour Chef, if I'd still had a lot of gas in the tank, I would have never tested the podcast format as a sandbox for
intellectual exploration and having the types of conversations I now have on a weekly basis
and share with the world. Never would have happened if I had not run headfirst into a brick wall
with The 4-Hour Chef. So number one, just in review, because I want to
make sure that I try to summarize this and then have a chance to call some other folks. Number
one, if you're having these feelings of being unfocused or not sure what to do with the rest
of your life, that is normal. And in fact, the majority of the world is having that type of feeling at least a few times a year.
So number one, don't freak out because it's normal. And number two is do an assessment.
You really need to understand where you are and what your baseline is before you can make any type
of plans or draw up possible experiments for finding the things that you feel you lack.
That would be the 80-20 principle, at least as one option that I think is particularly effective.
And then the second is coming up with experiments and identifying different ways to stick your toe in the water or different waters to gauge how that feels and whether that
provides you with some degree of inner peace or excitement. And I do think that those are two
pretty good litmus tests for a lot of the decisions that you might make in life, you know, does it excite you?
And are you excited to talk to other people about it? And, uh, which are, which are separate. They don't, you don't have to check both of those boxes. And then, you know, how excited are you,
or, uh, peaceful are you when you wake up in the morning and how easily do you go to sleep,
right? Like anything that can facilitate sort of those four metrics, I think generally falls into the good decision category in my
experience. But A, you don't have to figure it out for the rest of your life. And I think it's
highly likely that you will at 27, particularly given the rate of technological
change and new industries that will be created, will in fact have multiple careers throughout
your life.
And you don't have to figure out which one to stick with, because I think that might
in fact be a losing strategy for most people. You want to
develop skills and relationships that transcend any one narrow area of specialty. Unless you're,
you know, some type of like, you know, nanoparticle physicist who's, you know's committed to really specializing, that's fine too. But from the sound of
what you're describing, I would say experimentation, experiment, experiment, experiment.
Does that help at all?
Yes, Tim, that was extremely helpful. And I've been taking notes here as I've learned
is the right way to do things. And I appreciate your thorough answer.
It never does disappoint.
My pleasure.
You know, I'm just trying to make something up
that sounds believable.
So I'm glad if it can aid you in any way.
That is genuinely, though, how I've approached things
with very rare deviation for the last,
say, certainly the last decade.
And I would say even a little bit longer.
So I'm going to let you get back to your day.
But thanks for lending an ear and thanks for filling out the form.
Hey, thanks a lot, Tim.
And when our paths cross next, I'll ask you again about the cocktail.
But until then, thanks for the call. And I appreciate everything. You have a good day, all right?
All right. You too, man. Bye.
Hello?
Is this Maneel? Am I getting that pronunciation right?
You are. And what an honor it is for me.
Well, let's not speak too soon. I might flub the whole thing, but we'll see how it goes.
How are you this afternoon? I am doing superb talking to you. So, you know, just busy at work,
meetings, you know, the nine to five grind, the emphasis of your first book.
You know, there can be a time and a place. There can be a time and a place for it.
So how can I try to be of assistance? I can't
promise good answers, but I'll, I will do my best. Awesome. Well, you know, it's tea, not,
not wine or tequila this time. So, uh, you know, they might not be as good, but, uh, my question
for you today was, uh, regarding relationships and, you know, uh, basically you, you're very methodical in everything that
you do. You know, you kind of plan ahead and you always like trying to anticipate any downsides
and plan for those, yada, yada. So that's kind of my mindset and I've learned a lot of that from
you. I was wondering, like, how can I do that in a relationship where my partner or my girlfriend isn't really so prone to that or kind of bottles up or, you know, doesn't want to plan due to the anxiety of it?
Yeah, I think we have some fertile ground to explore here.
So I might rely on follow-up questions from you to direct this,
but I can tell you how I used to think about it and now how I think about it,
which is evolving as we speak.
But I realized in the last, say, five to 10 years that my ultimate nightmare would be
dating a long-term version of myself. So, the sort of assumption number one is that
I am looking for a compliment, someone who is a compliment.
And I have a fantastic girlfriend right now.
We've been together for a pretty decent stretch of time.
And she's proven to be a fantastic compliment.
I can explain what that means in a second to me as it stands right now.
I'm not looking for a duplicate. And at the same time, I'm looking for
someone with shared values, right? How do they view truth? How do they define success if they
define success at all? Right? So the shared value could be, and I think it is on many levels, least, what is helpful when you perceive,
say, I could get myself in trouble here.
That's okay. I'm hoping that my girlfriend doesn't hear this.
So we're both out on the booze.
Yeah, we're both. I can't blame it on the booze.
And this applies to the last, probably the last four or five relationships I've had,
which have all been with incredible women and brilliantly strong women in different ways, that I separate in my mind what is
emotional fragility or lack of resilience from sensitivity. And I think this is a really
important distinction, which I didn't, by the way,
draw for myself for many decades. And I think it did a lot of damage. In other words,
sensitivity to me is reflective of, to use one metaphor, a precision instrument, right? So if
you have a scale that gives you your weight but it's in 10 pound increments
that is less sensitive than a scale that gives you uh pound by pound increments and a very sensitive
scale would give you down to the gram and so on uh the question then is how someone wields that sensitivity and whether it is a help or a liability or when
it, or asking the question, when is that sensitivity a help or a liability? So, you find,
I think, that historically for me, I have viewed any type of feeling of feelings to be unhelpful, to be a primitive clouding of logical analysis.
And for a long time, therefore, my response to emotional responses in myself was to stuff them down, cut them off, mute them, turn down the volume.
And as a result, I made some really bad decisions. There were times when it was helpful.
Yeah. Oh, no, I was just gonna say, I know you said you basically have started relying more on
your gut instincts rather than pro-con lists. Yeah, and you use both, right?
So I think that it's a mistake to exclusively rely on either.
But there is a lot to be said for the hundreds and thousands
and millions of years of evolution that have given us rapid processing ability
that doesn't have to run through a four quadrant grid
in the analytical mind.
There's a lot to be said for it, right?
If a deal looks great,
but you get the heebie-jeebies
from the person you're doing the deal with,
I pay a lot of attention to that.
The reason I bring it up is that
I think it is equally easy to say date a, in this case, you know,
we're both dating women, date a woman or a partner who is very, very sensitive and to mistake that
for weakness, right? So, one thing that I try to do is to get a very clear understanding of
how sensitive their instrument is. For instance, one of my ex-girlfriends,
I only realized after we'd been together for several years that when she walked down the street,
she was so empathically receptive that she could basically feel the pain and emotions
almost like a contagion of people as she passed them walking down the
sidewalk. Like walking down the sidewalk in New York City was incredibly emotionally depleting
for her. And I didn't realize she was that sensitive. And that's not a value judgment.
It is an assessment of her instrumentation.
And that changed how I related
to what I'd previously perceived
as very unreasonable
and maybe immature responses to things.
Does that make sense?
So that's kind of point one.
And I find it also very,
I find it more productive these days.
And I should say right off the bat,
which I didn't,
that many people have suggested or asked me,
when are you going to write the four hour relationship?
And aside from a terrible sounding title,
the fact of the matter is,
I don't think I have right now a whole lot to contribute to that
conversation there are a million and one books out there about relationships some of them are very
good uh i think the five love languages is actually an excellent book and it's been recommended to me
by by some of the most impressive humans on the planet uh off the record. Black love language? What was it? That might be a separate one.
The five love languages.
Oh, five.
Sorry, I cut it out.
Okay.
No, no, no.
I mean, maybe somebody should write that one too.
The five love languages,
I do think for,
particularly for very Spock-admiring left-brainers, and I know that the left and right brain functions
are not as cleanly delineated as this, but just for the sake of simplicity, that book is very
helpful. And where I was going to go next, though, is that for quite a long time, my response to perceived weakness was frustration, and it
still is sometimes. The frustration was based on my perception of whatever their reaction was.
And I had no visibility into their internal process. This goes, by the way, for employees,
it goes for everybody, not just significant others. And what I've certainly come to practice
a lot more is before getting frustrated, asking what they're experiencing, asking them to describe how they're feeling,
recognizing that their response exists, whether you want it to or not. So you might as well have
a bit more resolution on what they're actually experiencing. And it can end up being very,
very reasonable. And not only that, but even if it is from your perspective, unreasonable, uh, simply
recognizing that their experience is valid.
And even saying, I can see how A, B, and C would be very difficult.
I totally hear you.
I could see that.
And I have friends who've experienced similar things, or I've experienced similar things
often diffuses the situation without you having to
offer a solution at all or to sort of critique the response. So, that's another sort of consideration.
There is a, this is the type of thing that's probably going to get me in trouble, but here it goes. So the 20% of you out there who just love to kind of sport outrage on the internet, you can use this one.
There's a book that I highly, highly before for many, many different situations or as education and a toolkit for many, many types of challenges that can crop up.
There's a book called Don't Shoot the Dog, which is written by, I believe it's Karen Pryor.
And it's, at its most basic, a book about positive reinforcement. And it happens to teach a lot of the lessons
through discussion of sort of animal conditioning, right? Marine animals, dolphins, and so on. Also
looking at every possible creature imaginable. And I think the back copy of the back cover of this book says
something like, whether you want the cat to get off of your kitchen table, or like your mother-in-law
to stop nagging you, this book will give you the tools you need. Something like that. And the title, I think, does not do justice to the book. But it's very useful, particularly when you...
How long have you been dating your girlfriend?
It'll be like two and a half years, getting very close to three.
Okay, so two and a half, three years in.
Both of you probably have, I think this is true for most couples,
by this point, certain triggers for each other,
you have certain, I'm sure you have habits that annoy the shit out of her. Maybe she bites her
lip, maybe she doesn't. I'm sure she has a few that drive you nuts. And there are probably also
exchanges wherein you end up in a self-perpetuating cycle of some type, right?
And I'm not saying this is true of your relationship, but for instance, right?
Like, you perceive her as being clingy or needy in some way,
so you push away or shut down,
which makes her even more fearful that you're withdrawing,
so she doubles down on the clinginess and the neediness,
then you double down on the pushing away, and it just...
Right, right, right. that type of dynamic might exist. So in those types of dynamics, it's very useful to have as a reference point, a book like this, that covers principles of positive reinforcement,
right? Because the negative reinforcement can work,
but there are a lot of side effects.
Does that make sense?
It's like, for instance,
and this book gives a lot of examples.
Negative reinforcement can work.
Yeah, it's like,
if you want to use a shock collar
with a dog,
and by the way,
just for everybody out there
who's just like waiting
to throw pitchforks at my head, I'm not comparing women to dogs.
I'm comparing humans to animals because we are animals.
So just chill the fuck out.
Right. quite frankly is thinking that we are uniquely special uh like animals when uh for most intents
and purposes that's just not the case at all like there's there's plenty of great literature
and science that we can review to get a better understanding of why we do some silly things and engage in self-defeating
behavior and thought patterns, which from an evolutionary standpoint make a lot of sense.
So, this is part of that education, for me at least. And the benefit of it is, one of the
benefits is that you're not reading about evolutionary biology in a purely theoretical or abstract way. I mean, there's some
great books by Dawkins and others that can inform this conversation. What's nice about something
like Don't Shoot the Dog is that it gives you tools you can immediately practice in real life.
So, that's one I would suggest that will give you an alternative palette of options,
mixing a lot of metaphors, palette of colors, i.e. options,
that you can paint with when you're in these situations.
And give me another, can you give me a specific example of a situation or a response,
something that you wish were different, whether it's ongoing,
preferably something that repeats, right? Something that you see repeatedly.
Right. So, I mean, the big one, obviously, always a big thing in relationships is financials.
There is like, she's going to kill me if she hears this, but there is a little bit of...
That's okay, Robert. Robert, that's okay, Robert.
Continue.
What was that?
I said, it's okay, Robert.
Don't worry about it.
Continue.
Oh, yes, yes, yes, exactly.
It's just like, you know, we have a little bit of, you know, income inequality, right?
I do make a little bit more than her, which is, I'm sure, you know, there's always income
disparity.
But I've always been very frugal my whole life, like in terms of, you know, always save a ton, don't live beyond your means or whatever.
And anytime I try and talk financials, I get shot down.
There's no discussion to be had.
It's just, well, you have yours and I have mine.
Let's just figure it out.
And for somebody I want to spend the rest of my life with, it becomes difficult,
especially when I've been raised so financially conscious as I am.
Okay, this is a good example. And because it represents a really common source of friction. Really common. I mean,
this is not a rare conversation, and it's not a rare conversation where one or more parties shut
down. So I can only speak to tools that have been helpful to me. I'll speak to a tool that's been helpful to
me, and also a buffer. And I'll explain what I mean by that. So the tool, which can become a bit
rote and repetitive if you overuse it, is nonviolent communication. And there are many books on the subject. There is a particular audiobook version
that Neil Strauss, eight or nine time New York Times bestselling author,
recommended to me.
I believe the first name is Marshall, the author.
The audiobook has, I think, a peace sign on the cover,
and it's several hours long.
In any case, nonviolent communication,
you could certainly read the Wikipedia entry for the basics, but in effect, it is an approach to communication
that aims, and I'm probably going to piss off a bunch of nonviolent communication black belts
out there who are
going to say that I got it all wrong. But for the purposes of our conversation right now,
to minimize the likelihood of provoking a strong emotional response in the person you're speaking
with, and in yourself. And I'm going to try to sort of recall this template right now. There
are different ways to approach it. But the way it will generally start is along the lines of, you know, when A, B, and C happened,
or when you did A, B, and C. And this first part has to be objective. It cannot be debatable,
right? So it could be something like when we agreed, uh, you know,
when we agreed to meet at three o'clock and you turned up at three 20, it's what,
it's what a video camera would have recorded. Uh, it makes me feel X, uh, because I have a need for why, right? It makes me feel sad because I have a need to feel that we're
in this together and that we're going to always strive to keep commitments to each other. And
then there's a specific ask, which is like, would you be willing to? And the would you be willing
to could be anything. Could be, would you be willing to set aside a time to have a conversation about this anytime that's convenient for you? It's really important to me
because for instance, in your case, like I, I, I literally want to spend the rest of my life with
you. And I, this is important to me because I was raised A, B, and C. Like, would you be willing
for us to set aside some time whenever it's convenient for you, put it in the calendar so we can actually talk about this?
And it's a template.
The goal being what I described previously.
So, I would look into nonviolent communication for these types of conversations that have historically produced the same response, whether in your partner or in yourself.
And then the buffer that I was mentioning is, and this took me, it's so obvious, and yet it took me, you know, 41, 42, I can't even
remember how old I am right now, but whatever my age is right now, I should have figured this out
earlier. And that is, it's not just the message, it's the messenger. And what I mean by that is it's not just the message it's the messenger and what i mean by that is
when when you get into a pattern this is in my experience where a partner says a the other
partner shuts down or responds with b and it's just groundhog day that what's what may be needed
and it's not they're not mutually exclusive,
what might be required of both,
is not the perfect wordsmithing
that is going to be like your Luke Skywalker
in Star Wars,
like shooting down the line in the Death Star.
Like it's not the perfect prose paragraph
that's going to just bestow this miraculous epiphany
upon your girlfriend who's going to be like, this miraculous epiphany upon your girlfriend is
going to be like, Oh my God, now I see it. Right. Rather than hoping to like craft the perfect
Gettysburg address, that's going to like revolutionize how she thinks about finances.
Maybe she just needs to hear exactly what you're saying through someone who is less threatening or with whom she hasn't established that pattern.
And I'm sure that, again, I'm not a relationship counselor, but in my experience, when I'm like,
I can't believe she does X, I usually have a very active role in provoking that somehow.
So, it's likely that the credit slash blame is shared by both parties.
But in the last year or so, I have been, and I'm like embarrassed to admit this.
I don't know what that's about.
We can unpack that another time. But found a relationship coach to meet with or speak with on a regular basis. And she will speak to me
individually. She'll speak to my girlfriend individually, and then we'll have group calls.
Has enabled my girlfriend to say things or convey things to me through someone else who can also act as a reality check for her. And for me, when I have a concern or a criticism,
she's more than willing to tell me that she thinks it's unreasonable or that I'm overreacting.
And as she's put it, she's not for either one of us she's for the relationship and having someone who is a
regular part of your fostering of the relationship as a couple even when there is not a problem
right who is consistently there to ensure that like the plants are watered before they start
dying right has been incredibly, incredibly helpful
and can defuse a lot of this stuff
through a myriad of different factors.
One of which being, you can say to this,
say relationship coach
or whoever you might choose to work with,
therapist that you'd really like to bring this
up in a safe space where the three of you can talk about it and where she can voice her concerns to
you, maybe separately, maybe together. And having someone to facilitate that is, at least in my
experience over the last year, extremely, extremely helpful. It is also helpful if you or anyone like me
can get a bit overwhelmed or feel overwhelmed when a partner comes to me with emotional challenges.
At some point, you'll have to develop the ability. I'm not saying you don't.
I will have to develop the ability, and I am, to kind of better just sit and witness the experience of an emotional challenge without having to immediately jump in and offer solutions within 30 seconds. brain go yeah which surprise surprise does not always make things better uh i'm i'm getting
better at that and it's it's it's a process of practicing and training and so on for me because
it doesn't come very naturally uh to have someone else that your partner can vent to who is not you is really worth the money and time in and of itself
and who you can vent to, by the way, so that you don't blow up over dinner or God knows what
at your part. And then say to yourself for the next two weeks, for fuck's sake, why did I do that?
What a like 12 car pileup of emotional trauma I have to now try to clean up.
So that's the buffer that I might suggest. And it's relatively new to me to have that,
because I like to think that I don't need things like that. And I've realized that that's,
at least from my experience so far, very penny wise and pound foolish,
particularly if it sounds like you're very committed to being with your girlfriend and want to be with her for a very, very, very long time.
So those are, those are a few of my thoughts.
I don't know how helpful those are, but they've been,
they've been helpful certainly to me thus far.
Awesome. No, I really appreciate that. My takeaways from all of that, obviously the
three books, Three Love Languages, Nonviolent Communication, and...
The five love languages.
Oh, Don't Shoot the Dog.
Yeah, Nonviolent Communication and Don't shoot the dog by care and prayer.
Right.
So,
uh,
that,
and then the messenger,
that was kind of another one.
I was like,
ah,
yeah,
it's not always about the message,
you know,
replaying in my head.
Uh,
thank you again.
I just wanted to say,
you know,
say thank you,
uh,
for everything that you do and for the call today.
Uh,
I hope you will have a wonderful rest of the day and,
uh,
hopefully this makes it to the podcast.
If not, is it possible to send a recording of it to me?
It's planned for the podcast.
So I'm sure this will end up on the podcast.
So don't worry.
It'll be just you, Robert, me,
and our couple million best friends.
Awesome.
All right. Good luck. Thank you. Thank you again, Tim. You're welcome. Awesome. All right.
Good luck.
Thank you.
Thank you again, Tim.
You're welcome.
Have a great day.
Bye.
Bye.
Hey, guys.
This is Tim again.
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